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Chapter 1. Protect your signing data
As a systems administrator, protecting the signing data of your software supply chain is critical when there is data loss due to hardware failure or accidental data deletion. The OpenShift API Data Protection (OADP) product provides data protection to applications running on Red Hat OpenShift. By using the OADP product, this can help us get the software developers back to signing and verifying code as quickly as possible. After installing and configuring the OADP operator you can start backing up and restoring your Red Hat Trusted Artifact Signer (RHTAS) data.
1.1. Installing and configuring the OADP operator
The OpenShift API Data Protection (OADP) operator gives you the ability to backup OpenShift application resources and internal container images. You can use the OADP operator to backup and restore your Trusted Artifact Signer data.
This procedure uses Amazon Web Services (AWS) Simple Storage Service (S3) to create a bucket for illustrating how to configure the OADP operator. You can choose to use a different supported S3-compatible object storage platform instead of AWS, such as Red Hat OpenShift Data Foundation.
Prerequisites
- Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform version 4.13 or later.
-
Access to the OpenShift web console with the
cluster-admin
role. - The ability to create an S3-compatible bucket.
-
A workstation with the
oc
, andaws
binaries installed.
Procedure
Open a terminal on your workstation, and log in to OpenShift:
Syntax
oc login --token=TOKEN --server=SERVER_URL_AND_PORT
Example
$ oc login --token=sha256~ZvFDBvoIYAbVECixS4-WmkN4RfnNd8Neh3y1WuiFPXC --server=https://example.com:6443
NoteYou can find your login token and URL for use on the command line from the OpenShift web console. Log in to the OpenShift web console. Click your user name, and click Copy login command. Offer your user name and password again, if asked, and click Display Token to view the command.
Create a new bucket:
Syntax
export BUCKET=NEW_BUCKET_NAME export REGION=AWS_REGION_ID export USER=OADP_USER_NAME aws s3api create-bucket \ --bucket $BUCKET \ --region $REGION \ --create-bucket-configuration LocationConstraint=$REGION
Example
$ export BUCKET=example-bucket-name $ export REGION=us-east-1 $ export USER=velero $ $ aws s3api create-bucket \ --bucket $BUCKET \ --region $REGION \ --create-bucket-configuration LocationConstraint=$REGION
Create a new user:
Example
$ aws iam create-user --user-name $USER
Create a new policy:
Example
$ cat > velero-policy.json <<EOF { "Version": "2012-10-17", "Statement": [ { "Effect": "Allow", "Action": [ "ec2:DescribeVolumes", "ec2:DescribeSnapshots", "ec2:CreateTags", "ec2:CreateVolume", "ec2:CreateSnapshot", "ec2:DeleteSnapshot" ], "Resource": "*" }, { "Effect": "Allow", "Action": [ "s3:GetObject", "s3:DeleteObject", "s3:PutObject", "s3:AbortMultipartUpload", "s3:ListMultipartUploadParts" ], "Resource": [ "arn:aws:s3:::${BUCKET}/*" ] }, { "Effect": "Allow", "Action": [ "s3:ListBucket", "s3:GetBucketLocation", "s3:ListBucketMultipartUploads" ], "Resource": [ "arn:aws:s3:::${BUCKET}" ] } ] } EOF
Associate this policy to the new user:
Example
$ aws iam put-user-policy \ --user-name $USER \ --policy-name velero \ --policy-document file://velero-policy.json
Create an access key:
Example
$ aws iam create-access-key --user-name $USER --output=json | jq -r '.AccessKey | [ "export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=" + .AccessKeyId, "export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=" + .SecretAccessKey ] | join("\n")'
Create a credentials file with your AWS secret key information:
Syntax
cat << EOF > ./credentials-velero [default] aws_access_key_id=$AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID aws_secret_access_key=$AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY EOF
-
Log in to the OpenShift web console with a user that has the
cluster-admin
role. - From the Administrator perspective, expand the Operators navigation menu, and click OperatorHub.
- In the search field, type oadp, and click the OADP Operator tile provided by Red Hat.
- Click the Install button to show the operator details.
- Accept the default values, click Install on the Install Operator page, and wait for the installation to finish.
After the operator installation finishes, from your workstation terminal, create a secret resource for OpenShift with your AWS credentials:
Example
$ oc create secret generic cloud-credentials -n openshift-adp --from-file cloud=credentials-velero
- From the OpenShift web console, click the View Operator button.
- Click Create instance on the DataProtectionApplication (DPA) tile.
- On the Create DataProtectionApplication page, select YAML view.
Edit the following values in the resource file:
-
Under the
metadata
section, replacevelero-sample
withvelero
. -
Under the
spec.configuration.nodeAgent
section, replacerestic
withkopia
. -
Under the
spec.configuration.velero
section, addresourceTimeout: 10m
. -
Under the
spec.configuration.velero.defaultPlugins
section, add- csi
. -
Under the
spec.snapshotLocations
section, replace theus-west-2
value with your AWS regional value. -
Under the
spec.backupLocations
section, replace theus-east-1
value with your AWS regional value. -
Under the
spec.backupLocations.objectStorage
section, replacemy-bucket-name
with your bucket name. Replacevelero
with your bucket prefix name, if you use a different prefix.
-
Under the
- Click the Create button.
Additional resources
1.2. Backing up your Trusted Artifact Signer data
With the OpenShift API Data Protection (OADP) operator installed and an instance deployed, you can create a volume snapshot resource, and a backup resource to backup your Red Hat Trusted Artifact Signer data.
Prerequisites
- Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform version 4.13 or later.
-
Access to the OpenShift web console with the
cluster-admin
role. - Installation of the OADP operator.
-
A workstation with the
oc
binary installed.
Procedure
Open a terminal on your workstation, and log in to OpenShift:
Syntax
oc login --token=TOKEN --server=SERVER_URL_AND_PORT
Example
$ oc login --token=sha256~ZvFDBvoIYAbVECixS4-WmkN4RfnNd8Neh3y1WuiFPXC --server=https://example.com:6443
NoteYou can find your login token and URL for use on the command line from the OpenShift web console. Log in to the OpenShift web console. Click your user name, and click Copy login command. Offer your user name and password again, if asked, and click Display Token to view the command.
Find and edit the
VolumeSnapshotClass
resource:Example
$ oc get VolumeSnapshotClass -n openshift-adp $ oc edit VolumeSnapshotClass csi-aws-vsc -n openshift-adp
Update the following values in the resource file:
-
Under the
metadata.labels
section, add thevelero.io/csi-volumesnapshot-class: "true"
label. - Save your changes, and quit the editor.
-
Under the
Create a
Backup
resource:Example
$ cat <<EOF | oc apply -f - apiVersion: velero.io/v1 kind: Backup metadata: name: rhtas-backup labels: velero.io/storage-location: velero-1 namespace: openshift-adp spec: schedule: 0 7 * * * hooks: {} includedNamespaces: - trusted-artifact-signer includedResources: [] excludedResources: [] snapshotMoveData: true storageLocation: velero-1 ttl: 720h0m0s EOF
Add the schedule property to enable Cron scheduling for running this backup. In the example, this backup resource runs everyday at 7:00 a.m.
By default, all resources are backed up within the trusted-artifact-signer namespace. You can specify what resources you want to include or exclude by using the includeResources or excludedResources properties respectively.
ImportantDepending on the storage class of the backup target, persistent volumes cannot be actively in-use for the backup to be successful.
1.3. Restoring your Trusted Artifact Signer data
With the Red Hat Trusted Artifact Signer (RHTAS) and OpenShift API Data Protection (OADP) operators installed, and a backup resource for RHTAS namespace, you can restore your data to an OpenShift cluster.
Prerequisites
- Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform version 4.13 or later.
-
Access to the OpenShift web console with the
cluster-admin
role. - Installation of the RHTAS operator.
- Installation of the OADP operator.
-
A backup resource of the
trusted-artifact-signer
namespace structure. -
A workstation with the
oc
binary installed.
Procedure
Disable the RHTAS operator:
Example
$ oc scale deploy rhtas-operator-controller-manager --replicas=0 -n openshift-operators
Create the
Restore
resource:Example
$ cat <<EOF | oc apply -f - apiVersion: velero.io/v1 kind: Restore metadata: name: rhtas-restore namespace: openshift-adp spec: backupName: rhtas-backup includedResources: [] restoreStatus: includedResources: - securesign.rhtas.redhat.com - trillian.rhtas.redhat.com - ctlog.rhtas.redhat.com - fulcio.rhtas.redhat.com - rekor.rhtas.redhat.com - tuf.rhtas.redhat.com - timestampauthority.rhtas.redhat.com excludedResources: - pod - deployment - nodes - route - service - replicaset - events - cronjob - events.events.k8s.io - backups.velero.io - restores.velero.io - resticrepositories.velero.io - pods - deployments restorePVs: true existingResourcePolicy: update EOF
Enable the RHTAS operator:
Example
$ oc scale deploy rhtas-operator-controller-manager --replicas=1 -n openshift-operators