Chapter 3. Getting your node ID
When providing information to Red Hat Support, it is helpful to provide the unique identifier of your node. For MicroShift, you can get your node ID manually by using the OpenShift CLI (oc
) or by retrieving the ID from a file.
A node ID is created only after the MicroShift service runs for the first time after installation.
3.1. Getting the node ID of a running node Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
Use either the of the following steps to get the ID of a running node.
Procedure
Get the ID of a running node using
oc get
by entering the following command:oc get namespaces kube-system -o jsonpath={.metadata.uid}
$ oc get namespaces kube-system -o jsonpath={.metadata.uid}
Copy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Example output
7cf13853-68f4-454e-8f5c-1af748cbfb1a
7cf13853-68f4-454e-8f5c-1af748cbfb1a
Copy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Get the ID of a running node by retrieving it from the
cluster-id
file by entering the following command:sudo cat /var/lib/microshift/cluster-id
$ sudo cat /var/lib/microshift/cluster-id
Copy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Example output
7cf13853-68f4-454e-8f5c-1af748cbfb1a
7cf13853-68f4-454e-8f5c-1af748cbfb1a
Copy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow
3.2. Getting the node ID of a stopped node Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
For a node that ran before, but is not running now, you can get the node ID from the cluster-id
file in the /var/lib/microshift
directory.
Procedure
Get the ID of a stopped node by retrieving it from the
cluster-id
file by entering the following command:sudo cat /var/lib/microshift/cluster-id
$ sudo cat /var/lib/microshift/cluster-id
Copy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Example output
7cf13853-68f4-454e-8f5c-1af748cbfb1a
7cf13853-68f4-454e-8f5c-1af748cbfb1a
Copy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow