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Upgrade a legacy Google Compute Engine deployment to support Retool Workflows

Learn how to add support for Retool Workflows to an existing self-hosted deployment.

Retool Workflows was available as an optional configuration in Legacy releases of Retool 3.20.15 and later. It is part of the standard configuration of Stable and Edge releases.

If you deployed a Legacy release and did not enable Retool Workflows, you can upgrade to a Stable or Edge release and configure it with support.

Requirements

Your self-hosted deployment must meet the following requirements for Retool Workflows.

VM configuration

Retool Workflows requires a Linux-based virtual machine that meets the following system requirements:

  • Ubuntu 22.04 or later.
  • 16GiB memory.
  • 8x vCPUs.
  • 60GiB storage.
  • curl and unzip software packages installed.

Retool recommends you allocate more resources than the minimum requirements so that your instance can more easily scale.

Retool version

Workflows is available in all Stable and Edge releases of self-hosted Retool, and in Legacy releases 3.20.15 or later. If you are using an older version, upgrade to either a Stable or Edge release. Unless you need to make use of the latest changes and have the ability to regularly upgrade your deployment, Retool recommends you use Stable releases.

Temporal

Temporal is a distributed system used to schedule and run asynchronous tasks for Retool Workflows. A Self-hosted Retool instance uses a Temporal cluster to facilitate the execution of each workflow amongst a pool of self-hosted workers that make queries and execute code in your VPC. Temporal manages the queueing, scheduling, and orchestration of workflows to guarantee that each workflow block executes in the correct order of the control flow. It does not store any block results by default.

You can use a Retool-managed cluster on Temporal Cloud, which is recommended for most use cases. You can also use an existing self-managed cluster that is hosted on Temporal Cloud or in your own infrastructure. Alternatively, you can spin up a new self-hosted cluster alongside your Self-hosted Retool instance.

Recommended

You should use a Retool-managed cluster if:

  • You are on a version greater than 3.6.14.
  • Your organization is on the Enterprise plan.
  • You don't have an existing cluster which you prefer to use.
  • Your cluster only needs to be used for a Self-hosted Retool deployment.
  • You don't want to manage the cluster directly.
  • You have a single or multi-instance Retool deployment, where each instance requires its own namespace.

Retool admins can enable Retool-managed Temporal. To get started, navigate to the Retool Workflows page and click Enroll now. Once you update your configuration, return to the page and click Complete setup.

It can take a few minutes to initialize a namespace in Retool-managed Temporal.

Retool-managed Temporal clusters are hosted on Temporal Cloud. Your Self-hosted Retool deployment communicates with the cluster when building, deploying, and executing Retool Workflows. All orchestration data to Temporal is fully encrypted and uses the private encryption key set for your deployment.

Once you’ve decided which Temporal deployment option is best for you, you'll need to modify and provision additional services to your existing deployment and provide sufficient resources to run those resources. Retool recommends providing the following resource specifications wherever you deploy your infrastructure (e.g. at the VM level if using docker compose or "node" level if using Kubernetes):

System architecture changes

Support for Retool Workflows requires provisioning additional containers and services:

ContainerImageRepositoryServices
workflows-workerbackendtryretool/backendWORKFLOW_TEMPORAL_WORKER
workflows-backendbackendtryretool/backendWORKFLOW_BACKEND
DB_CONNECTOR
DB_SSH_CONNECTOR
code-executorcode-executor-servicetryretool/code-executor-serviceNo service type.

The following diagrams illustrates how your deployment instance's architecture changes after you add support for Retool Workflows.

* Only present if you are using the default PostgreSQL database for Retool Database.

1. Upgrade Retool

Follow these instructions to update your Retool instance to a newer release version.

Retool strongly recommends that you back up the VM before performing an update. If you cannot complete a full backup, you should at least:

  • Create a snapshot of your PostgreSQL database.
  • Copy the environment variables in docker.env to a secure location outside of Retool.

To update your deployment to a newer version of Self-hosted Retool:

  1. Update the Dockerfile and CodeExecutor.Dockerfile with the newer version number. For example:
    • tryretool/backend:3.33.10-stable
    • tryretool/code-executor-service:3.33.10-stable
  2. Run ./update_retool.sh to perform the update.

The Retool instance is temporarily stopped while the update takes place and restarts automatically. Retool recommends performing the upgrade during off-peak hours to minimize downtime for users.

2. Configure Temporal

Compare your current docker-compose.yml file with the latest docker-compose.yml. You need to ensure you see the new services and appropriate network changes for the workflows-worker, code-executor, and workflows-backend containers.

Allow your deployment to connect to Temporal

Open up egress to the public internet on ports 443 and 7233 to allow outbound-only connections to Temporal Cloud from your deployment. This allows Workflows workers to pick up work and the Workflows backend to enqueue work on Temporal Cloud.

Your deployment must be able to connect through the public internet connection as Temporal Cloud does not have a static IP range.

The following changes also include some additional environment variables set on the api container, such as:

  WORKFLOW_BACKEND_HOST=http://workflows-backend:3000
CODE_EXECUTOR_INGRESS_DOMAIN=http://code-executor:3004