Este contenido no está disponible en el idioma seleccionado.
Troubleshooting
Troubleshooting
Abstract
Chapter 1. Troubleshooting
Before using the Troubleshooting guide, you can run the oc adm must-gather
command to gather details, logs, and take steps in debugging issues. For more details, see Running the must-gather command to troubleshoot.
Additionally, check your role-based access. See Role-based access control for details.
1.1. Documented troubleshooting
View the list of troubleshooting topics for Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management for Kubernetes:
Installation
To view the main documentation for the installing tasks, see Installing and upgrading.
Backup and restore
To view the main documentation for backup and restore, see Backup and restore.
Cluster management
To view the main documentation about managing your clusters, see The multicluster engine operator cluster lifecycle overview.
- Troubleshooting an offline cluster
- Troubleshooting a managed cluster import failure
- Troubleshooting cluster with pending import status
- Troubleshooting imported clusters offline after certificate change
- Troubleshooting cluster status changing from offline to available
- Troubleshooting cluster creation on VMware vSphere
- Troubleshooting cluster in console with pending or failed status
- Troubleshooting Klusterlet with degraded conditions
- Troubleshooting Object storage channel secret
- Namespace remains after deleting a cluster
- Auto-import-secret-exists error when importing a cluster
- Troubleshooting the cinder Container Storage Interface (CSI) driver for VolSync
multicluster global hub
To view the main documentation about the multicluster global hub, see multicluster global hub.
Application management
To view the main documentation about application management, see Managing applications.
Governance
To view the security guide, see Security overview.
Console observability
Console observability includes Search, along with header and navigation function. To view the observability guide, see Observability in the console.
Submariner networking and service discovery
This section lists the Submariner troubleshooting procedures that can occur when using Submariner with Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management or multicluster engine operator. For general Submariner troubleshooting information, see Troubleshooting in the Submariner documentation.
To view the main documentation for the Submariner networking service and service discovery, see Submariner multicluster networking and service discovery.
1.2. Running the must-gather command to troubleshoot
To get started with troubleshooting, learn about the troubleshooting scenarios for users to run the must-gather
command to debug the issues, then see the procedures to start using the command.
Required access: Cluster administrator
1.2.1. Must-gather scenarios
Scenario one: Use the Documented troubleshooting section to see if a solution to your problem is documented. The guide is organized by the major functions of the product.
With this scenario, you check the guide to see if your solution is in the documentation. For instance, for trouble with creating a cluster, you might find a solution in the Manage cluster section.
-
Scenario two: If your problem is not documented with steps to resolve, run the
must-gather
command and use the output to debug the issue. -
Scenario three: If you cannot debug the issue using your output from the
must-gather
command, then share your output with Red Hat Support.
1.2.2. Must-gather procedure
See the following procedure to start using the must-gather
command:
-
Learn about the
must-gather
command and install the prerequisites that you need at Gathering data about your cluster in the Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform documentation. Log in to your cluster. Add the Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management for Kubernetes image that is used for gathering data and the directory. Run the following command, where you insert the image and the directory for the output:
oc adm must-gather --image=registry.redhat.io/rhacm2/acm-must-gather-rhel9:v2.12 --dest-dir=<directory>
For the usual use-case, you should run the
must-gather
while you are logged into your hub cluster.Note: If you want to check your managed clusters, find the
gather-managed.log
file that is located in thecluster-scoped-resources
directory:<your-directory>/cluster-scoped-resources/gather-managed.log>
Check for managed clusters that are not set
True
for the JOINED and AVAILABLE column. You can run themust-gather
command on those clusters that are not connected withTrue
status.Go to your specified directory to see your output, which is organized in the following levels:
-
Two peer levels:
cluster-scoped-resources
andnamespace
resources. - Sub-level for each: API group for the custom resource definitions for both cluster-scope and namespace-scoped resources.
-
Next level for each: YAML file sorted by
kind
.
-
Two peer levels:
1.2.3. Must-gather in a disconnected environment
Complete the following steps to run the must-gather
command in a disconnected environment:
- In a disconnected environment, mirror the Red Hat operator catalog images into their mirror registry. For more information, see Install in disconnected network environments.
Run the following commands to collect all of the information, replacing
<2.x>
with the supported version for both<acm-must-gather>
, for example2.10
, and<multicluster-engine/must-gather>
, for example2.5
.REGISTRY=<internal.repo.address:port> IMAGE1=$REGISTRY/rhacm2/acm-must-gather-rhel9:v<2.x> oc adm must-gather --image=$IMAGE1 --dest-dir=<directory>
If you experience issues with one of the currently supported releases, or the product documentation, go to Red Hat Support where you can troubleshoot further, view Knowledgebase articles, connect with the Support Team, or open a case. You must log in with your Red Hat credentials.
1.2.4. Must-gather for a hosted cluster
If you experience issues with hosted control plane clusters, you can run the must-gather
command to gather information to help you with troubleshooting.
1.2.4.1. About the must-gather command for hosted clusters
The command generates output for the managed cluster and the hosted cluster.
Data from the multicluster engine operator hub cluster:
- Cluster-scoped resources: These resources are node definitions of the management cluster.
-
The
hypershift-dump
compressed file: This file is useful if you need to share the content with other people. - Namespaced resources: These resources include all of the objects from the relevant namespaces, such as config maps, services, events, and logs.
- Network logs: These logs include the OVN northbound and southbound databases and the status for each one.
- Hosted clusters: This level of output involves all of the resources inside of the hosted cluster.
Data from the hosted cluster:
- Cluster-scoped resources: These resources include all of the cluster-wide objects, such as nodes and CRDs.
- Namespaced resources: These resources include all of the objects from the relevant namespaces, such as config maps, services, events, and logs.
Although the output does not contain any secret objects from the cluster, it can contain references to the names of the secrets.
1.2.4.2. Prerequisites
To gather information by running the must-gather command, you must meet the following prerequisites:
-
You must ensure that the
kubeconfig
file is loaded and is pointing to the multicluster engine operator hub cluster. - You must have cluster-admin access to the multicluster engine operator hub cluster.
-
You must have the name value for the
HostedCluster
resource and the namespace where the custom resource is deployed.
1.2.4.3. Entering the must-gather command for hosted clusters
Enter the following command to collect information about the hosted cluster. In the command, the
hosted-cluster-namespace=HOSTEDCLUSTERNAMESPACE
parameter is optional; if you do not include it, the command runs as though the hosted cluster is in the default namespace, which isclusters
.oc adm must-gather --image=quay.io/stolostron/backplane-must-gather:SNAPSHOTNAME /usr/bin/gather hosted-cluster-namespace=HOSTEDCLUSTERNAMESPACE hosted-cluster-name=HOSTEDCLUSTERNAME
To save the results of the command to a compressed file, include the
--dest-dir=NAME
parameter, replacingNAME
with the name of the directory where you want to save the results:oc adm must-gather --image=quay.io/stolostron/backplane-must-gather:SNAPSHOTNAME /usr/bin/gather hosted-cluster-namespace=HOSTEDCLUSTERNAMESPACE hosted-cluster-name=HOSTEDCLUSTERNAME --dest-dir=NAME ; tar -cvzf NAME.tgz NAME
1.2.4.4. Entering the must-gather command in a disconnected environment
Complete the following steps to run the must-gather
command in a disconnected environment:
- In a disconnected environment, mirror the Red Hat operator catalog images into their mirror registry. For more information, see Install in disconnected network environments.
Run the following command to extract logs, which reference the image from their mirror registry:
REGISTRY=registry.example.com:5000 IMAGE=$REGISTRY/multicluster-engine/must-gather-rhel8@sha256:ff9f37eb400dc1f7d07a9b6f2da9064992934b69847d17f59e385783c071b9d8 oc adm must-gather --image=$IMAGE /usr/bin/gather hosted-cluster-namespace=HOSTEDCLUSTERNAMESPACE hosted-cluster-name=HOSTEDCLUSTERNAME --dest-dir=./data
1.2.4.5. Additional resources
- For more information about troubleshooting hosted control planes, see Troubleshooting hosted control planes in the OpenShift Container Platform documentation.
1.3. Troubleshooting installation status stuck in installing or pending
When installing Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management, the MultiClusterHub
remains in Installing
phase, or multiple pods maintain a Pending
status.
1.3.1. Symptom: Stuck in Pending status
More than ten minutes passed since you installed MultiClusterHub
and one or more components from the status.components
field of the MultiClusterHub
resource report ProgressDeadlineExceeded
. Resource constraints on the cluster might be the issue.
Check the pods in the namespace where Multiclusterhub
was installed. You might see Pending
with a status similar to the following:
reason: Unschedulable message: '0/6 nodes are available: 3 Insufficient cpu, 3 node(s) had taint {node-role.kubernetes.io/master: }, that the pod didn't tolerate.'
In this case, the worker nodes resources are not sufficient in the cluster to run the product.
1.3.2. Resolving the problem: Adjust worker node sizing
If you have this problem, then your cluster needs to be updated with either larger or more worker nodes. See Sizing your cluster for guidelines on sizing your cluster.
1.4. Troubleshooting ocm-controller errors after Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management upgrade
After you upgrade from 2.7.x to 2.8.x and then to 2.9.0, the ocm-controller
of the multicluster-engine
namespace crashes.
1.4.1. Symptom: Troubleshooting ocm-controller errors after Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management upgrade
After you attempt to list ManagedClusterSet
and ManagedClusterSetBinding
custom resource definitions, the following error message appears:
Error from server: request to convert CR from an invalid group/version: cluster.open-cluster-management.io/v1beta1
The previous message indicates that the migration of ManagedClusterSets
and ManagedClusterSetBindings
custom resource definitions from v1beta1
to v1beta2
failed.
1.4.2. Resolving the problem: Troubleshooting ocm-controller errors after Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management upgrade
To resolve this error, you must initiate the API migration manually. Complete the following steps:
Revert the
cluster-manager
to a previous release.Pause the
multiclusterengine
with the following command:oc annotate mce multiclusterengine pause=true
Run the following commands to replace the image of the
cluster-manager
deployment with a previous version:oc patch deployment cluster-manager -n multicluster-engine -p \ '{"spec":{"template":{"spec":{"containers":[{"name":"registration-operator","image":"registry.redhat.io/multicluster-engine/registration-operator-rhel8@sha256:35999c3a1022d908b6fe30aa9b85878e666392dbbd685e9f3edcb83e3336d19f"}]}}}}' export ORIGIN_REGISTRATION_IMAGE=$(oc get clustermanager cluster-manager -o jsonpath='{.spec.registrationImagePullSpec}')
Replace the registration image reference in the
ClusterManager
resource with a previous version. Run the following command:oc patch clustermanager cluster-manager --type='json' -p='[{"op": "replace", "path": "/spec/registrationImagePullSpec", "value": "registry.redhat.io/multicluster-engine/registration-rhel8@sha256:a3c22aa4326859d75986bf24322068f0aff2103cccc06e1001faaf79b9390515"}]'
Run the following commands to revert the
ManagedClusterSets
andManagedClusterSetBindings
custom resource definitions to a previous release:oc annotate crds managedclustersets.cluster.open-cluster-management.io operator.open-cluster-management.io/version- oc annotate crds managedclustersetbindings.cluster.open-cluster-management.io operator.open-cluster-management.io/version-
Restart the
cluster-manager
and wait for the custom resource definitions to be recreated. Run the following commands:oc -n multicluster-engine delete pods -l app=cluster-manager oc wait crds managedclustersets.cluster.open-cluster-management.io --for=jsonpath="{.metadata.annotations['operator\.open-cluster-management\.io/version']}"="2.3.3" --timeout=120s oc wait crds managedclustersetbindings.cluster.open-cluster-management.io --for=jsonpath="{.metadata.annotations['operator\.open-cluster-management\.io/version']}"="2.3.3" --timeout=120s
Start the storage version migration with the following commands:
oc patch StorageVersionMigration managedclustersets.cluster.open-cluster-management.io --type='json' -p='[{"op":"replace", "path":"/spec/resource/version", "value":"v1beta1"}]' oc patch StorageVersionMigration managedclustersets.cluster.open-cluster-management.io --type='json' --subresource status -p='[{"op":"remove", "path":"/status/conditions"}]' oc patch StorageVersionMigration managedclustersetbindings.cluster.open-cluster-management.io --type='json' -p='[{"op":"replace", "path":"/spec/resource/version", "value":"v1beta1"}]' oc patch StorageVersionMigration managedclustersetbindings.cluster.open-cluster-management.io --type='json' --subresource status -p='[{"op":"remove", "path":"/status/conditions"}]'
Run the following command to wait for the migration to complete:
oc wait storageversionmigration managedclustersets.cluster.open-cluster-management.io --for=condition=Succeeded --timeout=120s oc wait storageversionmigration managedclustersetbindings.cluster.open-cluster-management.io --for=condition=Succeeded --timeout=120s
Restore the
cluster-manager
back to Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management 2.12. It might take several minutes. Run the following command:oc annotate mce multiclusterengine pause- oc patch clustermanager cluster-manager --type='json' -p='[{"op": "replace", "path": "/spec/registrationImagePullSpec", "value": "'$ORIGIN_REGISTRATION_IMAGE'"}]'
1.4.2.1. Verification
To verify that Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management is recovered run the following commands:
oc get managedclusterset oc get managedclustersetbinding -A
After running the commands, the ManagedClusterSets
and ManagedClusterSetBindings
resources are listed without error messages.
1.5. Troubleshooting an offline cluster
There are a few common causes for a cluster showing an offline status.
1.5.1. Symptom: Cluster status is offline
After you complete the procedure for creating a cluster, you cannot access it from the Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management console, and it shows a status of offline
.
1.5.2. Resolving the problem: Cluster status is offline
Determine if the managed cluster is available. You can check this in the Clusters area of the Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management console.
If it is not available, try restarting the managed cluster.
If the managed cluster status is still offline, complete the following steps:
-
Run the
oc get managedcluster <cluster_name> -o yaml
command on the hub cluster. Replace<cluster_name>
with the name of your cluster. -
Find the
status.conditions
section. -
Check the messages for
type: ManagedClusterConditionAvailable
and resolve any problems.
-
Run the
1.6. Troubleshooting a managed cluster import failure
If your cluster import fails, there are a few steps that you can take to determine why the cluster import failed.
1.6.1. Symptom: Imported cluster not available
After you complete the procedure for importing a cluster, you cannot access it from the Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management for Kubernetes console.
1.6.2. Resolving the problem: Imported cluster not available
There can be a few reasons why an imported cluster is not available after an attempt to import it. If the cluster import fails, complete the following steps, until you find the reason for the failed import:
On the Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management hub cluster, run the following command to ensure that the Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management import controller is running.
kubectl -n multicluster-engine get pods -l app=managedcluster-import-controller-v2
You should see two pods that are running. If either of the pods is not running, run the following command to view the log to determine the reason:
kubectl -n multicluster-engine logs -l app=managedcluster-import-controller-v2 --tail=-1
On the Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management hub cluster, run the following command to determine if the managed cluster import secret was generated successfully by the Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management import controller:
kubectl -n <managed_cluster_name> get secrets <managed_cluster_name>-import
If the import secret does not exist, run the following command to view the log entries for the import controller and determine why it was not created:
kubectl -n multicluster-engine logs -l app=managedcluster-import-controller-v2 --tail=-1 | grep importconfig-controller
On the Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management hub cluster, if your managed cluster is
local-cluster
, provisioned by Hive, or has an auto-import secret, run the following command to check the import status of the managed cluster.kubectl get managedcluster <managed_cluster_name> -o=jsonpath='{range .status.conditions[*]}{.type}{"\t"}{.status}{"\t"}{.message}{"\n"}{end}' | grep ManagedClusterImportSucceeded
If the condition
ManagedClusterImportSucceeded
is nottrue
, the result of the command indicates the reason for the failure.- Check the Klusterlet status of the managed cluster for a degraded condition. See Troubleshooting Klusterlet with degraded conditions to find the reason that the Klusterlet is degraded.
1.7. Troubleshooting cluster with pending import status
If you receive Pending import continually on the console of your cluster, follow the procedure to troubleshoot the problem.
1.7.1. Symptom: Cluster with pending import status
After importing a cluster by using the Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management console, the cluster appears in the console with a status of Pending import.
1.7.2. Identifying the problem: Cluster with pending import status
Run the following command on the managed cluster to view the Kubernetes pod names that are having the issue:
kubectl get pod -n open-cluster-management-agent | grep klusterlet-registration-agent
Run the following command on the managed cluster to find the log entry for the error:
kubectl logs <registration_agent_pod> -n open-cluster-management-agent
Replace registration_agent_pod with the pod name that you identified in step 1.
-
Search the returned results for text that indicates there was a networking connectivity problem. Example includes:
no such host
.
1.7.3. Resolving the problem: Cluster with pending import status
Retrieve the port number that is having the problem by entering the following command on the hub cluster:
oc get infrastructure cluster -o yaml | grep apiServerURL
Ensure that the hostname from the managed cluster can be resolved, and that outbound connectivity to the host and port is occurring.
If the communication cannot be established by the managed cluster, the cluster import is not complete. The cluster status for the managed cluster is Pending import.
1.8. Troubleshooting cluster with already exists error
If you are unable to import an OpenShift Container Platform cluster into Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management MultiClusterHub
and receive an AlreadyExists
error, follow the procedure to troubleshoot the problem.
1.8.1. Symptom: Already exists error log when importing OpenShift Container Platform cluster
An error log shows up when importing an OpenShift Container Platform cluster into Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management MultiClusterHub
:
error log: Warning: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1beta1 CustomResourceDefinition is deprecated in v1.16+, unavailable in v1.22+; use apiextensions.k8s.io/v1 CustomResourceDefinition Error from server (AlreadyExists): error when creating "STDIN": customresourcedefinitions.apiextensions.k8s.io "klusterlets.operator.open-cluster-management.io" already exists The cluster cannot be imported because its Klusterlet CRD already exists. Either the cluster was already imported, or it was not detached completely during a previous detach process. Detach the existing cluster before trying the import again."
1.8.2. Identifying the problem: Already exists when importing OpenShift Container Platform cluster
Check if there are any Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management-related resources on the cluster that you want to import to new the Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management MultiClusterHub
by running the following commands:
oc get all -n open-cluster-management-agent oc get all -n open-cluster-management-agent-addon
1.8.3. Resolving the problem: Already exists when importing OpenShift Container Platform cluster
Remove the klusterlet
custom resource by using the following command:
oc get klusterlet | grep klusterlet | awk '{print $1}' | xargs oc patch klusterlet --type=merge -p '{"metadata":{"finalizers": []}}'
Run the following commands to remove pre-existing resources:
oc delete namespaces open-cluster-management-agent open-cluster-management-agent-addon --wait=false oc get crds | grep open-cluster-management.io | awk '{print $1}' | xargs oc delete crds --wait=false oc get crds | grep open-cluster-management.io | awk '{print $1}' | xargs oc patch crds --type=merge -p '{"metadata":{"finalizers": []}}'
1.9. Troubleshooting cluster creation on VMware vSphere
If you experience a problem when creating a Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform cluster on VMware vSphere, see the following troubleshooting information to see if one of them addresses your problem.
Note: Sometimes when the cluster creation process fails on VMware vSphere, the link is not enabled for you to view the logs. If this happens, you can identify the problem by viewing the log of the hive-controllers
pod. The hive-controllers
log is in the hive
namespace.
1.9.1. Managed cluster creation fails with certificate IP SAN error
1.9.1.1. Symptom: Managed cluster creation fails with certificate IP SAN error
After creating a new Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform cluster on VMware vSphere, the cluster fails with an error message that indicates a certificate IP SAN error.
1.9.1.2. Identifying the problem: Managed cluster creation fails with certificate IP SAN error
The deployment of the managed cluster fails and returns the following errors in the deployment log:
time="2020-08-07T15:27:55Z" level=error msg="Error: error setting up new vSphere SOAP client: Post https://147.1.1.1/sdk: x509: cannot validate certificate for xx.xx.xx.xx because it doesn't contain any IP SANs" time="2020-08-07T15:27:55Z" level=error
1.9.1.3. Resolving the problem: Managed cluster creation fails with certificate IP SAN error
Use the VMware vCenter server fully-qualified host name instead of the IP address in the credential. You can also update the VMware vCenter CA certificate to contain the IP SAN.
1.9.2. Managed cluster creation fails with unknown certificate authority
1.9.2.1. Symptom: Managed cluster creation fails with unknown certificate authority
After creating a new Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform cluster on VMware vSphere, the cluster fails because the certificate is signed by an unknown authority.
1.9.2.2. Identifying the problem: Managed cluster creation fails with unknown certificate authority
The deployment of the managed cluster fails and returns the following errors in the deployment log:
Error: error setting up new vSphere SOAP client: Post https://vspherehost.com/sdk: x509: certificate signed by unknown authority"
1.9.2.3. Resolving the problem: Managed cluster creation fails with unknown certificate authority
Ensure you entered the correct certificate from the certificate authority when creating the credential.
1.9.3. Managed cluster creation fails with expired certificate
1.9.3.1. Symptom: Managed cluster creation fails with expired certificate
After creating a new Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform cluster on VMware vSphere, the cluster fails because the certificate is expired or is not yet valid.
1.9.3.2. Identifying the problem: Managed cluster creation fails with expired certificate
The deployment of the managed cluster fails and returns the following errors in the deployment log:
x509: certificate has expired or is not yet valid
1.9.3.3. Resolving the problem: Managed cluster creation fails with expired certificate
Ensure that the time on your ESXi hosts is synchronized.
1.9.4. Managed cluster creation fails with insufficient privilege for tagging
1.9.4.1. Symptom: Managed cluster creation fails with insufficient privilege for tagging
After creating a new Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform cluster on VMware vSphere, the cluster fails because there is insufficient privilege to use tagging.
1.9.4.2. Identifying the problem: Managed cluster creation fails with insufficient privilege for tagging
The deployment of the managed cluster fails and returns the following errors in the deployment log:
time="2020-08-07T19:41:58Z" level=debug msg="vsphere_tag_category.category: Creating..." time="2020-08-07T19:41:58Z" level=error time="2020-08-07T19:41:58Z" level=error msg="Error: could not create category: POST https://vspherehost.com/rest/com/vmware/cis/tagging/category: 403 Forbidden" time="2020-08-07T19:41:58Z" level=error time="2020-08-07T19:41:58Z" level=error msg=" on ../tmp/openshift-install-436877649/main.tf line 54, in resource \"vsphere_tag_category\" \"category\":" time="2020-08-07T19:41:58Z" level=error msg=" 54: resource \"vsphere_tag_category\" \"category\" {"
1.9.4.3. Resolving the problem: Managed cluster creation fails with insufficient privilege for tagging
Ensure that your VMware vCenter required account privileges are correct. See Image registry removed during information for more information.
1.9.5. Managed cluster creation fails with invalid dnsVIP
1.9.5.1. Symptom: Managed cluster creation fails with invalid dnsVIP
After creating a new Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform cluster on VMware vSphere, the cluster fails because there is an invalid dnsVIP.
1.9.5.2. Identifying the problem: Managed cluster creation fails with invalid dnsVIP
If you see the following message when trying to deploy a new managed cluster with VMware vSphere, it is because you have an older OpenShift Container Platform release image that does not support VMware Installer Provisioned Infrastructure (IPI):
failed to fetch Master Machines: failed to load asset \\\"Install Config\\\": invalid \\\"install-config.yaml\\\" file: platform.vsphere.dnsVIP: Invalid value: \\\"\\\": \\\"\\\" is not a valid IP
1.9.5.3. Resolving the problem: Managed cluster creation fails with invalid dnsVIP
Select a release image from a later version of OpenShift Container Platform that supports VMware Installer Provisioned Infrastructure.
1.9.6. Managed cluster creation fails with incorrect network type
1.9.6.1. Symptom: Managed cluster creation fails with incorrect network type
After creating a new Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform cluster on VMware vSphere, the cluster fails because there is an incorrect network type specified.
1.9.6.2. Identifying the problem: Managed cluster creation fails with incorrect network type
If you see the following message when trying to deploy a new managed cluster with VMware vSphere, it is because you have an older OpenShift Container Platform image that does not support VMware Installer Provisioned Infrastructure (IPI):
time="2020-08-11T14:31:38-04:00" level=debug msg="vsphereprivate_import_ova.import: Creating..." time="2020-08-11T14:31:39-04:00" level=error time="2020-08-11T14:31:39-04:00" level=error msg="Error: rpc error: code = Unavailable desc = transport is closing" time="2020-08-11T14:31:39-04:00" level=error time="2020-08-11T14:31:39-04:00" level=error time="2020-08-11T14:31:39-04:00" level=fatal msg="failed to fetch Cluster: failed to generate asset \"Cluster\": failed to create cluster: failed to apply Terraform: failed to complete the change"
1.9.6.3. Resolving the problem: Managed cluster creation fails with incorrect network type
Select a valid VMware vSphere network type for the specified VMware cluster.
1.9.7. Managed cluster creation fails with an error processing disk changes
1.9.7.1. Symptom: Adding the VMware vSphere managed cluster fails due to an error processing disk changes
After creating a new Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform cluster on VMware vSphere, the cluster fails because there is an error when processing disk changes.
1.9.7.2. Identifying the problem: Adding the VMware vSphere managed cluster fails due to an error processing disk changes
A message similar to the following is displayed in the logs:
ERROR ERROR Error: error reconfiguring virtual machine: error processing disk changes post-clone: disk.0: ServerFaultCode: NoPermission: RESOURCE (vm-71:2000), ACTION (queryAssociatedProfile): RESOURCE (vm-71), ACTION (PolicyIDByVirtualDisk)
1.9.7.3. Resolving the problem: Adding the VMware vSphere managed cluster fails due to an error processing disk changes
Use the VMware vSphere client to give the user All privileges for Profile-driven Storage Privileges.
1.10. Managed cluster creation fails on Red Hat OpenStack Platform with unknown authority error
If you experience a problem when creating a Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform cluster on Red Hat OpenStack Platform, see the following troubleshooting information to see if one of them addresses your problem.
1.10.1. Symptom: Managed cluster creation fails with unknown authority error
After creating a new Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform cluster on Red Hat OpenStack Platform using self-signed certificates, the cluster fails with an error message that indicates an unknown authority error.
1.10.2. Identifying the problem: Managed cluster creation fails with unknown authority error
The deployment of the managed cluster fails and returns the following error message:
x509: certificate signed by unknown authority
1.10.3. Resolving the problem: Managed cluster creation fails with unknown authority error
Verify that the following files are configured correctly:
The
clouds.yaml
file must specify the path to theca.crt
file in thecacert
parameter. Thecacert
parameter is passed to the OpenShift installer when generating the ignition shim. See the following example:clouds: openstack: cacert: "/etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors/ca.crt"
The
certificatesSecretRef
paremeter must reference a secret with a file name matching theca.crt
file. See the following example:spec: baseDomain: dev09.red-chesterfield.com clusterName: txue-osspoke platform: openstack: cloud: openstack credentialsSecretRef: name: txue-osspoke-openstack-creds certificatesSecretRef: name: txue-osspoke-openstack-certificatebundle
To create a secret with a matching file name, run the following command:
oc create secret generic txue-osspoke-openstack-certificatebundle --from-file=ca.crt=ca.crt.pem -n $CLUSTERNAME
-
The size of the
ca.cert
file must be less than 63 thousand bytes.
1.11. Troubleshooting imported clusters offline after certificate change
Installing a custom apiserver
certificate is supported, but one or more clusters that were imported before you changed the certificate information are in offline
status.
1.11.1. Symptom: Clusters offline after certificate change
After you complete the procedure for updating a certificate secret, one or more of your clusters that were online now display offline
status in the console.
1.11.2. Identifying the problem: Clusters offline after certificate change
After updating the information for a custom API server certificate, clusters that were imported and running before the new certificate are now in an offline
state.
The errors that indicate that the certificate is the problem are found in the logs for the pods in the open-cluster-management-agent
namespace of the offline managed cluster. The following examples are similar to the errors that are displayed in the logs:
See the following work-agent
log:
E0917 03:04:05.874759 1 manifestwork_controller.go:179] Reconcile work test-1-klusterlet-addon-workmgr fails with err: Failed to update work status with err Get "https://api.aaa-ocp.dev02.location.com:6443/apis/cluster.management.io/v1/namespaces/test-1/manifestworks/test-1-klusterlet-addon-workmgr": x509: certificate signed by unknown authority E0917 03:04:05.874887 1 base_controller.go:231] "ManifestWorkAgent" controller failed to sync "test-1-klusterlet-addon-workmgr", err: Failed to update work status with err Get "api.aaa-ocp.dev02.location.com:6443/apis/cluster.management.io/v1/namespaces/test-1/manifestworks/test-1-klusterlet-addon-workmgr": x509: certificate signed by unknown authority E0917 03:04:37.245859 1 reflector.go:127] k8s.io/client-go@v0.19.0/tools/cache/reflector.go:156: Failed to watch *v1.ManifestWork: failed to list *v1.ManifestWork: Get "api.aaa-ocp.dev02.location.com:6443/apis/cluster.management.io/v1/namespaces/test-1/manifestworks?resourceVersion=607424": x509: certificate signed by unknown authority
See the following registration-agent
log:
I0917 02:27:41.525026 1 event.go:282] Event(v1.ObjectReference{Kind:"Namespace", Namespace:"open-cluster-management-agent", Name:"open-cluster-management-agent", UID:"", APIVersion:"v1", ResourceVersion:"", FieldPath:""}): type: 'Normal' reason: 'ManagedClusterAvailableConditionUpdated' update managed cluster "test-1" available condition to "True", due to "Managed cluster is available" E0917 02:58:26.315984 1 reflector.go:127] k8s.io/client-go@v0.19.0/tools/cache/reflector.go:156: Failed to watch *v1beta1.CertificateSigningRequest: Get "https://api.aaa-ocp.dev02.location.com:6443/apis/cluster.management.io/v1/managedclusters?allowWatchBookmarks=true&fieldSelector=metadata.name%3Dtest-1&resourceVersion=607408&timeout=9m33s&timeoutSeconds=573&watch=true"": x509: certificate signed by unknown authority E0917 02:58:26.598343 1 reflector.go:127] k8s.io/client-go@v0.19.0/tools/cache/reflector.go:156: Failed to watch *v1.ManagedCluster: Get "https://api.aaa-ocp.dev02.location.com:6443/apis/cluster.management.io/v1/managedclusters?allowWatchBookmarks=true&fieldSelector=metadata.name%3Dtest-1&resourceVersion=607408&timeout=9m33s&timeoutSeconds=573&watch=true": x509: certificate signed by unknown authority E0917 02:58:27.613963 1 reflector.go:127] k8s.io/client-go@v0.19.0/tools/cache/reflector.go:156: Failed to watch *v1.ManagedCluster: failed to list *v1.ManagedCluster: Get "https://api.aaa-ocp.dev02.location.com:6443/apis/cluster.management.io/v1/managedclusters?allowWatchBookmarks=true&fieldSelector=metadata.name%3Dtest-1&resourceVersion=607408&timeout=9m33s&timeoutSeconds=573&watch=true"": x509: certificate signed by unknown authority
1.11.3. Resolving the problem: Clusters offline after certificate change
If your managed cluster is the local-cluster
, or your managed cluster was created by using Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management for Kubernetes, you must wait 10 minutes or longer to reimport your managed cluster.
To reimport your managed cluster immediately, you can delete your managed cluster import secret on the hub cluster and reimport it by using Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management. Run the following command:
oc delete secret -n <cluster_name> <cluster_name>-import
Replace <cluster_name>
with the name of the managed cluster that you want to import.
If you want to reimport a managed cluster that was imported by using Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management, complete the following steps to import the managed cluster again:
On the hub cluster, recreate the managed cluster import secret by running the following command:
oc delete secret -n <cluster_name> <cluster_name>-import
Replace
<cluster_name>
with the name of the managed cluster that you want to import.On the hub cluster, expose the managed cluster import secret to a YAML file by running the following command:
oc get secret -n <cluster_name> <cluster_name>-import -ojsonpath='{.data.import\.yaml}' | base64 --decode > import.yaml
Replace
<cluster_name>
with the name of the managed cluster that you want to import.On the managed cluster, apply the
import.yaml
file by running the following command:oc apply -f import.yaml
Note: The previous steps do not detach the managed cluster from the hub cluster. The steps update the required manifests with current settings on the managed cluster, including the new certificate information.
1.12. Namespace remains after deleting a cluster
When you remove a managed cluster, the namespace is normally removed as part of the cluster removal process. In rare cases, the namespace remains with some artifacts in it. In that case, you must manually remove the namespace.
1.12.1. Symptom: Namespace remains after deleting a cluster
After removing a managed cluster, the namespace is not removed.
1.12.2. Resolving the problem: Namespace remains after deleting a cluster
Complete the following steps to remove the namespace manually:
Run the following command to produce a list of the resources that remain in the <cluster_name> namespace:
oc api-resources --verbs=list --namespaced -o name | grep -E '^secrets|^serviceaccounts|^managedclusteraddons|^roles|^rolebindings|^manifestworks|^leases|^managedclusterinfo|^appliedmanifestworks'|^clusteroauths' | xargs -n 1 oc get --show-kind --ignore-not-found -n <cluster_name>
Replace
cluster_name
with the name of the namespace for the cluster that you attempted to remove.Delete each identified resource on the list that does not have a status of
Delete
by entering the following command to edit the list:oc edit <resource_kind> <resource_name> -n <namespace>
Replace
resource_kind
with the kind of the resource. Replaceresource_name
with the name of the resource. Replacenamespace
with the name of the namespace of the resource.-
Locate the
finalizer
attribute in the in the metadata. -
Delete the non-Kubernetes finalizers by using the vi editor
dd
command. -
Save the list and exit the
vi
editor by entering the:wq
command. Delete the namespace by entering the following command:
oc delete ns <cluster-name>
Replace
cluster-name
with the name of the namespace that you are trying to delete.
1.13. Auto-import-secret-exists error when importing a cluster
Your cluster import fails with an error message that reads: auto import secret exists.
1.13.1. Symptom: Auto import secret exists error when importing a cluster
When importing a hive cluster for management, an auto-import-secret already exists
error is displayed.
1.13.2. Resolving the problem: Auto-import-secret-exists error when importing a cluster
This problem occurs when you attempt to import a cluster that was previously managed by Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management. When this happens, the secrets conflict when you try to reimport the cluster.
To work around this problem, complete the following steps:
To manually delete the existing
auto-import-secret
, run the following command on the hub cluster:oc delete secret auto-import-secret -n <cluster-namespace>
Replace
cluster-namespace
with the namespace of your cluster.- Import your cluster again by using the procedure in Cluster import introduction.
1.14. Troubleshooting the cinder Container Storage Interface (CSI) driver for VolSync
If you use VolSync or use a default setting in a cinder Container Storage Interface (CSI) driver, you might encounter errors for the PVC that is in use.
1.14.1. Symptom: Volumesnapshot
error state
You can configure a VolSync ReplicationSource
or ReplicationDestination
to use snapshots. Also, you can configure the storageclass
and volumesnapshotclass
in the ReplicationSource
and ReplicationDestination
. There is a parameter on the cinder volumesnapshotclass
called force-create
with a default value of false
. This force-create
parameter on the volumesnapshotclass
means cinder does not allow the volumesnapshot
to be taken of a PVC in use. As a result, the volumesnapshot
is in an error state.
1.14.2. Resolving the problem: Setting the parameter to true
-
Create a new
volumesnapshotclass
for the cinder CSI driver. Change the paramater,
force-create
, totrue
. See the following sample YAML:apiVersion: snapshot.storage.k8s.io/v1 deletionPolicy: Delete driver: cinder.csi.openstack.org kind: VolumeSnapshotClass metadata: annotations: snapshot.storage.kubernetes.io/is-default-class: 'true' name: standard-csi parameters: force-create: 'true'
1.15. Troubleshooting with the must-gather command
1.15.1. Symptom: Errors with multicluster global hub
You might experience various errors with multicluster global hub. You can run the must-gather
command for troubleshooting issues with multicluster global hub.
1.15.2. Resolving the problem: Running the must-gather command for dubugging
Run the must-gather
command to gather details, logs, and take steps in debugging issues. This debugging information is also useful when you open a support request. The oc adm must-gather
CLI command collects the information from your cluster that is often needed for debugging issues, including:
- Resource definitions
- Service logs
1.15.2.1. Prerequisites
You must meet the following prerequisites to run the must-gather
command:
-
Access to the global hub and managed hub clusters as a user with the
cluster-admin
role. - The OpenShift Container Platform CLI (oc) installed.
1.15.2.2. Running the must-gather command
Complete the following procedure to collect information by using the must-gather command:
-
Learn about the
must-gather
command and install the prerequisites that you need by reading the Gathering data about your cluster in the OpenShift Container Platform documentation. Log in to your global hub cluster. For the typical use case, run the following command while you are logged into your global hub cluster:
oc adm must-gather --image=quay.io/stolostron/must-gather:SNAPSHOTNAME
If you want to check your managed hub clusters, run the
must-gather
command on those clusters.Optional: If you want to save the results in a the
SOMENAME
directory, you can run the following command instead of the one in the previous step:oc adm must-gather --image=quay.io/stolostron/must-gather:SNAPSHOTNAME --dest-dir=<SOMENAME> ; tar -cvzf <SOMENAME>.tgz <SOMENAME>
You can specify a different name for the directory.
Note: The command includes the required additions to create a gzipped tarball file.
The following information is collected from the must-gather
command:
-
Two peer levels:
cluster-scoped-resources
andnamespaces
resources. - Sub-level for each: API group for the custom resource definitions for both cluster-scope and namespace-scoped resources.
- Next level for each: YAML file sorted by kind.
-
For the global hub cluster, you can check the
PostgresCluster
andKafka
in thenamespaces
resources. -
For the global hub cluster, you can check the multicluster global hub related pods and logs in
pods
ofnamespaces
resources. -
For the managed hub cluster, you can check the multicluster global hub agent pods and logs in
pods
ofnamespaces
resources.
1.16. Troubleshooting by accessing the PostgreSQL database
1.16.1. Symptom: Errors with multicluster global hub
You might experience various errors with multicluster global hub. You can access the provisioned PostgreSQL database to view messages that might be helpful for troubleshooting issues with multicluster global hub.
1.16.2. Resolving the problem: Accessing the PostgresSQL database
There are two ways to access the provisioned PostgreSQL database.
Using the
ClusterIP
serviceoc exec -it multicluster-global-hub-postgres-0 -c multicluster-global-hub-postgres -n multicluster-global-hub -- psql -U postgres -d hoh # Or access the database installed by crunchy operator oc exec -it $(kubectl get pods -n multicluster-global-hub -l postgres-operator.crunchydata.com/role=master -o jsonpath='{.items..metadata.name}') -c database -n multicluster-global-hub -- psql -U postgres -d hoh -c "SELECT 1"
LoadBalancer
Expose the service type to
LoadBalancer
provisioned by default:cat <<EOF | oc apply -f - apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: name: multicluster-global-hub-postgres-lb namespace: multicluster-global-hub spec: ports: - name: postgres port: 5432 protocol: TCP targetPort: 5432 selector: name: multicluster-global-hub-postgres type: LoadBalancer EOF
Run the following command to get your the credentials:
# Host oc get svc postgres-ha -ojsonpath='{.status.loadBalancer.ingress[0].hostname}' # Password oc get secrets -n multicluster-global-hub postgres-pguser-postgres -o go-template='{{index (.data) "password" | base64decode}}'
Expose the service type to
LoadBalancer
provisioned by crunchy operator:oc patch postgrescluster postgres -n multicluster-global-hub -p '{"spec":{"service":{"type":"LoadBalancer"}}}' --type merge
Run the following command to get your the credentials:
# Host oc get svc -n multicluster-global-hub postgres-ha -ojsonpath='{.status.loadBalancer.ingress[0].hostname}' # Username oc get secrets -n multicluster-global-hub postgres-pguser-postgres -o go-template='{{index (.data) "user" | base64decode}}' # Password oc get secrets -n multicluster-global-hub postgres-pguser-postgres -o go-template='{{index (.data) "password" | base64decode}}' # Database oc get secrets -n multicluster-global-hub postgres-pguser-postgres -o go-template='{{index (.data) "dbname" | base64decode}}'
1.17. Troubleshooting by using the database dump and restore
In a production environment, back up your PostgreSQL database regularly as a database management task. The backup can also be used for debugging the multicluster global hub.
1.17.1. Symptom: Errors with multicluster global hub
You might experience various errors with multicluster global hub. You can use the database dump and restore for troubleshooting issues with multicluster global hub.
1.17.2. Resolving the problem: Dumping the output of the database for dubugging
Sometimes you need to dump the output in the multicluster global hub database to debug a problem. The PostgreSQL database provides the pg_dump
command line tool to dump the contents of the database. To dump data from localhost database server, run the following command:
pg_dump hoh > hoh.sql
To dump the multicluster global hub database located on a remote server with compressed format, use the command-line options to control the connection details, as shown in the following example:
pg_dump -h my.host.com -p 5432 -U postgres -F t hoh -f hoh-$(date +%d-%m-%y_%H-%M).tar
1.17.3. Resolving the problem: Restore database from dump
To restore a PostgreSQL database, you can use the psql
or pg_restore
command line tools. The psql
tool is used to restore plain text files created by pg_dump
:
psql -h another.host.com -p 5432 -U postgres -d hoh < hoh.sql
The pg_restore
tool is used to restore a PostgreSQL database from an archive created by pg_dump
in one of the non-plain-text formats (custom, tar, or directory):
pg_restore -h another.host.com -p 5432 -U postgres -d hoh hoh-$(date +%d-%m-%y_%H-%M).tar
1.18. Troubleshooting cluster status changing from offline to available
The status of the managed cluster alternates between offline
and available
without any manual change to the environment or cluster.
1.18.1. Symptom: Cluster status changing from offline to available
When the network that connects the managed cluster to the hub cluster is unstable, the status of the managed cluster that is reported by the hub cluster cycles between offline
and available
.
The connection between the hub cluster and managed cluster is maintained through a lease that is validated at the leaseDurationSeconds
interval value. If the lease is not validated within five consecutive attempts of the leaseDurationSeconds
value, then the cluster is marked offline
.
For example, the cluster is marked offline
after five minutes with a leaseDurationSeconds
interval of 60 seconds
. This configuration can be inadequate for reasons such as connectivity issues or latency, causing instability.
1.18.2. Resolving the problem: Cluster status changing from offline to available
The five validation attempts is default and cannot be changed, but you can change the leaseDurationSeconds
interval.
Determine the amount of time, in minutes, that you want the cluster to be marked as offline
, then multiply that value by 60 to convert to seconds. Then divide by the default five number of attempts. The result is your leaseDurationSeconds
value.
Edit your
ManagedCluster
specification on the hub cluster by entering the following command, but replacecluster-name
with the name of your managed cluster:oc edit managedcluster <cluster-name>
Increase the value of
leaseDurationSeconds
in yourManagedCluster
specification, as seen in the following sample YAML:apiVersion: cluster.open-cluster-management.io/v1 kind: ManagedCluster metadata: name: <cluster-name> spec: hubAcceptsClient: true leaseDurationSeconds: 60
- Save and apply the file.
1.19. Troubleshooting cluster in console with pending or failed status
If you observe Pending status or Failed status in the console for a cluster you created, follow the procedure to troubleshoot the problem.
1.19.1. Symptom: Cluster in console with pending or failed status
After creating a new cluster by using the Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management for Kubernetes console, the cluster does not progress beyond the status of Pending or displays Failed status.
1.19.2. Identifying the problem: Cluster in console with pending or failed status
If the cluster displays Failed status, navigate to the details page for the cluster and follow the link to the logs provided. If no logs are found or the cluster displays Pending status, continue with the following procedure to check for logs:
Procedure 1
Run the following command on the hub cluster to view the names of the Kubernetes pods that were created in the namespace for the new cluster:
oc get pod -n <new_cluster_name>
Replace
new_cluster_name
with the name of the cluster that you created.If no pod that contains the string
provision
in the name is listed, continue with Procedure 2. If there is a pod withprovision
in the title, run the following command on the hub cluster to view the logs of that pod:oc logs <new_cluster_name_provision_pod_name> -n <new_cluster_name> -c hive
Replace
new_cluster_name_provision_pod_name
with the name of the cluster that you created, followed by the pod name that containsprovision
.- Search for errors in the logs that might explain the cause of the problem.
Procedure 2
If there is not a pod with
provision
in its name, the problem occurred earlier in the process. Complete the following procedure to view the logs:Run the following command on the hub cluster:
oc describe clusterdeployments -n <new_cluster_name>
Replace
new_cluster_name
with the name of the cluster that you created. For more information about cluster installation logs, see Gathering installation logs in the Red Hat OpenShift documentation.- See if there is additional information about the problem in the Status.Conditions.Message and Status.Conditions.Reason entries of the resource.
1.19.3. Resolving the problem: Cluster in console with pending or failed status
After you identify the errors in the logs, determine how to resolve the errors before you destroy the cluster and create it again.
The following example provides a possible log error of selecting an unsupported zone, and the actions that are required to resolve it:
No subnets provided for zones
When you created your cluster, you selected one or more zones within a region that are not supported. Complete one of the following actions when you recreate your cluster to resolve the issue:
- Select a different zone within the region.
- Omit the zone that does not provide the support, if you have other zones listed.
- Select a different region for your cluster.
After determining the issues from the log, destroy the cluster and recreate it.
See Creating clusters for more information about creating a cluster.
1.20. Troubleshooting Grafana
When you query some time-consuming metrics in the Grafana explorer, you might encounter a Gateway Time-out
error.
1.20.1. Symptom: Grafana explorer gateway timeout
If you hit the Gateway Time-out
error when you query some time-consuming metrics in the Grafana explorer, it is possible that the timeout is caused by the Grafana in the open-cluster-management-observability
namespace.
1.20.2. Resolving the problem: Configure the Grafana
If you have this problem, complete the following steps:
Verify that the default configuration of Grafana has expected timeout settings:
To verify that the default timeout setting of Grafana, run the following command:
oc get secret grafana-config -n open-cluster-management-observability -o jsonpath="{.data.grafana\.ini}" | base64 -d | grep dataproxy -A 4
The following timeout settings should be displayed:
[dataproxy] timeout = 300 dial_timeout = 30 keep_alive_seconds = 300
To verify the default data source query timeout for Grafana, run the following command:
oc get secret/grafana-datasources -n open-cluster-management-observability -o jsonpath="{.data.datasources\.yaml}" | base64 -d | grep queryTimeout
The following timeout settings should be displayed:
queryTimeout: 300s
If you verified the default configuration of Grafana has expected timeout settings, then you can configure the Grafana in the
open-cluster-management-observability
namespace by running the following command:oc annotate route grafana -n open-cluster-management-observability --overwrite haproxy.router.openshift.io/timeout=300s
Refresh the Grafana page and try to query the metrics again. The Gateway Time-out
error is no longer displayed.
1.21. Troubleshooting local cluster not selected with placement rule
The managed clusters are selected with a placement rule, but the local-cluster
, which is a hub cluster that is also managed, is not selected. The placement rule user is not granted permission to get the managedcluster
resources in the local-cluster
namespace.
1.21.1. Symptom: Troubleshooting local cluster not selected as a managed cluster
All managed clusters are selected with a placement rule, but the local-cluster
is not. The placement rule user is not granted permission to get the managedcluster
resources in the local-cluster
namespace.
1.21.2. Resolving the problem: Troubleshooting local cluster not selected as a managed cluster
Deprecated: PlacementRule
To resolve this issue, you need to grant the managedcluster
administrative permission in the local-cluster
namespace. Complete the following steps:
Confirm that the list of managed clusters does include
local-cluster
, and that the placement ruledecisions
list does not display thelocal-cluster
. Run the following command and view the results:% oc get managedclusters
See in the sample output that
local-cluster
is joined, but it is not in the YAML forPlacementRule
:NAME HUB ACCEPTED MANAGED CLUSTER URLS JOINED AVAILABLE AGE local-cluster true True True 56d cluster1 true True True 16h
apiVersion: apps.open-cluster-management.io/v1 kind: PlacementRule metadata: name: all-ready-clusters namespace: default spec: clusterSelector: {} status: decisions: - clusterName: cluster1 clusterNamespace: cluster1
Create a
Role
in your YAML file to grant themanagedcluster
administrative permission in thelocal-cluster
namespace. See the following example:apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1 kind: Role metadata: name: managedcluster-admin-user-zisis namespace: local-cluster rules: - apiGroups: - cluster.open-cluster-management.io resources: - managedclusters verbs: - get
Create a
RoleBinding
resource to grant the placement rule user access to thelocal-cluster
namespace. See the following example:apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1 kind: RoleBinding metadata: name: managedcluster-admin-user-zisis namespace: local-cluster roleRef: apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io kind: Role name: managedcluster-admin-user-zisis namespace: local-cluster subjects: - kind: User name: zisis apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
1.22. Troubleshooting application Kubernetes deployment version
A managed cluster with a deprecated Kubernetes apiVersion
might not be supported. See the Kubernetes issue for more details about the deprecated API version.
1.22.1. Symptom: Application deployment version
If one or more of your application resources in the Subscription YAML file uses the deprecated API, you might receive an error similar to the following error:
failed to install release: unable to build kubernetes objects from release manifest: unable to recognize "": no matches for kind "Deployment" in version "extensions/v1beta1"
Or with new Kubernetes API version in your YAML file named old.yaml
for instance, you might receive the following error:
error: unable to recognize "old.yaml": no matches for kind "Deployment" in version "deployment/v1beta1"
1.22.2. Resolving the problem: Application deployment version
Update the
apiVersion
in the resource. For example, if the error displays for Deployment kind in the subscription YAML file, you need to update theapiVersion
fromextensions/v1beta1
toapps/v1
.See the following example:
apiVersion: apps/v1 kind: Deployment
Verify the available versions by running the following command on the managed cluster:
kubectl explain <resource>
-
Check for
VERSION
.
1.23. Troubleshooting Klusterlet with degraded conditions
The Klusterlet degraded conditions can help to diagnose the status of Klusterlet agents on managed cluster. If a Klusterlet is in the degraded condition, the Klusterlet agents on managed cluster might have errors that need to be troubleshooted. See the following information for Klusterlet degraded conditions that are set to True
.
1.23.1. Symptom: Klusterlet is in the degraded condition
After deploying a Klusterlet on managed cluster, the KlusterletRegistrationDegraded
or KlusterletWorkDegraded
condition displays a status of True.
1.23.2. Identifying the problem: Klusterlet is in the degraded condition
Run the following command on the managed cluster to view the Klusterlet status:
kubectl get klusterlets klusterlet -oyaml
-
Check
KlusterletRegistrationDegraded
orKlusterletWorkDegraded
to see if the condition is set toTrue
. Proceed to Resolving the problem for any degraded conditions that are listed.
1.23.3. Resolving the problem: Klusterlet is in the degraded condition
See the following list of degraded statuses and how you can attempt to resolve those issues:
-
If the
KlusterletRegistrationDegraded
condition with a status of True and the condition reason is: BootStrapSecretMissing, you need create a bootstrap secret onopen-cluster-management-agent
namespace. -
If the
KlusterletRegistrationDegraded
condition displays True and the condition reason is a BootstrapSecretError, or BootstrapSecretUnauthorized, then the current bootstrap secret is invalid. Delete the current bootstrap secret and recreate a valid bootstrap secret onopen-cluster-management-agent
namespace. -
If the
KlusterletRegistrationDegraded
andKlusterletWorkDegraded
displays True and the condition reason is HubKubeConfigSecretMissing, delete the Klusterlet and recreate it. -
If the
KlusterletRegistrationDegraded
andKlusterletWorkDegraded
displays True and the condition reason is: ClusterNameMissing, KubeConfigMissing, HubConfigSecretError, or HubConfigSecretUnauthorized, delete the hub cluster kubeconfig secret fromopen-cluster-management-agent
namespace. The registration agent will bootstrap again to get a new hub cluster kubeconfig secret. -
If the
KlusterletRegistrationDegraded
displays True and the condition reason is GetRegistrationDeploymentFailed, or UnavailableRegistrationPod, you can check the condition message to get the problem details and attempt to resolve. -
If the
KlusterletWorkDegraded
displays True and the condition reason is GetWorkDeploymentFailed ,or UnavailableWorkPod, you can check the condition message to get the problem details and attempt to resolve.
1.24. Troubleshooting Object storage channel secret
If you change the SecretAccessKey
, the subscription of an Object storage channel cannot pick up the updated secret automatically and you receive an error.
1.24.1. Symptom: Object storage channel secret
The subscription of an Object storage channel cannot pick up the updated secret automatically. This prevents the subscription operator from reconciliation and deploys resources from Object storage to the managed cluster.
1.24.2. Resolving the problem: Object storage channel secret
You need to manually input the credentials to create a secret, then refer to the secret within a channel.
Annotate the subscription CR in order to generate a reconcile single to subscription operator. See the following
data
specification:apiVersion: apps.open-cluster-management.io/v1 kind: Channel metadata: name: deva namespace: ch-obj labels: name: obj-sub spec: type: ObjectBucket pathname: http://ec2-100-26-232-156.compute-1.amazonaws.com:9000/deva sourceNamespaces: - default secretRef: name: dev --- apiVersion: v1 kind: Secret metadata: name: dev namespace: ch-obj labels: name: obj-sub data: AccessKeyID: YWRtaW4= SecretAccessKey: cGFzc3dvcmRhZG1pbg==
Run
oc annotate
to test:oc annotate appsub -n <subscription-namespace> <subscription-name> test=true
After you run the command, you can go to the Application console to verify that the resource is deployed to the managed cluster. Or you can log in to the managed cluster to see if the application resource is created at the given namespace.
1.25. Troubleshooting observability
After you install the observability component, the component might be stuck and an Installing
status is displayed.
1.25.1. Symptom: MultiClusterObservability resource status stuck
If the observability status is stuck in an Installing
status after you install and create the Observability custom resource definition (CRD), it is possible that there is no value defined for the spec:storageConfig:storageClass
parameter. Alternatively, the observability component automatically finds the default storageClass
, but if there is no value for the storage, the component remains stuck with the Installing
status.
1.25.2. Resolving the problem: MultiClusterObservability resource status stuck
If you have this problem, complete the following steps:
Verify that the observability components are installed:
To verify that the
multicluster-observability-operator
, run the following command:kubectl get pods -n open-cluster-management|grep observability
To verify that the appropriate CRDs are present, run the following command:
kubectl get crd|grep observ
The following CRDs must be displayed before you enable the component:
multiclusterobservabilities.observability.open-cluster-management.io observabilityaddons.observability.open-cluster-management.io observatoria.core.observatorium.io
- If you create your own storageClass for a Bare Metal cluster, see Persistent storage using NFS.
-
To ensure that the observability component can find the default storageClass, update the
storageClass
parameter in themulticluster-observability-operator
custom resource definition. Your parameter might resemble the following value:
storageclass.kubernetes.io/is-default-class: "true"
The observability component status is updated to a Ready status when the installation is complete. If the installation fails to complete, the Fail status is displayed.
1.26. Troubleshooting OpenShift monitoring service
Observability service in a managed cluster needs to scrape metrics from the OpenShift Container Platform monitoring stack. The metrics-collector
is not installed if the OpenShift Container Platform monitoring stack is not ready.
1.26.1. Symptom: OpenShift monitoring service is not ready
The endpoint-observability-operator-x
pod checks if the prometheus-k8s
service is available in the openshift-monitoring
namespace. If the service is not present in the openshift-monitoring
namespace, then the metrics-collector
is not deployed. You might receive the following error message: Failed to get prometheus resource
.
1.26.2. Resolving the problem: OpenShift monitoring service is not ready
If you have this problem, complete the following steps:
- Log in to your OpenShift Container Platform cluster.
-
Access the
openshift-monitoring
namespace to verify that theprometheus-k8s
service is available. -
Restart
endpoint-observability-operator-x
pod in theopen-cluster-management-addon-observability
namespace of the managed cluster.
1.27. Troubleshooting metrics-collector
When the observability-client-ca-certificate
secret is not refreshed in the managed cluster, you might receive an internal server error.
1.29. Troubleshooting a block error for Thanos compactor
You might receive a block error message that indicates that the block for Thanos compactor is corrupted.
1.29.1. Symptom: Block error for Thanos compactor
After you upgrade Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management for Kubernetes and check the logs for the Thanos compactor by using the oc logs observability-thanos-compact-0
command, the logs display the following error message:
ts=2024-01-24T15:34:51.948653839Z caller=compact.go:491 level=error msg="critical error detected; halting" err="compaction: group 0@15699422364132557315: compact blocks [/var/thanos/compact/compact/0@15699422364132557315/01HKZGQGJCKQWF3XMA8EXAMPLE /var/thanos/compact/compact/0@15699422364132557315/01HKZQK7TD06J2XWGR5EXAMPLE /var/thanos/compact/compact/0@15699422364132557315/01HKZYEZ2DVDQXF1STVEXAMPLE /var/thanos/compact/compact/0@15699422364132557315/01HM05APAHXBQSNC0N5EXAMPLE]: populate block: chunk iter: cannot populate chunk 8 from block 01HKZYEZ2DVDQXF1STVEXAMPLE: segment index 0 out of range"
1.29.2. Resolving the problem: Add the thanos bucket verify command
Add the thanos bucket verify
command to the object storage configuration. Complete the following steps:
Resolve the block error by adding the
thanos bucket verify
command to the object storage configuration. Set the configuration in theobservability-thanos-compact
pod by using the following commands:oc rsh observability-thanos-compact-0 [..] thanos tools bucket verify -r --objstore.config="$OBJSTORE_CONFIG" --objstore-backup.config="$OBJSTORE_CONFIG" --id=01HKZYEZ2DVDQXF1STVEXAMPLE
If the previous command does not work, you must mark the block for deletion because it might be corrupted. Run the following commands:
thanos tools bucket mark --id "01HKZYEZ2DVDQXF1STVEXAMPLE" --objstore.config="$OBJSTORE_CONFIG" --marker=deletion-mark.json --details=DELETE
If you blocked for deletion, clean up the marked blocks by running the following command:
thanos tools bucket cleanup --objstore.config="$OBJSTORE_CONFIG"
1.30. Troubleshooting Submariner not connecting after installation
If Submariner does not run correctly after you configure it, complete the following steps to diagnose the issue.
1.30.1. Symptom: Submariner not connecting after installation
Your Submariner network is not communicating after installation.
1.30.2. Identifying the problem: Submariner not connecting after installation
If the network connectivity is not established after deploying Submariner, begin the troubleshooting steps. Note that it might take several minutes for the processes to complete when you deploy Submariner.
1.30.3. Resolving the problem: Submariner not connecting after installation
When Submariner does not run correctly after deployment, complete the following steps:
Check for the following requirements to determine whether the components of Submariner deployed correctly:
-
The
submariner-addon
pod is running in theopen-cluster-management
namespace of your hub cluster. The following pods are running in the
submariner-operator
namespace of each managed cluster:- submariner-addon
- submariner-gateway
- submariner-routeagent
- submariner-operator
- submariner-globalnet (only if Globalnet is enabled in the ClusterSet)
- submariner-lighthouse-agent
- submariner-lighthouse-coredns
-
submariner-networkplugin-syncer (only if the specified CNI value is
OVNKubernetes
) - submariner-metrics-proxy
-
The
-
Run the
subctl diagnose all
command to check the status of the required pods, with the exception of thesubmariner-addon
pods. -
Make sure to run the
must-gather
command to collect logs that can help with debugging issues.
1.31. Troubleshooting Submariner end-to-end test failures
After running Submariner end-to-end tests, you might get failures. Use the following sections to help you troubleshoot these end-to-end test failures.
1.31.1. Symptom: Submariner end-to-end data plane test fails
When the end-to-end data plane test fails, the Submariner tests show that the connector
pod can connect to the listener
pod, but later the connector
pod gets stuck in the listening
phase.
1.31.2. Resolving the problem: Submariner end-to-end data plane test fails
The maximum transmission unit (MTU) can cause the end-to-end data plane test failure. For example, the MTU might cause the inter-cluster
traffic over the Internet Protocol Security (IPsec) to fail. Verify if the MTU causes the failure by running an end-to-end data plane test that uses a small packet size.
To run this type of test, run the following command in your Submariner workspace:
subctl verify --verbose --only connectivity --context <from_context> --tocontext <to_context> --image-override submariner-nettest=quay.io/submariner/nettest:devel --packet-size 200
If the test succeeds with this small packet size, you can resolve the connection issues by setting the transmission control protocol (TCP) maximum segment size (MSS). Set the TCP MSS by completing the following steps:
Set the TCP MSS
clamping
value by annotating the gateway node. For example, run the following command with a value of1200
:oc annotate node <node_name> submariner.io/tcp-clamp-mss=1200
Restart all the
RouteAgent
pods by running the following command:oc delete pod -n submariner-operator -l app=submariner-routeagent
1.31.3. Symptom: Submariner end-to-end test fails for bare-metal clusters
The end-to-end data plane tests might fail for the bare-metal cluster if the container network interface (CNI) is OpenShiftSDN, or if the virtual extensible local-area network (VXLAN) is used for the inter-cluster
tunnels.
1.31.4. Resolving the problem: Submariner end-to-end test fails for bare-metal clusters
A bug in the User Datagram Protocal (UDP) checksum calculation by the hardware can be the root cause for the end-to-end data plane test failures for bare-metal clusters. To troubleshoot this bug, disable the hardware offloading by applying the following YAML file:
apiVersion: apps/v1 kind: DaemonSet metadata: name: disable-offload namespace: submariner-operator spec: selector: matchLabels: app: disable-offload template: metadata: labels: app: disable-offload spec: tolerations: - operator: Exists containers: - name: disable-offload image: nicolaka/netshoot imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent securityContext: allowPrivilegeEscalation: true capabilities: add: - net_admin drop: - all privileged: true readOnlyRootFilesystem: false runAsNonRoot: false command: ["/bin/sh", "-c"] args: - ethtool --offload vxlan-tunnel rx off tx off; ethtool --offload vx-submariner rx off tx off; sleep infinity restartPolicy: Always securityContext: {} serviceAccount: submariner-routeagent serviceAccountName: submariner-routeagent hostNetwork: true
1.32. Troubleshooting restore status finishes with errors
After you restore a backup, resources are restored correctly but the Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management restore resource shows a FinishedWithErrors
status.
1.32.1. Symptom: Troubleshooting restore status finishes with errors
Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management shows a FinishedWithErrors
status and one or more of the Velero restore resources created by the Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management restore show a PartiallyFailed
status.
1.32.2. Resolving the problem: Troubleshooting restore status finishes with errors
If you restore from a backup that is empty, you can safely ignore the FinishedWithErrors
status.
Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management for Kubernetes restore shows a cumulative status for all Velero restore resources. If one status is PartiallyFailed
and the others are Completed
, the cumulative status you see is PartiallyFailed
to notify you that there is at least one issue.
To resolve the issue, check the status for all individual Velero restore resources with a PartiallyFailed
status and view the logs for more details. You can get the log from the object storage directly, or download it from the OADP Operator by using the DownloadRequest
custom resource.
To create a DownloadRequest
from the console, complete the following steps:
- Navigate to Operators > Installed Operators > Create DownloadRequest.
-
Select
BackupLog
as your Kind and follow the console instructions to complete theDownloadRequest
creation.
1.33. Troubleshooting multiline YAML parsing
When you want to use the fromSecret
function to add contents of a Secret
resource into a Route
resource, the contents are displayed incorrectly.
1.33.1. Symptom: Troubleshooting multiline YAML parsing
When the managed cluster and hub cluster are the same cluster the certificate data is redacted, so the contents are not parsed as a template JSON string. You might receive the following error messages:
message: >- [spec.tls.caCertificate: Invalid value: "redacted ca certificate data": failed to parse CA certificate: data does not contain any valid RSA or ECDSA certificates, spec.tls.certificate: Invalid value: "redacted certificate data": data does not contain any valid RSA or ECDSA certificates, spec.tls.key: Invalid value: "": no key specified]
1.33.2. Resolving the problem: Troubleshooting multiline YAML parsing
Configure your certificate policy to retrieve the hub cluster and managed cluster fromSecret
values. Use the autoindent
function to update your certificate policy with the following content:
tls: certificate: | {{ print "{{hub fromSecret "open-cluster-management" "minio-cert" "tls.crt" hub}}" | base64dec | autoindent }}