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Chapter 4. Upgrading a geo-replication deployment of standalone Red Hat Quay


Use the following procedure to upgrade your geo-replication Red Hat Quay deployment.

Important
  • When upgrading geo-replication Red Hat Quay deployments to the next y-stream release (for example, Red Hat Quay 3.7 Red Hat Quay 3.8), or geo-replication deployments, you must stop operations before upgrading.
  • There is intermittent downtime down upgrading from one y-stream release to the next.
  • It is highly recommended to back up your Red Hat Quay deployment before upgrading.

Prerequisites

  • You have logged into registry.redhat.io
Procedure

This procedure assumes that you are running Red Hat Quay services on three (or more) systems. For more information, see Preparing for Red Hat Quay high availability.

  1. Obtain a list of all Red Hat Quay instances on each system running a Red Hat Quay instance.

    1. Enter the following command on System A to reveal the Red Hat Quay instances:

      $ sudo podman ps

      Example output

      CONTAINER ID  IMAGE                                      COMMAND         CREATED        STATUS            PORTS                                        NAMES
      ec16ece208c0  registry.redhat.io/quay/quay-rhel8:v{producty-n1}  registry        6 minutes ago  Up 6 minutes ago  0.0.0.0:80->8080/tcp, 0.0.0.0:443->8443/tcp  quay01

    2. Enter the following command on System B to reveal the Red Hat Quay instances:

      $ sudo podman ps

      Example output

      CONTAINER ID  IMAGE                                      COMMAND         CREATED        STATUS            PORTS                                        NAMES
      7ae0c9a8b37d  registry.redhat.io/quay/quay-rhel8:v{producty-n1}  registry        5 minutes ago   Up 2 seconds ago   0.0.0.0:82->8080/tcp, 0.0.0.0:445->8443/tcp  quay02

    3. Enter the following command on System C to reveal the Red Hat Quay instances:

      $ sudo podman ps

      Example output

      CONTAINER ID  IMAGE                                      COMMAND         CREATED        STATUS            PORTS                                        NAMES
      e75c4aebfee9  registry.redhat.io/quay/quay-rhel8:v{producty-n1}  registry        4 seconds ago   Up 4 seconds ago   0.0.0.0:84->8080/tcp, 0.0.0.0:447->8443/tcp  quay03

  2. Temporarily shut down all Red Hat Quay instances on each system.

    1. Enter the following command on System A to shut down the Red Hat Quay instance:

      $ sudo podman stop ec16ece208c0
    2. Enter the following command on System B to shut down the Red Hat Quay instance:

      $ sudo podman stop 7ae0c9a8b37d
    3. Enter the following command on System C to shut down the Red Hat Quay instance:

      $ sudo podman stop e75c4aebfee9
  3. Obtain the latest Red Hat Quay version, for example, Red Hat Quay 3.13, on each system.

    1. Enter the following command on System A to obtain the latest Red Hat Quay version:

      $ sudo podman pull registry.redhat.io/quay/quay-rhel8:{productminv}
    2. Enter the following command on System B to obtain the latest Red Hat Quay version:

      $ sudo podman pull registry.redhat.io/quay/quay-rhel8:v{producty}
    3. Enter the following command on System C to obtain the latest Red Hat Quay version:

      $ sudo podman pull registry.redhat.io/quay/quay-rhel8:{productminv}
  4. On System A of your highly available Red Hat Quay deployment, run the new image version, for example, Red Hat Quay 3.13:

    # sudo podman run --restart=always -p 443:8443 -p 80:8080 \
       --sysctl net.core.somaxconn=4096 \
       --name=quay01 \
       -v /mnt/quay/config:/conf/stack:Z \
       -v /mnt/quay/storage:/datastorage:Z \
       -d registry.redhat.io/quay/quay-rhel8:{productminv}
  5. Wait for the new Red Hat Quay container to become fully operational on System A. You can check the status of the container by entering the following command:

    $ sudo podman ps

    Example output

    CONTAINER ID  IMAGE                                      COMMAND         CREATED        STATUS            PORTS                                        NAMES
    70b9f38c3fb4  registry.redhat.io/quay/quay-rhel8:v{producty} registry        2 seconds ago   Up 2 seconds ago   0.0.0.0:82->8080/tcp, 0.0.0.0:445->8443/tcp  quay01

  6. Optional: Ensure that Red Hat Quay is fully operation by navigating to the Red Hat Quay UI.
  7. After ensuring that Red Hat Quay on System A is fully operational, run the new image versions on System B and on System C.

    1. On System B of your highly available Red Hat Quay deployment, run the new image version, for example, Red Hat Quay 3.13:

      # sudo podman run --restart=always -p 443:8443 -p 80:8080 \
         --sysctl net.core.somaxconn=4096 \
         --name=quay02 \
         -v /mnt/quay/config:/conf/stack:Z \
         -v /mnt/quay/storage:/datastorage:Z \
         -d registry.redhat.io/quay/quay-rhel8:{productminv}
    2. On System C of your highly available Red Hat Quay deployment, run the new image version, for example, Red Hat Quay 3.13:

      # sudo podman run --restart=always -p 443:8443 -p 80:8080 \
         --sysctl net.core.somaxconn=4096 \
         --name=quay03 \
         -v /mnt/quay/config:/conf/stack:Z \
         -v /mnt/quay/storage:/datastorage:Z \
         -d registry.redhat.io/quay/quay-rhel8:{productminv}
  8. You can check the status of the containers on System B and on System C by entering the following command:

    $ sudo podman ps
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