Ce contenu n'est pas disponible dans la langue sélectionnée.
Chapter 12. Managing control plane machines
12.1. About control plane machine sets
With control plane machine sets, you can automate management of the control plane machine resources within your OpenShift Container Platform cluster.
Control plane machine sets cannot manage compute machines, and compute machine sets cannot manage control plane machines.
Control plane machine sets provide for control plane machines similar management capabilities as compute machine sets provide for compute machines. However, these two types of machine sets are separate custom resources defined within the Machine API and have several fundamental differences in their architecture and functionality.
12.1.1. Control Plane Machine Set Operator overview
The Control Plane Machine Set Operator uses the ControlPlaneMachineSet
custom resource (CR) to automate management of the control plane machine resources within your OpenShift Container Platform cluster.
When the state of the cluster control plane machine set is set to Active
, the Operator ensures that the cluster has the correct number of control plane machines with the specified configuration. This allows the automated replacement of degraded control plane machines and rollout of changes to the control plane.
A cluster has only one control plane machine set, and the Operator only manages objects in the openshift-machine-api
namespace.
12.1.1.1. Control Plane Machine Set Operator limitations
The Control Plane Machine Set Operator has the following limitations:
- Only Amazon Web Services (AWS), Google Cloud Platform (GCP), IBM Power® Virtual Server, Microsoft Azure, Nutanix, VMware vSphere, and Red Hat OpenStack Platform (RHOSP) clusters are supported.
Clusters that do not have preexisting machines that represent the control plane nodes cannot use a control plane machine set or enable the use of a control plane machine set after installation. Generally, preexisting control plane machines are only present if a cluster was installed using infrastructure provisioned by the installation program.
To determine if a cluster has the required preexisting control plane machines, run the following command as a user with administrator privileges:
$ oc get machine \ -n openshift-machine-api \ -l machine.openshift.io/cluster-api-machine-role=master
Example output showing preexisting control plane machines
NAME PHASE TYPE REGION ZONE AGE <infrastructure_id>-master-0 Running m6i.xlarge us-west-1 us-west-1a 5h19m <infrastructure_id>-master-1 Running m6i.xlarge us-west-1 us-west-1b 5h19m <infrastructure_id>-master-2 Running m6i.xlarge us-west-1 us-west-1a 5h19m
Example output missing preexisting control plane machines
No resources found in openshift-machine-api namespace.
-
The Operator requires the Machine API Operator to be operational and is therefore not supported on clusters with manually provisioned machines. When installing a OpenShift Container Platform cluster with manually provisioned machines for a platform that creates an active generated
ControlPlaneMachineSet
custom resource (CR), you must remove the Kubernetes manifest files that define the control plane machine set as instructed in the installation process. - Only clusters with three control plane machines are supported.
- Horizontal scaling of the control plane is not supported.
- Deploying Azure control plane machines on Ephemeral OS disks increases risk for data loss and is not supported.
Deploying control plane machines as AWS Spot Instances, GCP preemptible VMs, or Azure Spot VMs is not supported.
ImportantAttempting to deploy control plane machines as AWS Spot Instances, GCP preemptible VMs, or Azure Spot VMs might cause the cluster to lose etcd quorum. A cluster that loses all control plane machines simultaneously is unrecoverable.
- Making changes to the control plane machine set during or prior to installation is not supported. You must make any changes to the control plane machine set only after installation.
12.1.2. Additional resources
12.2. Getting started with control plane machine sets
The process for getting started with control plane machine sets depends on the state of the ControlPlaneMachineSet
custom resource (CR) in your cluster.
- Clusters with an active generated CR
- Clusters that have a generated CR with an active state use the control plane machine set by default. No administrator action is required.
- Clusters with an inactive generated CR
- For clusters that include an inactive generated CR, you must review the CR configuration and activate the CR.
- Clusters without a generated CR
- For clusters that do not include a generated CR, you must create and activate a CR with the appropriate configuration for your cluster.
If you are uncertain about the state of the ControlPlaneMachineSet
CR in your cluster, you can verify the CR status.
12.2.1. Supported cloud providers
In OpenShift Container Platform 4.17, the control plane machine set is supported for Amazon Web Services (AWS), Google Cloud Platform (GCP), Microsoft Azure, Nutanix, and VMware vSphere clusters.
The status of the control plane machine set after installation depends on your cloud provider and the version of OpenShift Container Platform that you installed on your cluster.
Cloud provider | Active by default | Generated CR | Manual CR required |
---|---|---|---|
Amazon Web Services (AWS) | X [1] | X | |
Google Cloud Platform (GCP) | X [2] | X | |
Microsoft Azure | X [2] | X | |
Nutanix | X [3] | X | |
Red Hat OpenStack Platform (RHOSP) | X [3] | X | |
VMware vSphere | X [4] | X |
- AWS clusters that are upgraded from version 4.11 or earlier require CR activation.
- GCP and Azure clusters that are upgraded from version 4.12 or earlier require CR activation.
- Nutanix and RHOSP clusters that are upgraded from version 4.13 or earlier require CR activation.
- vSphere clusters that are upgraded from version 4.15 or earlier require CR activation.
12.2.2. Checking the control plane machine set custom resource state
You can verify the existence and state of the ControlPlaneMachineSet
custom resource (CR).
Procedure
Determine the state of the CR by running the following command:
$ oc get controlplanemachineset.machine.openshift.io cluster \ --namespace openshift-machine-api
-
A result of
Active
indicates that theControlPlaneMachineSet
CR exists and is activated. No administrator action is required. -
A result of
Inactive
indicates that aControlPlaneMachineSet
CR exists but is not activated. -
A result of
NotFound
indicates that there is no existingControlPlaneMachineSet
CR.
-
A result of
Next steps
To use the control plane machine set, you must ensure that a ControlPlaneMachineSet
CR with the correct settings for your cluster exists.
- If your cluster has an existing CR, you must verify that the configuration in the CR is correct for your cluster.
- If your cluster does not have an existing CR, you must create one with the correct configuration for your cluster.
12.2.3. Activating the control plane machine set custom resource
To use the control plane machine set, you must ensure that a ControlPlaneMachineSet
custom resource (CR) with the correct settings for your cluster exists. On a cluster with a generated CR, you must verify that the configuration in the CR is correct for your cluster and activate it.
For more information about the parameters in the CR, see "Control plane machine set configuration".
Procedure
View the configuration of the CR by running the following command:
$ oc --namespace openshift-machine-api edit controlplanemachineset.machine.openshift.io cluster
- Change the values of any fields that are incorrect for your cluster configuration.
When the configuration is correct, activate the CR by setting the
.spec.state
field toActive
and saving your changes.ImportantTo activate the CR, you must change the
.spec.state
field toActive
in the sameoc edit
session that you use to update the CR configuration. If the CR is saved with the state left asInactive
, the control plane machine set generator resets the CR to its original settings.
Additional resources
12.2.4. Creating a control plane machine set custom resource
To use the control plane machine set, you must ensure that a ControlPlaneMachineSet
custom resource (CR) with the correct settings for your cluster exists. On a cluster without a generated CR, you must create the CR manually and activate it.
For more information about the structure and parameters of the CR, see "Control plane machine set configuration".
Procedure
Create a YAML file using the following template:
Control plane machine set CR YAML file template
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet metadata: name: cluster namespace: openshift-machine-api spec: replicas: 3 selector: matchLabels: machine.openshift.io/cluster-api-cluster: <cluster_id> 1 machine.openshift.io/cluster-api-machine-role: master machine.openshift.io/cluster-api-machine-type: master state: Active 2 strategy: type: RollingUpdate 3 template: machineType: machines_v1beta1_machine_openshift_io machines_v1beta1_machine_openshift_io: failureDomains: platform: <platform> 4 <platform_failure_domains> 5 metadata: labels: machine.openshift.io/cluster-api-cluster: <cluster_id> 6 machine.openshift.io/cluster-api-machine-role: master machine.openshift.io/cluster-api-machine-type: master spec: providerSpec: value: <platform_provider_spec> 7
- 1
- Specify the infrastructure ID that is based on the cluster ID that you set when you provisioned the cluster. You must specify this value when you create a
ControlPlaneMachineSet
CR. If you have the OpenShift CLI (oc
) installed, you can obtain the infrastructure ID by running the following command:$ oc get -o jsonpath='{.status.infrastructureName}{"\n"}' infrastructure cluster
- 2
- Specify the state of the Operator. When the state is
Inactive
, the Operator is not operational. You can activate the Operator by setting the value toActive
.ImportantBefore you activate the CR, you must ensure that its configuration is correct for your cluster requirements.
- 3
- Specify the update strategy for the cluster. Valid values are
OnDelete
andRollingUpdate
. The default value isRollingUpdate
. For more information about update strategies, see "Updating the control plane configuration". - 4
- Specify your cloud provider platform name. Valid values are
AWS
,Azure
,GCP
,Nutanix
,VSphere
, andOpenStack
. - 5
- Add the
<platform_failure_domains>
configuration for the cluster. The format and values of this section are provider-specific. For more information, see the sample failure domain configuration for your cloud provider. - 6
- Specify the infrastructure ID.
- 7
- Add the
<platform_provider_spec>
configuration for the cluster. The format and values of this section are provider-specific. For more information, see the sample provider specification for your cloud provider.
- Refer to the sample YAML for a control plane machine set CR and populate your file with values that are appropriate for your cluster configuration.
- Refer to the sample failure domain configuration and sample provider specification for your cloud provider and update those sections of your file with the appropriate values.
-
When the configuration is correct, activate the CR by setting the
.spec.state
field toActive
and saving your changes. Create the CR from your YAML file by running the following command:
$ oc create -f <control_plane_machine_set>.yaml
where
<control_plane_machine_set>
is the name of the YAML file that contains the CR configuration.
12.3. Managing control plane machines with control plane machine sets
Control plane machine sets automate several essential aspects of control plane management.
12.3.1. Updating the control plane configuration
You can make changes to the configuration of the machines in the control plane by updating the specification in the control plane machine set custom resource (CR).
The Control Plane Machine Set Operator monitors the control plane machines and compares their configuration with the specification in the control plane machine set CR. When there is a discrepancy between the specification in the CR and the configuration of a control plane machine, the Operator marks that control plane machine for replacement.
For more information about the parameters in the CR, see "Control plane machine set configuration".
Prerequisites
- Your cluster has an activated and functioning Control Plane Machine Set Operator.
Procedure
Edit your control plane machine set CR by running the following command:
$ oc edit controlplanemachineset.machine.openshift.io cluster \ -n openshift-machine-api
- Change the values of any fields that you want to update in your cluster configuration.
- Save your changes.
Next steps
-
For clusters that use the default
RollingUpdate
update strategy, the control plane machine set propagates changes to your control plane configuration automatically. -
For clusters that are configured to use the
OnDelete
update strategy, you must replace your control plane machines manually.
12.3.1.1. Automatic updates to the control plane configuration
The RollingUpdate
update strategy automatically propagates changes to your control plane configuration. This update strategy is the default configuration for the control plane machine set.
For clusters that use the RollingUpdate
update strategy, the Operator creates a replacement control plane machine with the configuration that is specified in the CR. When the replacement control plane machine is ready, the Operator deletes the control plane machine that is marked for replacement. The replacement machine then joins the control plane.
If multiple control plane machines are marked for replacement, the Operator protects etcd health during replacement by repeating this replacement process one machine at a time until it has replaced each machine.
12.3.1.2. Manual updates to the control plane configuration
You can use the OnDelete
update strategy to propagate changes to your control plane configuration by replacing machines manually. Manually replacing machines allows you to test changes to your configuration on a single machine before applying the changes more broadly.
For clusters that are configured to use the OnDelete
update strategy, the Operator creates a replacement control plane machine when you delete an existing machine. When the replacement control plane machine is ready, the etcd Operator allows the existing machine to be deleted. The replacement machine then joins the control plane.
If multiple control plane machines are deleted, the Operator creates all of the required replacement machines simultaneously. The Operator maintains etcd health by preventing more than one machine being removed from the control plane at once.
12.3.2. Replacing a control plane machine
To replace a control plane machine in a cluster that has a control plane machine set, you delete the machine manually. The control plane machine set replaces the deleted machine with one using the specification in the control plane machine set custom resource (CR).
Prerequisites
If your cluster runs on Red Hat OpenStack Platform (RHOSP) and you need to evacuate a compute server, such as for an upgrade, you must disable the RHOSP compute node that the machine runs on by running the following command:
$ openstack compute service set <target_node_host_name> nova-compute --disable
For more information, see Preparing to migrate in the RHOSP documentation.
Procedure
List the control plane machines in your cluster by running the following command:
$ oc get machines \ -l machine.openshift.io/cluster-api-machine-role==master \ -n openshift-machine-api
Delete a control plane machine by running the following command:
$ oc delete machine \ -n openshift-machine-api \ <control_plane_machine_name> 1
- 1
- Specify the name of the control plane machine to delete.
NoteIf you delete multiple control plane machines, the control plane machine set replaces them according to the configured update strategy:
-
For clusters that use the default
RollingUpdate
update strategy, the Operator replaces one machine at a time until each machine is replaced. -
For clusters that are configured to use the
OnDelete
update strategy, the Operator creates all of the required replacement machines simultaneously.
Both strategies maintain etcd health during control plane machine replacement.
12.3.3. Additional resources
12.4. Control plane machine set configuration
This example YAML snippet shows the base structure for a control plane machine set custom resource (CR).
12.4.1. Sample YAML for a control plane machine set custom resource
The base of the ControlPlaneMachineSet
CR is structured the same way for all platforms.
Sample ControlPlaneMachineSet
CR YAML file
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet metadata: name: cluster 1 namespace: openshift-machine-api spec: replicas: 3 2 selector: matchLabels: machine.openshift.io/cluster-api-cluster: <cluster_id> 3 machine.openshift.io/cluster-api-machine-role: master machine.openshift.io/cluster-api-machine-type: master state: Active 4 strategy: type: RollingUpdate 5 template: machineType: machines_v1beta1_machine_openshift_io machines_v1beta1_machine_openshift_io: failureDomains: platform: <platform> 6 <platform_failure_domains> 7 metadata: labels: machine.openshift.io/cluster-api-cluster: <cluster_id> machine.openshift.io/cluster-api-machine-role: master machine.openshift.io/cluster-api-machine-type: master spec: providerSpec: value: <platform_provider_spec> 8
- 1
- Specifies the name of the
ControlPlaneMachineSet
CR, which iscluster
. Do not change this value. - 2
- Specifies the number of control plane machines. Only clusters with three control plane machines are supported, so the
replicas
value is3
. Horizontal scaling is not supported. Do not change this value. - 3
- Specifies the infrastructure ID that is based on the cluster ID that you set when you provisioned the cluster. You must specify this value when you create a
ControlPlaneMachineSet
CR. If you have the OpenShift CLI (oc
) installed, you can obtain the infrastructure ID by running the following command:$ oc get -o jsonpath='{.status.infrastructureName}{"\n"}' infrastructure cluster
- 4
- Specifies the state of the Operator. When the state is
Inactive
, the Operator is not operational. You can activate the Operator by setting the value toActive
.ImportantBefore you activate the Operator, you must ensure that the
ControlPlaneMachineSet
CR configuration is correct for your cluster requirements. For more information about activating the Control Plane Machine Set Operator, see "Getting started with control plane machine sets". - 5
- Specifies the update strategy for the cluster. The allowed values are
OnDelete
andRollingUpdate
. The default value isRollingUpdate
. For more information about update strategies, see "Updating the control plane configuration". - 6
- Specifies the cloud provider platform name. Do not change this value.
- 7
- Specifies the
<platform_failure_domains>
configuration for the cluster. The format and values of this section are provider-specific. For more information, see the sample failure domain configuration for your cloud provider. - 8
- Specifies the
<platform_provider_spec>
configuration for the cluster. The format and values of this section are provider-specific. For more information, see the sample provider specification for your cloud provider.
Additional resources
12.4.2. Provider-specific configuration options
The <platform_provider_spec>
and <platform_failure_domains>
sections of the control plane machine set manifests are provider specific. For provider-specific configuration options for your cluster, see the following resources:
- Control plane configuration options for Amazon Web Services
- Control plane configuration options for Google Cloud Platform
- Control plane configuration options for Microsoft Azure
- Control plane configuration options for Nutanix
- Control plane configuration options for Red Hat OpenStack Platform (RHOSP)
- Control plane configuration options for VMware vSphere
12.5. Configuration options for control plane machines
12.5.1. Control plane configuration options for Amazon Web Services
You can change the configuration of your Amazon Web Services (AWS) control plane machines and enable features by updating values in the control plane machine set. When you save an update to the control plane machine set, the Control Plane Machine Set Operator updates the control plane machines according to your configured update strategy.
12.5.1.1. Sample YAML for configuring Amazon Web Services clusters
The following example YAML snippets show provider specification and failure domain configurations for an AWS cluster.
12.5.1.1.1. Sample AWS provider specification
When you create a control plane machine set for an existing cluster, the provider specification must match the providerSpec
configuration in the control plane machine custom resource (CR) that is created by the installation program. You can omit any field that is set in the failure domain section of the CR.
In the following example, <cluster_id>
is the infrastructure ID that is based on the cluster ID that you set when you provisioned the cluster. If you have the OpenShift CLI installed, you can obtain the infrastructure ID by running the following command:
$ oc get -o jsonpath='{.status.infrastructureName}{"\n"}' infrastructure cluster
Sample AWS providerSpec
values
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet metadata: name: cluster namespace: openshift-machine-api spec: # ... template: # ... spec: providerSpec: value: ami: id: ami-<ami_id_string> 1 apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1beta1 blockDevices: - ebs: 2 encrypted: true iops: 0 kmsKey: arn: "" volumeSize: 120 volumeType: gp3 credentialsSecret: name: aws-cloud-credentials 3 deviceIndex: 0 iamInstanceProfile: id: <cluster_id>-master-profile 4 instanceType: m6i.xlarge 5 kind: AWSMachineProviderConfig 6 loadBalancers: 7 - name: <cluster_id>-int type: network - name: <cluster_id>-ext type: network metadata: creationTimestamp: null metadataServiceOptions: {} placement: 8 region: <region> 9 availabilityZone: "" 10 tenancy: 11 securityGroups: - filters: - name: tag:Name values: - <cluster_id>-master-sg 12 subnet: {} 13 userDataSecret: name: master-user-data 14
- 1
- Specifies the Red Hat Enterprise Linux CoreOS (RHCOS) Amazon Machine Images (AMI) ID for the cluster. The AMI must belong to the same region as the cluster. If you want to use an AWS Marketplace image, you must complete the OpenShift Container Platform subscription from the AWS Marketplace to obtain an AMI ID for your region.
- 2
- Specifies the configuration of an encrypted EBS volume.
- 3
- Specifies the secret name for the cluster. Do not change this value.
- 4
- Specifies the AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) instance profile. Do not change this value.
- 5
- Specifies the AWS instance type for the control plane.
- 6
- Specifies the cloud provider platform type. Do not change this value.
- 7
- Specifies the internal (
int
) and external (ext
) load balancers for the cluster.NoteYou can omit the external (
ext
) load balancer parameters on private OpenShift Container Platform clusters. - 8
- Specifies where to create the control plane instance in AWS.
- 9
- Specifies the AWS region for the cluster.
- 10
- This parameter is configured in the failure domain and is shown with an empty value here. If a value specified for this parameter differs from the value in the failure domain, the Control Plane Machine Set Operator overwrites it with the value in the failure domain.
- 11
- Specifies the AWS Dedicated Instance configuration for the control plane. For more information, see AWS documentation about Dedicated Instances. The following values are valid:
-
default
: The Dedicated Instance runs on shared hardware. -
dedicated
: The Dedicated Instance runs on single-tenant hardware. -
host
: The Dedicated Instance runs on a Dedicated Host, which is an isolated server with configurations that you can control.
-
- 12
- Specifies the control plane machines security group.
- 13
- This parameter is configured in the failure domain and is shown with an empty value here. If a value specified for this parameter differs from the value in the failure domain, the Control Plane Machine Set Operator overwrites it with the value in the failure domain.Note
If the failure domain configuration does not specify a value, the value in the provider specification is used. Configuring a subnet in the failure domain overwrites the subnet value in the provider specification.
- 14
- Specifies the control plane user data secret. Do not change this value.
12.5.1.1.2. Sample AWS failure domain configuration
The control plane machine set concept of a failure domain is analogous to existing AWS concept of an Availability Zone (AZ). The ControlPlaneMachineSet
CR spreads control plane machines across multiple failure domains when possible.
When configuring AWS failure domains in the control plane machine set, you must specify the availability zone name and the subnet to use.
Sample AWS failure domain values
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet metadata: name: cluster namespace: openshift-machine-api spec: # ... template: # ... machines_v1beta1_machine_openshift_io: failureDomains: aws: - placement: availabilityZone: <aws_zone_a> 1 subnet: 2 filters: - name: tag:Name values: - <cluster_id>-private-<aws_zone_a> 3 type: Filters 4 - placement: availabilityZone: <aws_zone_b> 5 subnet: filters: - name: tag:Name values: - <cluster_id>-private-<aws_zone_b> 6 type: Filters platform: AWS 7 # ...
- 1
- Specifies an AWS availability zone for the first failure domain.
- 2
- Specifies a subnet configuration. In this example, the subnet type is
Filters
, so there is afilters
stanza. - 3
- Specifies the subnet name for the first failure domain, using the infrastructure ID and the AWS availability zone.
- 4
- Specifies the subnet type. The allowed values are:
ARN
,Filters
andID
. The default value isFilters
. - 5
- Specifies the subnet name for an additional failure domain, using the infrastructure ID and the AWS availability zone.
- 6
- Specifies the cluster’s infrastructure ID and the AWS availability zone for the additional failure domain.
- 7
- Specifies the cloud provider platform name. Do not change this value.
12.5.1.2. Enabling Amazon Web Services features for control plane machines
You can enable features by updating values in the control plane machine set.
12.5.1.2.1. Restricting the API server to private
After you deploy a cluster to Amazon Web Services (AWS), you can reconfigure the API server to use only the private zone.
Prerequisites
-
Install the OpenShift CLI (
oc
). -
Have access to the web console as a user with
admin
privileges.
Procedure
In the web portal or console for your cloud provider, take the following actions:
Locate and delete the appropriate load balancer component:
- For AWS, delete the external load balancer. The API DNS entry in the private zone already points to the internal load balancer, which uses an identical configuration, so you do not need to modify the internal load balancer.
-
Delete the
api.$clustername.$yourdomain
DNS entry in the public zone.
Remove the external load balancers by deleting the following indicated lines in the control plane machine set custom resource:
# ... providerSpec: value: # ... loadBalancers: - name: lk4pj-ext 1 type: network 2 - name: lk4pj-int type: network # ...
Additional resources
12.5.1.2.2. Changing the Amazon Web Services instance type by using a control plane machine set
You can change the Amazon Web Services (AWS) instance type that your control plane machines use by updating the specification in the control plane machine set custom resource (CR).
Prerequisites
- Your AWS cluster uses a control plane machine set.
Procedure
Edit the following line under the
providerSpec
field:providerSpec: value: ... instanceType: <compatible_aws_instance_type> 1
- 1
- Specify a larger AWS instance type with the same base as the previous selection. For example, you can change
m6i.xlarge
tom6i.2xlarge
orm6i.4xlarge
.
- Save your changes.
12.5.1.2.3. Assigning machines to placement groups for Elastic Fabric Adapter instances by using machine sets
You can configure a machine set to deploy machines on Elastic Fabric Adapter (EFA) instances within an existing AWS placement group.
EFA instances do not require placement groups, and you can use placement groups for purposes other than configuring an EFA. This example uses both to demonstrate a configuration that can improve network performance for machines within the specified placement group.
Prerequisites
You created a placement group in the AWS console.
NoteEnsure that the rules and limitations for the type of placement group that you create are compatible with your intended use case. The control plane machine set spreads the control plane machines across multiple failure domains when possible. To use placement groups for the control plane, you must use a placement group type that can span multiple Availability Zones.
Procedure
- In a text editor, open the YAML file for an existing machine set or create a new one.
Edit the following lines under the
providerSpec
field:apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet # ... spec: template: spec: providerSpec: value: instanceType: <supported_instance_type> 1 networkInterfaceType: EFA 2 placement: availabilityZone: <zone> 3 region: <region> 4 placementGroupName: <placement_group> 5 placementGroupPartition: <placement_group_partition_number> 6 # ...
- 1
- Specify an instance type that supports EFAs.
- 2
- Specify the
EFA
network interface type. - 3
- Specify the zone, for example,
us-east-1a
. - 4
- Specify the region, for example,
us-east-1
. - 5
- Specify the name of the existing AWS placement group to deploy machines in.
- 6
- Optional: Specify the partition number of the existing AWS placement group to deploy machines in.
Verification
In the AWS console, find a machine that the machine set created and verify the following in the machine properties:
-
The placement group field has the value that you specified for the
placementGroupName
parameter in the machine set. -
The partition number field has the value that you specified for the
placementGroupPartition
parameter in the machine set. - The interface type field indicates that it uses an EFA.
-
The placement group field has the value that you specified for the
12.5.1.2.4. Machine set options for the Amazon EC2 Instance Metadata Service
You can use machine sets to create machines that use a specific version of the Amazon EC2 Instance Metadata Service (IMDS). Machine sets can create machines that allow the use of both IMDSv1 and IMDSv2 or machines that require the use of IMDSv2.
Using IMDSv2 is only supported on AWS clusters that were created with OpenShift Container Platform version 4.7 or later.
Before configuring a machine set to create machines that require IMDSv2, ensure that any workloads that interact with the AWS metadata service support IMDSv2.
12.5.1.2.4.1. Configuring IMDS by using machine sets
You can specify whether to require the use of IMDSv2 by adding or editing the value of metadataServiceOptions.authentication
in the machine set YAML file for your machines.
Prerequisites
- To use IMDSv2, your AWS cluster must have been created with OpenShift Container Platform version 4.7 or later.
Procedure
Add or edit the following lines under the
providerSpec
field:providerSpec: value: metadataServiceOptions: authentication: Required 1
- 1
- To require IMDSv2, set the parameter value to
Required
. To allow the use of both IMDSv1 and IMDSv2, set the parameter value toOptional
. If no value is specified, both IMDSv1 and IMDSv2 are allowed.
12.5.1.2.5. Machine sets that deploy machines as Dedicated Instances
You can create a machine set running on AWS that deploys machines as Dedicated Instances. Dedicated Instances run in a virtual private cloud (VPC) on hardware that is dedicated to a single customer. These Amazon EC2 instances are physically isolated at the host hardware level. The isolation of Dedicated Instances occurs even if the instances belong to different AWS accounts that are linked to a single payer account. However, other instances that are not dedicated can share hardware with Dedicated Instances if they belong to the same AWS account.
Instances with either public or dedicated tenancy are supported by the Machine API. Instances with public tenancy run on shared hardware. Public tenancy is the default tenancy. Instances with dedicated tenancy run on single-tenant hardware.
12.5.1.2.5.1. Creating Dedicated Instances by using machine sets
You can run a machine that is backed by a Dedicated Instance by using Machine API integration. Set the tenancy
field in your machine set YAML file to launch a Dedicated Instance on AWS.
Procedure
Specify a dedicated tenancy under the
providerSpec
field:providerSpec: placement: tenancy: dedicated
12.5.2. Control plane configuration options for Microsoft Azure
You can change the configuration of your Microsoft Azure control plane machines and enable features by updating values in the control plane machine set. When you save an update to the control plane machine set, the Control Plane Machine Set Operator updates the control plane machines according to your configured update strategy.
12.5.2.1. Sample YAML for configuring Microsoft Azure clusters
The following example YAML snippets show provider specification and failure domain configurations for an Azure cluster.
12.5.2.1.1. Sample Azure provider specification
When you create a control plane machine set for an existing cluster, the provider specification must match the providerSpec
configuration in the control plane Machine
CR that is created by the installation program. You can omit any field that is set in the failure domain section of the CR.
In the following example, <cluster_id>
is the infrastructure ID that is based on the cluster ID that you set when you provisioned the cluster. If you have the OpenShift CLI installed, you can obtain the infrastructure ID by running the following command:
$ oc get -o jsonpath='{.status.infrastructureName}{"\n"}' infrastructure cluster
Sample Azure providerSpec
values
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet metadata: name: cluster namespace: openshift-machine-api spec: # ... template: # ... spec: providerSpec: value: acceleratedNetworking: true apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1beta1 credentialsSecret: name: azure-cloud-credentials 1 namespace: openshift-machine-api diagnostics: {} image: 2 offer: "" publisher: "" resourceID: /resourceGroups/<cluster_id>-rg/providers/Microsoft.Compute/galleries/gallery_<cluster_id>/images/<cluster_id>-gen2/versions/412.86.20220930 3 sku: "" version: "" internalLoadBalancer: <cluster_id>-internal 4 kind: AzureMachineProviderSpec 5 location: <region> 6 managedIdentity: <cluster_id>-identity metadata: creationTimestamp: null name: <cluster_id> networkResourceGroup: <cluster_id>-rg osDisk: 7 diskSettings: {} diskSizeGB: 1024 managedDisk: storageAccountType: Premium_LRS osType: Linux publicIP: false publicLoadBalancer: <cluster_id> 8 resourceGroup: <cluster_id>-rg subnet: <cluster_id>-master-subnet 9 userDataSecret: name: master-user-data 10 vmSize: Standard_D8s_v3 vnet: <cluster_id>-vnet zone: "1" 11
- 1
- Specifies the secret name for the cluster. Do not change this value.
- 2
- Specifies the image details for your control plane machine set.
- 3
- Specifies an image that is compatible with your instance type. The Hyper-V generation V2 images created by the installation program have a
-gen2
suffix, while V1 images have the same name without the suffix. - 4
- Specifies the internal load balancer for the control plane. This field might not be preconfigured but is required in both the
ControlPlaneMachineSet
and control planeMachine
CRs. - 5
- Specifies the cloud provider platform type. Do not change this value.
- 6
- Specifies the region to place control plane machines on.
- 7
- Specifies the disk configuration for the control plane.
- 8
- Specifies the public load balancer for the control plane.Note
You can omit the
publicLoadBalancer
parameter on private OpenShift Container Platform clusters that have user-defined outbound routing. - 9
- Specifies the subnet for the control plane.
- 10
- Specifies the control plane user data secret. Do not change this value.
- 11
- Specifies the zone configuration for clusters that use a single zone for all failure domains.Note
If the cluster is configured to use a different zone for each failure domain, this parameter is configured in the failure domain. If you specify this value in the provider specification when using different zones for each failure domain, the Control Plane Machine Set Operator ignores it.
12.5.2.1.2. Sample Azure failure domain configuration
The control plane machine set concept of a failure domain is analogous to existing Azure concept of an Azure availability zone. The ControlPlaneMachineSet
CR spreads control plane machines across multiple failure domains when possible.
When configuring Azure failure domains in the control plane machine set, you must specify the availability zone name. An Azure cluster uses a single subnet that spans multiple zones.
Sample Azure failure domain values
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet metadata: name: cluster namespace: openshift-machine-api spec: # ... template: # ... machines_v1beta1_machine_openshift_io: failureDomains: azure: - zone: "1" 1 - zone: "2" - zone: "3" platform: Azure 2 # ...
- 1
- Each instance of
zone
specifies an Azure availability zone for a failure domain.NoteIf the cluster is configured to use a single zone for all failure domains, the
zone
parameter is configured in the provider specification instead of in the failure domain configuration. - 2
- Specifies the cloud provider platform name. Do not change this value.
12.5.2.2. Enabling Microsoft Azure features for control plane machines
You can enable features by updating values in the control plane machine set.
12.5.2.2.1. Restricting the API server to private
After you deploy a cluster to Amazon Web Services (AWS), you can reconfigure the API server to use only the private zone.
Prerequisites
-
Install the OpenShift CLI (
oc
). -
Have access to the web console as a user with
admin
privileges.
Procedure
In the web portal or console for your cloud provider, take the following actions:
- Locate and delete the appropriate load balancer component:
-
Delete the
api.$clustername.$yourdomain
DNS entry in the public zone.
Remove the external load balancers by deleting the following indicated lines in the control plane machine set custom resource:
# ... providerSpec: value: # ... loadBalancers: - name: lk4pj-ext 1 type: network 2 - name: lk4pj-int type: network # ...
Additional resources
12.5.2.2.2. Using the Azure Marketplace offering
You can create a machine set running on Azure that deploys machines that use the Azure Marketplace offering. To use this offering, you must first obtain the Azure Marketplace image. When obtaining your image, consider the following:
-
While the images are the same, the Azure Marketplace publisher is different depending on your region. If you are located in North America, specify
redhat
as the publisher. If you are located in EMEA, specifyredhat-limited
as the publisher. -
The offer includes a
rh-ocp-worker
SKU and arh-ocp-worker-gen1
SKU. Therh-ocp-worker
SKU represents a Hyper-V generation version 2 VM image. The default instance types used in OpenShift Container Platform are version 2 compatible. If you plan to use an instance type that is only version 1 compatible, use the image associated with therh-ocp-worker-gen1
SKU. Therh-ocp-worker-gen1
SKU represents a Hyper-V version 1 VM image.
Installing images with the Azure marketplace is not supported on clusters with 64-bit ARM instances.
Prerequisites
-
You have installed the Azure CLI client
(az)
. - Your Azure account is entitled for the offer and you have logged into this account with the Azure CLI client.
Procedure
Display all of the available OpenShift Container Platform images by running one of the following commands:
North America:
$ az vm image list --all --offer rh-ocp-worker --publisher redhat -o table
Example output
Offer Publisher Sku Urn Version ------------- -------------- ------------------ -------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------- rh-ocp-worker RedHat rh-ocp-worker RedHat:rh-ocp-worker:rh-ocp-worker:4.15.2024072409 4.15.2024072409 rh-ocp-worker RedHat rh-ocp-worker-gen1 RedHat:rh-ocp-worker:rh-ocp-worker-gen1:4.15.2024072409 4.15.2024072409
EMEA:
$ az vm image list --all --offer rh-ocp-worker --publisher redhat-limited -o table
Example output
Offer Publisher Sku Urn Version ------------- -------------- ------------------ -------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------- rh-ocp-worker redhat-limited rh-ocp-worker redhat-limited:rh-ocp-worker:rh-ocp-worker:4.15.2024072409 4.15.2024072409 rh-ocp-worker redhat-limited rh-ocp-worker-gen1 redhat-limited:rh-ocp-worker:rh-ocp-worker-gen1:4.15.2024072409 4.15.2024072409
NoteUse the latest image that is available for compute and control plane nodes. If required, your VMs are automatically upgraded as part of the installation process.
Inspect the image for your offer by running one of the following commands:
North America:
$ az vm image show --urn redhat:rh-ocp-worker:rh-ocp-worker:<version>
EMEA:
$ az vm image show --urn redhat-limited:rh-ocp-worker:rh-ocp-worker:<version>
Review the terms of the offer by running one of the following commands:
North America:
$ az vm image terms show --urn redhat:rh-ocp-worker:rh-ocp-worker:<version>
EMEA:
$ az vm image terms show --urn redhat-limited:rh-ocp-worker:rh-ocp-worker:<version>
Accept the terms of the offering by running one of the following commands:
North America:
$ az vm image terms accept --urn redhat:rh-ocp-worker:rh-ocp-worker:<version>
EMEA:
$ az vm image terms accept --urn redhat-limited:rh-ocp-worker:rh-ocp-worker:<version>
-
Record the image details of your offer, specifically the values for
publisher
,offer
,sku
, andversion
. Add the following parameters to the
providerSpec
section of your machine set YAML file using the image details for your offer:Sample
providerSpec
image values for Azure Marketplace machinesproviderSpec: value: image: offer: rh-ocp-worker publisher: redhat resourceID: "" sku: rh-ocp-worker type: MarketplaceWithPlan version: 413.92.2023101700
12.5.2.2.3. Enabling Azure boot diagnostics
You can enable boot diagnostics on Azure machines that your machine set creates.
Prerequisites
- Have an existing Microsoft Azure cluster.
Procedure
Add the
diagnostics
configuration that is applicable to your storage type to theproviderSpec
field in your machine set YAML file:For an Azure Managed storage account:
providerSpec: diagnostics: boot: storageAccountType: AzureManaged 1
- 1
- Specifies an Azure Managed storage account.
For an Azure Unmanaged storage account:
providerSpec: diagnostics: boot: storageAccountType: CustomerManaged 1 customerManaged: storageAccountURI: https://<storage-account>.blob.core.windows.net 2
NoteOnly the Azure Blob Storage data service is supported.
Verification
- On the Microsoft Azure portal, review the Boot diagnostics page for a machine deployed by the machine set, and verify that you can see the serial logs for the machine.
12.5.2.2.4. Machine sets that deploy machines with ultra disks as data disks
You can create a machine set running on Azure that deploys machines with ultra disks. Ultra disks are high-performance storage that are intended for use with the most demanding data workloads.
Additional resources
12.5.2.2.4.1. Creating machines with ultra disks by using machine sets
You can deploy machines with ultra disks on Azure by editing your machine set YAML file.
Prerequisites
- Have an existing Microsoft Azure cluster.
Procedure
Create a custom secret in the
openshift-machine-api
namespace using themaster
data secret by running the following command:$ oc -n openshift-machine-api \ get secret <role>-user-data \ 1 --template='{{index .data.userData | base64decode}}' | jq > userData.txt 2
In a text editor, open the
userData.txt
file and locate the final}
character in the file.-
On the immediately preceding line, add a
,
. Create a new line after the
,
and add the following configuration details:"storage": { "disks": [ 1 { "device": "/dev/disk/azure/scsi1/lun0", 2 "partitions": [ 3 { "label": "lun0p1", 4 "sizeMiB": 1024, 5 "startMiB": 0 } ] } ], "filesystems": [ 6 { "device": "/dev/disk/by-partlabel/lun0p1", "format": "xfs", "path": "/var/lib/lun0p1" } ] }, "systemd": { "units": [ 7 { "contents": "[Unit]\nBefore=local-fs.target\n[Mount]\nWhere=/var/lib/lun0p1\nWhat=/dev/disk/by-partlabel/lun0p1\nOptions=defaults,pquota\n[Install]\nWantedBy=local-fs.target\n", 8 "enabled": true, "name": "var-lib-lun0p1.mount" } ] }
- 1
- The configuration details for the disk that you want to attach to a node as an ultra disk.
- 2
- Specify the
lun
value that is defined in thedataDisks
stanza of the machine set you are using. For example, if the machine set containslun: 0
, specifylun0
. You can initialize multiple data disks by specifying multiple"disks"
entries in this configuration file. If you specify multiple"disks"
entries, ensure that thelun
value for each matches the value in the machine set. - 3
- The configuration details for a new partition on the disk.
- 4
- Specify a label for the partition. You might find it helpful to use hierarchical names, such as
lun0p1
for the first partition oflun0
. - 5
- Specify the total size in MiB of the partition.
- 6
- Specify the filesystem to use when formatting a partition. Use the partition label to specify the partition.
- 7
- Specify a
systemd
unit to mount the partition at boot. Use the partition label to specify the partition. You can create multiple partitions by specifying multiple"partitions"
entries in this configuration file. If you specify multiple"partitions"
entries, you must specify asystemd
unit for each. - 8
- For
Where
, specify the value ofstorage.filesystems.path
. ForWhat
, specify the value ofstorage.filesystems.device
.
-
On the immediately preceding line, add a
Extract the disabling template value to a file called
disableTemplating.txt
by running the following command:$ oc -n openshift-machine-api get secret <role>-user-data \ 1 --template='{{index .data.disableTemplating | base64decode}}' | jq > disableTemplating.txt
- 1
- Replace
<role>
withmaster
.
Combine the
userData.txt
file anddisableTemplating.txt
file to create a data secret file by running the following command:$ oc -n openshift-machine-api create secret generic <role>-user-data-x5 \ 1 --from-file=userData=userData.txt \ --from-file=disableTemplating=disableTemplating.txt
- 1
- For
<role>-user-data-x5
, specify the name of the secret. Replace<role>
withmaster
.
Edit your control plane machine set CR by running the following command:
$ oc --namespace openshift-machine-api edit controlplanemachineset.machine.openshift.io cluster
Add the following lines in the positions indicated:
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1beta1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet spec: template: spec: metadata: labels: disk: ultrassd 1 providerSpec: value: ultraSSDCapability: Enabled 2 dataDisks: 3 - nameSuffix: ultrassd lun: 0 diskSizeGB: 4 deletionPolicy: Delete cachingType: None managedDisk: storageAccountType: UltraSSD_LRS userDataSecret: name: <role>-user-data-x5 4
Save your changes.
-
For clusters that use the default
RollingUpdate
update strategy, the Operator automatically propagates the changes to your control plane configuration. -
For clusters that are configured to use the
OnDelete
update strategy, you must replace your control plane machines manually.
-
For clusters that use the default
Verification
Validate that the machines are created by running the following command:
$ oc get machines
The machines should be in the
Running
state.For a machine that is running and has a node attached, validate the partition by running the following command:
$ oc debug node/<node-name> -- chroot /host lsblk
In this command,
oc debug node/<node-name>
starts a debugging shell on the node<node-name>
and passes a command with--
. The passed commandchroot /host
provides access to the underlying host OS binaries, andlsblk
shows the block devices that are attached to the host OS machine.
Next steps
- To use an ultra disk on the control plane, reconfigure your workload to use the control plane’s ultra disk mount point.
12.5.2.2.4.2. Troubleshooting resources for machine sets that enable ultra disks
Use the information in this section to understand and recover from issues you might encounter.
12.5.2.2.4.2.1. Incorrect ultra disk configuration
If an incorrect configuration of the ultraSSDCapability
parameter is specified in the machine set, the machine provisioning fails.
For example, if the ultraSSDCapability
parameter is set to Disabled
, but an ultra disk is specified in the dataDisks
parameter, the following error message appears:
StorageAccountType UltraSSD_LRS can be used only when additionalCapabilities.ultraSSDEnabled is set.
- To resolve this issue, verify that your machine set configuration is correct.
12.5.2.2.4.2.2. Unsupported disk parameters
If a region, availability zone, or instance size that is not compatible with ultra disks is specified in the machine set, the machine provisioning fails. Check the logs for the following error message:
failed to create vm <machine_name>: failure sending request for machine <machine_name>: cannot create vm: compute.VirtualMachinesClient#CreateOrUpdate: Failure sending request: StatusCode=400 -- Original Error: Code="BadRequest" Message="Storage Account type 'UltraSSD_LRS' is not supported <more_information_about_why>."
- To resolve this issue, verify that you are using this feature in a supported environment and that your machine set configuration is correct.
12.5.2.2.4.2.3. Unable to delete disks
If the deletion of ultra disks as data disks is not working as expected, the machines are deleted and the data disks are orphaned. You must delete the orphaned disks manually if desired.
12.5.2.2.5. Enabling customer-managed encryption keys for a machine set
You can supply an encryption key to Azure to encrypt data on managed disks at rest. You can enable server-side encryption with customer-managed keys by using the Machine API.
An Azure Key Vault, a disk encryption set, and an encryption key are required to use a customer-managed key. The disk encryption set must be in a resource group where the Cloud Credential Operator (CCO) has granted permissions. If not, an additional reader role is required to be granted on the disk encryption set.
Prerequisites
Procedure
Configure the disk encryption set under the
providerSpec
field in your machine set YAML file. For example:providerSpec: value: osDisk: diskSizeGB: 128 managedDisk: diskEncryptionSet: id: /subscriptions/<subscription_id>/resourceGroups/<resource_group_name>/providers/Microsoft.Compute/diskEncryptionSets/<disk_encryption_set_name> storageAccountType: Premium_LRS
Additional resources
12.5.2.2.6. Configuring trusted launch for Azure virtual machines by using machine sets
Using trusted launch for Azure virtual machines is a Technology Preview feature only. Technology Preview features are not supported with Red Hat production service level agreements (SLAs) and might not be functionally complete. Red Hat does not recommend using them in production. These features provide early access to upcoming product features, enabling customers to test functionality and provide feedback during the development process.
For more information about the support scope of Red Hat Technology Preview features, see Technology Preview Features Support Scope.
OpenShift Container Platform 4.17 supports trusted launch for Azure virtual machines (VMs). By editing the machine set YAML file, you can configure the trusted launch options that a machine set uses for machines that it deploys. For example, you can configure these machines to use UEFI security features such as Secure Boot or a dedicated virtual Trusted Platform Module (vTPM) instance.
Some feature combinations result in an invalid configuration.
Secure Boot[1] | vTPM[2] | Valid configuration |
---|---|---|
Enabled | Enabled | Yes |
Enabled | Disabled | Yes |
Enabled | Omitted | Yes |
Disabled | Enabled | Yes |
Omitted | Enabled | Yes |
Disabled | Disabled | No |
Omitted | Disabled | No |
Omitted | Omitted | No |
-
Using the
secureBoot
field. -
Using the
virtualizedTrustedPlatformModule
field.
For more information about related features and functionality, see the Microsoft Azure documentation about Trusted launch for Azure virtual machines.
Procedure
- In a text editor, open the YAML file for an existing machine set or create a new one.
Edit the following section under the
providerSpec
field to provide a valid configuration:Sample valid configuration with UEFI Secure Boot and vTPM enabled
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet # ... spec: template: machines_v1beta1_machine_openshift_io: spec: providerSpec: value: securityProfile: settings: securityType: TrustedLaunch 1 trustedLaunch: uefiSettings: 2 secureBoot: Enabled 3 virtualizedTrustedPlatformModule: Enabled 4 # ...
Verification
- On the Azure portal, review the details for a machine deployed by the machine set and verify that the trusted launch options match the values that you configured.
12.5.2.2.7. Configuring Azure confidential virtual machines by using machine sets
Using Azure confidential virtual machines is a Technology Preview feature only. Technology Preview features are not supported with Red Hat production service level agreements (SLAs) and might not be functionally complete. Red Hat does not recommend using them in production. These features provide early access to upcoming product features, enabling customers to test functionality and provide feedback during the development process.
For more information about the support scope of Red Hat Technology Preview features, see Technology Preview Features Support Scope.
OpenShift Container Platform 4.17 supports Azure confidential virtual machines (VMs).
Confidential VMs are currently not supported on 64-bit ARM architectures.
By editing the machine set YAML file, you can configure the confidential VM options that a machine set uses for machines that it deploys. For example, you can configure these machines to use UEFI security features such as Secure Boot or a dedicated virtual Trusted Platform Module (vTPM) instance.
Not all instance types support confidential VMs. Do not change the instance type for a control plane machine set that is configured to use confidential VMs to a type that is incompatible. Using an incompatible instance type can cause your cluster to become unstable.
For more information about related features and functionality, see the Microsoft Azure documentation about Confidential virtual machines.
Procedure
- In a text editor, open the YAML file for an existing machine set or create a new one.
Edit the following section under the
providerSpec
field:Sample configuration
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet # ... spec: template: spec: providerSpec: value: osDisk: # ... managedDisk: securityProfile: 1 securityEncryptionType: VMGuestStateOnly 2 # ... securityProfile: 3 settings: securityType: ConfidentialVM 4 confidentialVM: uefiSettings: 5 secureBoot: Disabled 6 virtualizedTrustedPlatformModule: Enabled 7 vmSize: Standard_DC16ads_v5 8 # ...
- 1
- Specifies security profile settings for the managed disk when using a confidential VM.
- 2
- Enables encryption of the Azure VM Guest State (VMGS) blob. This setting requires the use of vTPM.
- 3
- Specifies security profile settings for the confidential VM.
- 4
- Enables the use of confidential VMs. This value is required for all valid configurations.
- 5
- Specifies which UEFI security features to use. This section is required for all valid configurations.
- 6
- Disables UEFI Secure Boot.
- 7
- Enables the use of a vTPM.
- 8
- Specifies an instance type that supports confidential VMs.
Verification
- On the Azure portal, review the details for a machine deployed by the machine set and verify that the confidential VM options match the values that you configured.
12.5.2.2.8. Accelerated Networking for Microsoft Azure VMs
Accelerated Networking uses single root I/O virtualization (SR-IOV) to provide Microsoft Azure VMs with a more direct path to the switch. This enhances network performance. This feature can be enabled after installation.
12.5.2.2.8.1. Limitations
Consider the following limitations when deciding whether to use Accelerated Networking:
- Accelerated Networking is only supported on clusters where the Machine API is operational.
Accelerated Networking requires an Azure VM size that includes at least four vCPUs. To satisfy this requirement, you can change the value of
vmSize
in your machine set. For information about Azure VM sizes, see Microsoft Azure documentation.
12.5.2.2.9. Configuring Capacity Reservation by using machine sets
OpenShift Container Platform version 4.17 and later supports on-demand Capacity Reservation with Capacity Reservation groups on Microsoft Azure clusters.
You can configure a machine set to deploy machines on any available resources that match the parameters of a capacity request that you define. These parameters specify the VM size, region, and number of instances that you want to reserve. If your Azure subscription quota can accommodate the capacity request, the deployment succeeds.
For more information, including limitations and suggested use cases for this Azure instance type, see the Microsoft Azure documentation about On-demand Capacity Reservation.
You cannot change an existing Capacity Reservation configuration for a machine set. To use a different Capacity Reservation group, you must replace the machine set and the machines that the previous machine set deployed.
Prerequisites
-
You have access to the cluster with
cluster-admin
privileges. -
You installed the OpenShift CLI (
oc
). You created a Capacity Reservation group.
For more information, see the Microsoft Azure documentation Create a Capacity Reservation.
Procedure
- In a text editor, open the YAML file for an existing machine set or create a new one.
Edit the following section under the
providerSpec
field:Sample configuration
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet # ... spec: template: machines_v1beta1_machine_openshift_io: spec: providerSpec: value: capacityReservationGroupID: <capacity_reservation_group> 1 # ...
- 1
- Specify the ID of the Capacity Reservation group that you want the machine set to deploy machines on.
Verification
To verify machine deployment, list the machines that the machine set created by running the following command:
$ oc get machine \ -n openshift-machine-api \ -l machine.openshift.io/cluster-api-machine-role=master
In the output, verify that the characteristics of the listed machines match the parameters of your Capacity Reservation.
12.5.2.2.9.1. Enabling Accelerated Networking on an existing Microsoft Azure cluster
You can enable Accelerated Networking on Azure by adding acceleratedNetworking
to your machine set YAML file.
Prerequisites
- Have an existing Microsoft Azure cluster where the Machine API is operational.
Procedure
Add the following to the
providerSpec
field:providerSpec: value: acceleratedNetworking: true 1 vmSize: <azure-vm-size> 2
- 1
- This line enables Accelerated Networking.
- 2
- Specify an Azure VM size that includes at least four vCPUs. For information about VM sizes, see Microsoft Azure documentation.
Verification
-
On the Microsoft Azure portal, review the Networking settings page for a machine provisioned by the machine set, and verify that the
Accelerated networking
field is set toEnabled
.
12.5.3. Control plane configuration options for Google Cloud Platform
You can change the configuration of your Google Cloud Platform (GCP) control plane machines and enable features by updating values in the control plane machine set. When you save an update to the control plane machine set, the Control Plane Machine Set Operator updates the control plane machines according to your configured update strategy.
12.5.3.1. Sample YAML for configuring Google Cloud Platform clusters
The following example YAML snippets show provider specification and failure domain configurations for a GCP cluster.
12.5.3.1.1. Sample GCP provider specification
When you create a control plane machine set for an existing cluster, the provider specification must match the providerSpec
configuration in the control plane machine custom resource (CR) that is created by the installation program. You can omit any field that is set in the failure domain section of the CR.
Values obtained by using the OpenShift CLI
In the following example, you can obtain some of the values for your cluster by using the OpenShift CLI.
- Infrastructure ID
The
<cluster_id>
string is the infrastructure ID that is based on the cluster ID that you set when you provisioned the cluster. If you have the OpenShift CLI installed, you can obtain the infrastructure ID by running the following command:$ oc get -o jsonpath='{.status.infrastructureName}{"\n"}' infrastructure cluster
- Image path
The
<path_to_image>
string is the path to the image that was used to create the disk. If you have the OpenShift CLI installed, you can obtain the path to the image by running the following command:$ oc -n openshift-machine-api \ -o jsonpath='{.spec.template.machines_v1beta1_machine_openshift_io.spec.providerSpec.value.disks[0].image}{"\n"}' \ get ControlPlaneMachineSet/cluster
Sample GCP providerSpec
values
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet metadata: name: cluster namespace: openshift-machine-api spec: # ... template: # ... spec: providerSpec: value: apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1beta1 canIPForward: false credentialsSecret: name: gcp-cloud-credentials 1 deletionProtection: false disks: - autoDelete: true boot: true image: <path_to_image> 2 labels: null sizeGb: 200 type: pd-ssd kind: GCPMachineProviderSpec 3 machineType: e2-standard-4 metadata: creationTimestamp: null metadataServiceOptions: {} networkInterfaces: - network: <cluster_id>-network subnetwork: <cluster_id>-master-subnet projectID: <project_name> 4 region: <region> 5 serviceAccounts: 6 - email: <cluster_id>-m@<project_name>.iam.gserviceaccount.com scopes: - https://www.googleapis.com/auth/cloud-platform shieldedInstanceConfig: {} tags: - <cluster_id>-master targetPools: - <cluster_id>-api userDataSecret: name: master-user-data 7 zone: "" 8
- 1
- Specifies the secret name for the cluster. Do not change this value.
- 2
- Specifies the path to the image that was used to create the disk.
To use a GCP Marketplace image, specify the offer to use:
-
OpenShift Container Platform:
https://www.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/redhat-marketplace-public/global/images/redhat-coreos-ocp-413-x86-64-202305021736
-
OpenShift Platform Plus:
https://www.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/redhat-marketplace-public/global/images/redhat-coreos-opp-413-x86-64-202305021736
-
OpenShift Kubernetes Engine:
https://www.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/redhat-marketplace-public/global/images/redhat-coreos-oke-413-x86-64-202305021736
-
OpenShift Container Platform:
- 3
- Specifies the cloud provider platform type. Do not change this value.
- 4
- Specifies the name of the GCP project that you use for your cluster.
- 5
- Specifies the GCP region for the cluster.
- 6
- Specifies a single service account. Multiple service accounts are not supported.
- 7
- Specifies the control plane user data secret. Do not change this value.
- 8
- This parameter is configured in the failure domain, and is shown with an empty value here. If a value specified for this parameter differs from the value in the failure domain, the Operator overwrites it with the value in the failure domain.
12.5.3.1.2. Sample GCP failure domain configuration
The control plane machine set concept of a failure domain is analogous to the existing GCP concept of a zone. The ControlPlaneMachineSet
CR spreads control plane machines across multiple failure domains when possible.
When configuring GCP failure domains in the control plane machine set, you must specify the zone name to use.
Sample GCP failure domain values
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet metadata: name: cluster namespace: openshift-machine-api spec: # ... template: # ... machines_v1beta1_machine_openshift_io: failureDomains: gcp: - zone: <gcp_zone_a> 1 - zone: <gcp_zone_b> 2 - zone: <gcp_zone_c> - zone: <gcp_zone_d> platform: GCP 3 # ...
12.5.3.2. Enabling Google Cloud Platform features for control plane machines
You can enable features by updating values in the control plane machine set.
12.5.3.2.1. Configuring persistent disk types by using machine sets
You can configure the type of persistent disk that a machine set deploys machines on by editing the machine set YAML file.
For more information about persistent disk types, compatibility, regional availability, and limitations, see the GCP Compute Engine documentation about persistent disks.
Procedure
- In a text editor, open the YAML file for an existing machine set or create a new one.
Edit the following line under the
providerSpec
field:apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet ... spec: template: spec: providerSpec: value: disks: type: pd-ssd 1
- 1
- Control plane nodes must use the
pd-ssd
disk type.
Verification
-
Using the Google Cloud console, review the details for a machine deployed by the machine set and verify that the
Type
field matches the configured disk type.
12.5.3.2.2. Configuring Confidential VM by using machine sets
By editing the machine set YAML file, you can configure the Confidential VM options that a machine set uses for machines that it deploys.
For more information about Confidential VM features, functions, and compatibility, see the GCP Compute Engine documentation about Confidential VM.
Confidential VMs are currently not supported on 64-bit ARM architectures.
OpenShift Container Platform 4.17 does not support some Confidential Compute features, such as Confidential VMs with AMD Secure Encrypted Virtualization Secure Nested Paging (SEV-SNP).
Procedure
- In a text editor, open the YAML file for an existing machine set or create a new one.
Edit the following section under the
providerSpec
field:apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet ... spec: template: spec: providerSpec: value: confidentialCompute: Enabled 1 onHostMaintenance: Terminate 2 machineType: n2d-standard-8 3 ...
- 1
- Specify whether Confidential VM is enabled. Valid values are
Disabled
orEnabled
. - 2
- Specify the behavior of the VM during a host maintenance event, such as a hardware or software update. For a machine that uses Confidential VM, this value must be set to
Terminate
, which stops the VM. Confidential VM does not support live VM migration. - 3
- Specify a machine type that supports Confidential VM. Confidential VM supports the N2D and C2D series of machine types.
Verification
- On the Google Cloud console, review the details for a machine deployed by the machine set and verify that the Confidential VM options match the values that you configured.
12.5.3.2.3. Configuring Shielded VM options by using machine sets
By editing the machine set YAML file, you can configure the Shielded VM options that a machine set uses for machines that it deploys.
For more information about Shielded VM features and functionality, see the GCP Compute Engine documentation about Shielded VM.
Procedure
- In a text editor, open the YAML file for an existing machine set or create a new one.
Edit the following section under the
providerSpec
field:apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet # ... spec: template: spec: providerSpec: value: shieldedInstanceConfig: 1 integrityMonitoring: Enabled 2 secureBoot: Disabled 3 virtualizedTrustedPlatformModule: Enabled 4 # ...
- 1
- In this section, specify any Shielded VM options that you want.
- 2
- Specify whether integrity monitoring is enabled. Valid values are
Disabled
orEnabled
.NoteWhen integrity monitoring is enabled, you must not disable virtual trusted platform module (vTPM).
- 3
- Specify whether UEFI Secure Boot is enabled. Valid values are
Disabled
orEnabled
. - 4
- Specify whether vTPM is enabled. Valid values are
Disabled
orEnabled
.
Verification
- Using the Google Cloud console, review the details for a machine deployed by the machine set and verify that the Shielded VM options match the values that you configured.
Additional resources
12.5.3.2.4. Enabling customer-managed encryption keys for a machine set
Google Cloud Platform (GCP) Compute Engine allows users to supply an encryption key to encrypt data on disks at rest. The key is used to encrypt the data encryption key, not to encrypt the customer’s data. By default, Compute Engine encrypts this data by using Compute Engine keys.
You can enable encryption with a customer-managed key in clusters that use the Machine API. You must first create a KMS key and assign the correct permissions to a service account. The KMS key name, key ring name, and location are required to allow a service account to use your key.
If you do not want to use a dedicated service account for the KMS encryption, the Compute Engine default service account is used instead. You must grant the default service account permission to access the keys if you do not use a dedicated service account. The Compute Engine default service account name follows the service-<project_number>@compute-system.iam.gserviceaccount.com
pattern.
Procedure
To allow a specific service account to use your KMS key and to grant the service account the correct IAM role, run the following command with your KMS key name, key ring name, and location:
$ gcloud kms keys add-iam-policy-binding <key_name> \ --keyring <key_ring_name> \ --location <key_ring_location> \ --member "serviceAccount:service-<project_number>@compute-system.iam.gserviceaccount.com” \ --role roles/cloudkms.cryptoKeyEncrypterDecrypter
Configure the encryption key under the
providerSpec
field in your machine set YAML file. For example:apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet ... spec: template: spec: providerSpec: value: disks: - type: encryptionKey: kmsKey: name: machine-encryption-key 1 keyRing: openshift-encrpytion-ring 2 location: global 3 projectID: openshift-gcp-project 4 kmsKeyServiceAccount: openshift-service-account@openshift-gcp-project.iam.gserviceaccount.com 5
- 1
- The name of the customer-managed encryption key that is used for the disk encryption.
- 2
- The name of the KMS key ring that the KMS key belongs to.
- 3
- The GCP location in which the KMS key ring exists.
- 4
- Optional: The ID of the project in which the KMS key ring exists. If a project ID is not set, the machine set
projectID
in which the machine set was created is used. - 5
- Optional: The service account that is used for the encryption request for the given KMS key. If a service account is not set, the Compute Engine default service account is used.
When a new machine is created by using the updated
providerSpec
object configuration, the disk encryption key is encrypted with the KMS key.
12.5.4. Control plane configuration options for Nutanix
You can change the configuration of your Nutanix control plane machines by updating values in the control plane machine set. When you save an update to the control plane machine set, the Control Plane Machine Set Operator updates the control plane machines according to your configured update strategy.
12.5.4.1. Sample YAML for configuring Nutanix clusters
The following example YAML snippet shows a provider specification configuration for a Nutanix cluster.
12.5.4.1.1. Sample Nutanix provider specification
When you create a control plane machine set for an existing cluster, the provider specification must match the providerSpec
configuration in the control plane machine custom resource (CR) that is created by the installation program.
Values obtained by using the OpenShift CLI
In the following example, you can obtain some of the values for your cluster by using the OpenShift CLI.
- Infrastructure ID
The
<cluster_id>
string is the infrastructure ID that is based on the cluster ID that you set when you provisioned the cluster. If you have the OpenShift CLI installed, you can obtain the infrastructure ID by running the following command:$ oc get -o jsonpath='{.status.infrastructureName}{"\n"}' infrastructure cluster
Sample Nutanix providerSpec
values
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet metadata: name: cluster namespace: openshift-machine-api spec: # ... template: # ... spec: providerSpec: value: apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 bootType: "" 1 categories: 2 - key: <category_name> value: <category_value> cluster: 3 type: uuid uuid: <cluster_uuid> credentialsSecret: name: nutanix-credentials 4 image: 5 name: <cluster_id>-rhcos type: name kind: NutanixMachineProviderConfig 6 memorySize: 16Gi 7 metadata: creationTimestamp: null project: 8 type: name name: <project_name> subnets: 9 - type: uuid uuid: <subnet_uuid> systemDiskSize: 120Gi 10 userDataSecret: name: master-user-data 11 vcpuSockets: 8 12 vcpusPerSocket: 1 13
- 1
- Specifies the boot type that the control plane machines use. For more information about boot types, see Understanding UEFI, Secure Boot, and TPM in the Virtualized Environment. Valid values are
Legacy
,SecureBoot
, orUEFI
. The default isLegacy
.NoteYou must use the
Legacy
boot type in OpenShift Container Platform 4.17. - 2
- Specifies one or more Nutanix Prism categories to apply to control plane machines. This stanza requires
key
andvalue
parameters for a category key-value pair that exists in Prism Central. For more information about categories, see Category management. - 3
- Specifies a Nutanix Prism Element cluster configuration. In this example, the cluster type is
uuid
, so there is auuid
stanza.NoteClusters that use OpenShift Container Platform version 4.15 or later can use failure domain configurations.
If the cluster is configured to use a failure domain, this parameter is configured in the failure domain. If you specify this value in the provider specification when using failure domains, the Control Plane Machine Set Operator ignores it.
- 4
- Specifies the secret name for the cluster. Do not change this value.
- 5
- Specifies the image that was used to create the disk.
- 6
- Specifies the cloud provider platform type. Do not change this value.
- 7
- Specifies the memory allocated for the control plane machines.
- 8
- Specifies the Nutanix project that you use for your cluster. In this example, the project type is
name
, so there is aname
stanza. - 9
- Specifies a subnet configuration. In this example, the subnet type is
uuid
, so there is auuid
stanza.NoteClusters that use OpenShift Container Platform version 4.15 or later can use failure domain configurations.
If the cluster is configured to use a failure domain, this parameter is configured in the failure domain. If you specify this value in the provider specification when using failure domains, the Control Plane Machine Set Operator ignores it.
- 10
- Specifies the VM disk size for the control plane machines.
- 11
- Specifies the control plane user data secret. Do not change this value.
- 12
- Specifies the number of vCPU sockets allocated for the control plane machines.
- 13
- Specifies the number of vCPUs for each control plane vCPU socket.
12.5.4.1.2. Failure domains for Nutanix clusters
To add or update the failure domain configuration on a Nutanix cluster, you must make coordinated changes to several resources. The following actions are required:
- Modify the cluster infrastructure custom resource (CR).
- Modify the cluster control plane machine set CR.
- Modify or replace the compute machine set CRs.
For more information, see "Adding failure domains to an existing Nutanix cluster" in the Post-installation configuration content.
Additional resources
12.5.5. Control plane configuration options for Red Hat OpenStack Platform
You can change the configuration of your Red Hat OpenStack Platform (RHOSP) control plane machines and enable features by updating values in the control plane machine set. When you save an update to the control plane machine set, the Control Plane Machine Set Operator updates the control plane machines according to your configured update strategy.
12.5.5.1. Sample YAML for configuring Red Hat OpenStack Platform (RHOSP) clusters
The following example YAML snippets show provider specification and failure domain configurations for an RHOSP cluster.
12.5.5.1.1. Sample RHOSP provider specification
When you create a control plane machine set for an existing cluster, the provider specification must match the providerSpec
configuration in the control plane machine custom resource (CR) that is created by the installation program.
Sample OpenStack providerSpec
values
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet metadata: name: cluster namespace: openshift-machine-api spec: # ... template: # ... spec: providerSpec: value: apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1alpha1 cloudName: openstack cloudsSecret: name: openstack-cloud-credentials 1 namespace: openshift-machine-api flavor: m1.xlarge 2 image: ocp1-2g2xs-rhcos kind: OpenstackProviderSpec 3 metadata: creationTimestamp: null networks: - filter: {} subnets: - filter: name: ocp1-2g2xs-nodes tags: openshiftClusterID=ocp1-2g2xs securityGroups: - filter: {} name: ocp1-2g2xs-master 4 serverGroupName: ocp1-2g2xs-master serverMetadata: Name: ocp1-2g2xs-master openshiftClusterID: ocp1-2g2xs tags: - openshiftClusterID=ocp1-2g2xs trunk: true userDataSecret: name: master-user-data
12.5.5.1.2. Sample RHOSP failure domain configuration
The control plane machine set concept of a failure domain is analogous to the existing Red Hat OpenStack Platform (RHOSP) concept of an availability zone. The ControlPlaneMachineSet
CR spreads control plane machines across multiple failure domains when possible.
The following example demonstrates the use of multiple Nova availability zones as well as Cinder availability zones.
Sample OpenStack failure domain values
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet metadata: name: cluster namespace: openshift-machine-api spec: # ... template: # ... machines_v1beta1_machine_openshift_io: failureDomains: platform: OpenStack openstack: - availabilityZone: nova-az0 rootVolume: availabilityZone: cinder-az0 - availabilityZone: nova-az1 rootVolume: availabilityZone: cinder-az1 - availabilityZone: nova-az2 rootVolume: availabilityZone: cinder-az2 # ...
12.5.5.2. Enabling Red Hat OpenStack Platform (RHOSP) features for control plane machines
You can enable features by updating values in the control plane machine set.
12.5.5.2.1. Changing the RHOSP compute flavor by using a control plane machine set
You can change the Red Hat OpenStack Platform (RHOSP) compute service (Nova) flavor that your control plane machines use by updating the specification in the control plane machine set custom resource.
In RHOSP, flavors define the compute, memory, and storage capacity of computing instances. By increasing or decreasing the flavor size, you can scale your control plane vertically.
Prerequisites
- Your RHOSP cluster uses a control plane machine set.
Procedure
Edit the following line under the
providerSpec
field:providerSpec: value: # ... flavor: m1.xlarge 1
- 1
- Specify a RHOSP flavor type that has the same base as the existing selection. For example, you can change
m6i.xlarge
tom6i.2xlarge
orm6i.4xlarge
. You can choose larger or smaller flavors depending on your vertical scaling needs.
- Save your changes.
After you save your changes, machines are replaced with ones that use the flavor you chose.
12.5.6. Control plane configuration options for VMware vSphere
You can change the configuration of your VMware vSphere control plane machines by updating values in the control plane machine set. When you save an update to the control plane machine set, the Control Plane Machine Set Operator updates the control plane machines according to your configured update strategy.
12.5.6.1. Sample YAML for configuring VMware vSphere clusters
The following example YAML snippets show provider specification and failure domain configurations for a vSphere cluster.
12.5.6.1.1. Sample VMware vSphere provider specification
When you create a control plane machine set for an existing cluster, the provider specification must match the providerSpec
configuration in the control plane machine custom resource (CR) that is created by the installation program.
Sample vSphere providerSpec
values
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet metadata: name: cluster namespace: openshift-machine-api spec: # ... template: # ... spec: providerSpec: value: apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1beta1 credentialsSecret: name: vsphere-cloud-credentials 1 diskGiB: 120 2 kind: VSphereMachineProviderSpec 3 memoryMiB: 16384 4 metadata: creationTimestamp: null network: 5 devices: - networkName: <vm_network_name> numCPUs: 4 6 numCoresPerSocket: 4 7 snapshot: "" template: <vm_template_name> 8 userDataSecret: name: master-user-data 9 workspace: 10 datacenter: <vcenter_data_center_name> 11 datastore: <vcenter_datastore_name> 12 folder: <path_to_vcenter_vm_folder> 13 resourcePool: <vsphere_resource_pool> 14 server: <vcenter_server_ip> 15
- 1
- Specifies the secret name for the cluster. Do not change this value.
- 2
- Specifies the VM disk size for the control plane machines.
- 3
- Specifies the cloud provider platform type. Do not change this value.
- 4
- Specifies the memory allocated for the control plane machines.
- 5
- Specifies the network on which the control plane is deployed.Note
If the cluster is configured to use a failure domain, this parameter is configured in the failure domain. If you specify this value in the provider specification when using failure domains, the Control Plane Machine Set Operator ignores it.
- 6
- Specifies the number of CPUs allocated for the control plane machines.
- 7
- Specifies the number of cores for each control plane CPU.
- 8
- Specifies the vSphere VM template to use, such as
user-5ddjd-rhcos
.NoteIf the cluster is configured to use a failure domain, this parameter is configured in the failure domain. If you specify this value in the provider specification when using failure domains, the Control Plane Machine Set Operator ignores it.
- 9
- Specifies the control plane user data secret. Do not change this value.
- 10
- Specifies the workspace details for the control plane.Note
If the cluster is configured to use a failure domain, these parameters are configured in the failure domain. If you specify these values in the provider specification when using failure domains, the Control Plane Machine Set Operator ignores them.
- 11
- Specifies the vCenter data center for the control plane.
- 12
- Specifies the vCenter datastore for the control plane.
- 13
- Specifies the path to the vSphere VM folder in vCenter, such as
/dc1/vm/user-inst-5ddjd
. - 14
- Specifies the vSphere resource pool for your VMs.
- 15
- Specifies the vCenter server IP or fully qualified domain name.
12.5.6.1.2. Sample VMware vSphere failure domain configuration
On VMware vSphere infrastructure, the cluster-wide infrastructure Custom Resource Definition (CRD), infrastructures.config.openshift.io
, defines failure domains for your cluster. The providerSpec
in the ControlPlaneMachineSet
custom resource (CR) specifies names for failure domains that the control plane machine set uses to ensure control plane nodes are deployed to the appropriate failure domain. A failure domain is an infrastructure resource made up of a control plane machine set, a vCenter data center, vCenter datastore, and a network.
By using a failure domain resource, you can use a control plane machine set to deploy control plane machines on separate clusters or data centers. A control plane machine set also balances control plane machines across defined failure domains to provide fault tolerance capabilities to your infrastructure.
If you modify the ProviderSpec
configuration in the ControlPlaneMachineSet
CR, the control plane machine set updates all control plane machines deployed on the primary infrastructure and each failure domain infrastructure.
Sample VMware vSphere failure domain values
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet metadata: name: cluster namespace: openshift-machine-api spec: # ... template: # ... machines_v1beta1_machine_openshift_io: failureDomains: 1 platform: VSphere vsphere: 2 - name: <failure_domain_name1> - name: <failure_domain_name2> # ...
- 1
- Specifies the vCenter location for OpenShift Container Platform cluster nodes.
- 2
- Specifies failure domains by name for the control plane machine set.Important
Each
name
field value in this section must match the corresponding value in thefailureDomains.name
field of the cluster-wide infrastructure CRD. You can find the value of thefailureDomains.name
field by running the following command:$ oc get infrastructure cluster -o=jsonpath={.spec.platformSpec.vsphere.failureDomains[0].name}
The
name
field is the only supported failure domain field that you can specify in theControlPlaneMachineSet
CR.
For an example of a cluster-wide infrastructure CRD that defines resources for each failure domain, see "Specifying multiple regions and zones for your cluster on vSphere."
Additional resources
12.5.6.2. Enabling VMware vSphere features for control plane machines
You can enable features by updating values in the control plane machine set.
12.5.6.2.1. Adding tags to machines by using machine sets
OpenShift Container Platform adds a cluster-specific tag to each virtual machine (VM) that it creates. The installation program uses these tags to select the VMs to delete when uninstalling a cluster.
In addition to the cluster-specific tags assigned to VMs, you can configure a machine set to add up to 10 additional vSphere tags to the VMs it provisions.
Prerequisites
-
You have access to an OpenShift Container Platform cluster installed on vSphere using an account with
cluster-admin
permissions. - You have access to the VMware vCenter console associated with your cluster.
- You have created a tag in the vCenter console.
-
You have installed the OpenShift CLI (
oc
).
Procedure
Use the vCenter console to find the tag ID for any tag that you want to add to your machines:
- Log in to the vCenter console.
- From the Home menu, click Tags & Custom Attributes.
- Select a tag that you want to add to your machines.
Use the browser URL for the tag that you select to identify the tag ID.
Example tag URL
https://vcenter.example.com/ui/app/tags/tag/urn:vmomi:InventoryServiceTag:208e713c-cae3-4b7f-918e-4051ca7d1f97:GLOBAL/permissions
Example tag ID
urn:vmomi:InventoryServiceTag:208e713c-cae3-4b7f-918e-4051ca7d1f97:GLOBAL
- In a text editor, open the YAML file for an existing machine set or create a new one.
Edit the following lines under the
providerSpec
field:apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1 kind: ControlPlaneMachineSet # ... spec: template: spec: providerSpec: value: tagIDs: 1 - <tag_id_value> 2 # ...
12.6. Control plane resiliency and recovery
You can use the control plane machine set to improve the resiliency of the control plane for your OpenShift Container Platform cluster.
12.6.1. High availability and fault tolerance with failure domains
When possible, the control plane machine set spreads the control plane machines across multiple failure domains. This configuration provides high availability and fault tolerance within the control plane. This strategy can help protect the control plane when issues arise within the infrastructure provider.
12.6.1.1. Failure domain platform support and configuration
The control plane machine set concept of a failure domain is analogous to existing concepts on cloud providers. Not all platforms support the use of failure domains.
Cloud provider | Support for failure domains | Provider nomenclature |
---|---|---|
Amazon Web Services (AWS) | X | |
Google Cloud Platform (GCP) | X | |
Microsoft Azure | X | |
Nutanix | X | |
Red Hat OpenStack Platform (RHOSP) | X | OpenStack Nova availability zones and OpenStack Cinder availability zones |
VMware vSphere | X | failure domain mapped to a vSphere Zone [1] |
- For more information, see "Regions and zones for a VMware vCenter".
The failure domain configuration in the control plane machine set custom resource (CR) is platform-specific. For more information about failure domain parameters in the CR, see the sample failure domain configuration for your provider.
Additional resources
- Sample Amazon Web Services failure domain configuration
- Sample Google Cloud Platform failure domain configuration
- Sample Microsoft Azure failure domain configuration
- Adding failure domains to an existing Nutanix cluster
- Sample Red Hat OpenStack Platform (RHOSP) failure domain configuration
- Sample VMware vSphere failure domain configuration
- Regions and zones for a VMware vCenter
12.6.1.2. Balancing control plane machines
The control plane machine set balances control plane machines across the failure domains that are specified in the custom resource (CR).
When possible, the control plane machine set uses each failure domain equally to ensure appropriate fault tolerance. If there are fewer failure domains than control plane machines, failure domains are selected for reuse alphabetically by name. For clusters with no failure domains specified, all control plane machines are placed within a single failure domain.
Some changes to the failure domain configuration cause the control plane machine set to rebalance the control plane machines. For example, if you add failure domains to a cluster with fewer failure domains than control plane machines, the control plane machine set rebalances the machines across all available failure domains.
12.6.2. Recovery of failed control plane machines
The Control Plane Machine Set Operator automates the recovery of control plane machines. When a control plane machine is deleted, the Operator creates a replacement with the configuration that is specified in the ControlPlaneMachineSet
custom resource (CR).
For clusters that use control plane machine sets, you can configure a machine health check. The machine health check deletes unhealthy control plane machines so that they are replaced.
If you configure a MachineHealthCheck
resource for the control plane, set the value of maxUnhealthy
to 1
.
This configuration ensures that the machine health check takes no action when multiple control plane machines appear to be unhealthy. Multiple unhealthy control plane machines can indicate that the etcd cluster is degraded or that a scaling operation to replace a failed machine is in progress.
If the etcd cluster is degraded, manual intervention might be required. If a scaling operation is in progress, the machine health check should allow it to finish.
Additional resources
12.6.3. Quorum protection with machine lifecycle hooks
For OpenShift Container Platform clusters that use the Machine API Operator, the etcd Operator uses lifecycle hooks for the machine deletion phase to implement a quorum protection mechanism.
By using a preDrain
lifecycle hook, the etcd Operator can control when the pods on a control plane machine are drained and removed. To protect etcd quorum, the etcd Operator prevents the removal of an etcd member until it migrates that member onto a new node within the cluster.
This mechanism allows the etcd Operator precise control over the members of the etcd quorum and allows the Machine API Operator to safely create and remove control plane machines without specific operational knowledge of the etcd cluster.
12.6.3.1. Control plane deletion with quorum protection processing order
When a control plane machine is replaced on a cluster that uses a control plane machine set, the cluster temporarily has four control plane machines. When the fourth control plane node joins the cluster, the etcd Operator starts a new etcd member on the replacement node. When the etcd Operator observes that the old control plane machine is marked for deletion, it stops the etcd member on the old node and promotes the replacement etcd member to join the quorum of the cluster.
The control plane machine Deleting
phase proceeds in the following order:
- A control plane machine is slated for deletion.
-
The control plane machine enters the
Deleting
phase. To satisfy the
preDrain
lifecycle hook, the etcd Operator takes the following actions:-
The etcd Operator waits until a fourth control plane machine is added to the cluster as an etcd member. This new etcd member has a state of
Running
but notready
until it receives the full database update from the etcd leader. - When the new etcd member receives the full database update, the etcd Operator promotes the new etcd member to a voting member and removes the old etcd member from the cluster.
After this transition is complete, it is safe for the old etcd pod and its data to be removed, so the
preDrain
lifecycle hook is removed.-
The etcd Operator waits until a fourth control plane machine is added to the cluster as an etcd member. This new etcd member has a state of
-
The control plane machine status condition
Drainable
is set toTrue
. The machine controller attempts to drain the node that is backed by the control plane machine.
-
If draining fails,
Drained
is set toFalse
and the machine controller attempts to drain the node again. -
If draining succeeds,
Drained
is set toTrue
.
-
If draining fails,
-
The control plane machine status condition
Drained
is set toTrue
. -
If no other Operators have added a
preTerminate
lifecycle hook, the control plane machine status conditionTerminable
is set toTrue
. - The machine controller removes the instance from the infrastructure provider.
-
The machine controller deletes the
Node
object.
YAML snippet demonstrating the etcd quorum protection preDrain
lifecycle hook
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1beta1 kind: Machine metadata: ... spec: lifecycleHooks: preDrain: - name: EtcdQuorumOperator 1 owner: clusteroperator/etcd 2 ...
Additional resources
12.7. Troubleshooting the control plane machine set
Use the information in this section to understand and recover from issues you might encounter.
12.7.1. Checking the control plane machine set custom resource state
You can verify the existence and state of the ControlPlaneMachineSet
custom resource (CR).
Procedure
Determine the state of the CR by running the following command:
$ oc get controlplanemachineset.machine.openshift.io cluster \ --namespace openshift-machine-api
-
A result of
Active
indicates that theControlPlaneMachineSet
CR exists and is activated. No administrator action is required. -
A result of
Inactive
indicates that aControlPlaneMachineSet
CR exists but is not activated. -
A result of
NotFound
indicates that there is no existingControlPlaneMachineSet
CR.
-
A result of
Next steps
To use the control plane machine set, you must ensure that a ControlPlaneMachineSet
CR with the correct settings for your cluster exists.
- If your cluster has an existing CR, you must verify that the configuration in the CR is correct for your cluster.
- If your cluster does not have an existing CR, you must create one with the correct configuration for your cluster.
12.7.2. Adding a missing Azure internal load balancer
The internalLoadBalancer
parameter is required in both the ControlPlaneMachineSet
and control plane Machine
custom resources (CRs) for Azure. If this parameter is not preconfigured on your cluster, you must add it to both CRs.
For more information about where this parameter is located in the Azure provider specification, see the sample Azure provider specification. The placement in the control plane Machine
CR is similar.
Procedure
List the control plane machines in your cluster by running the following command:
$ oc get machines \ -l machine.openshift.io/cluster-api-machine-role==master \ -n openshift-machine-api
For each control plane machine, edit the CR by running the following command:
$ oc edit machine <control_plane_machine_name>
-
Add the
internalLoadBalancer
parameter with the correct details for your cluster and save your changes. Edit your control plane machine set CR by running the following command:
$ oc edit controlplanemachineset.machine.openshift.io cluster \ -n openshift-machine-api
-
Add the
internalLoadBalancer
parameter with the correct details for your cluster and save your changes.
Next steps
-
For clusters that use the default
RollingUpdate
update strategy, the Operator automatically propagates the changes to your control plane configuration. -
For clusters that are configured to use the
OnDelete
update strategy, you must replace your control plane machines manually.
Additional resources
12.7.3. Recovering a degraded etcd Operator
Certain situations can cause the etcd Operator to become degraded.
For example, while performing remediation, the machine health check might delete a control plane machine that is hosting etcd. If the etcd member is not reachable at that time, the etcd Operator becomes degraded.
When the etcd Operator is degraded, manual intervention is required to force the Operator to remove the failed member and restore the cluster state.
Procedure
List the control plane machines in your cluster by running the following command:
$ oc get machines \ -l machine.openshift.io/cluster-api-machine-role==master \ -n openshift-machine-api \ -o wide
Any of the following conditions might indicate a failed control plane machine:
-
The
STATE
value isstopped
. -
The
PHASE
value isFailed
. -
The
PHASE
value isDeleting
for more than ten minutes.
ImportantBefore continuing, ensure that your cluster has two healthy control plane machines. Performing the actions in this procedure on more than one control plane machine risks losing etcd quorum and can cause data loss.
If you have lost the majority of your control plane hosts, leading to etcd quorum loss, then you must follow the disaster recovery procedure "Restoring to a previous cluster state" instead of this procedure.
-
The
Edit the machine CR for the failed control plane machine by running the following command:
$ oc edit machine <control_plane_machine_name>
Remove the contents of the
lifecycleHooks
parameter from the failed control plane machine and save your changes.The etcd Operator removes the failed machine from the cluster and can then safely add new etcd members.
Additional resources
12.7.4. Upgrading clusters that run on RHOSP
For clusters that run on Red Hat OpenStack Platform (RHOSP) that were created with OpenShift Container Platform 4.13 or earlier, you might have to perform post-upgrade tasks before you can use control plane machine sets.
12.7.4.1. Configuring RHOSP clusters that have machines with root volume availability zones after an upgrade
For some clusters that run on Red Hat OpenStack Platform (RHOSP) that you upgrade, you must manually update machine resources before you can use control plane machine sets if the following configurations are true:
- The upgraded cluster was created with OpenShift Container Platform 4.13 or earlier.
- The cluster infrastructure is installer-provisioned.
- Machines were distributed across multiple availability zones.
- Machines were configured to use root volumes for which block storage availability zones were not defined.
To understand why this procedure is necessary, see Solution #7024383.
Procedure
For all control plane machines, edit the provider spec for all control plane machines that match the environment. For example, to edit the machine
master-0
, enter the following command:$ oc edit machine/<cluster_id>-master-0 -n openshift-machine-api
where:
<cluster_id>
- Specifies the ID of the upgraded cluster.
In the provider spec, set the value of the property
rootVolume.availabilityZone
to the volume of the availability zone you want to use.An example RHOSP provider spec
providerSpec: value: apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1alpha1 availabilityZone: az0 cloudName: openstack cloudsSecret: name: openstack-cloud-credentials namespace: openshift-machine-api flavor: m1.xlarge image: rhcos-4.14 kind: OpenstackProviderSpec metadata: creationTimestamp: null networks: - filter: {} subnets: - filter: name: refarch-lv7q9-nodes tags: openshiftClusterID=refarch-lv7q9 rootVolume: availabilityZone: nova 1 diskSize: 30 sourceUUID: rhcos-4.12 volumeType: fast-0 securityGroups: - filter: {} name: refarch-lv7q9-master serverGroupName: refarch-lv7q9-master serverMetadata: Name: refarch-lv7q9-master openshiftClusterID: refarch-lv7q9 tags: - openshiftClusterID=refarch-lv7q9 trunk: true userDataSecret: name: master-user-data
- 1
- Set the zone name as this value.
NoteIf you edited or recreated machine resources after your initial cluster deployment, you might have to adapt these steps for your configuration.
In your RHOSP cluster, find the availability zone of the root volumes for your machines and use that as the value.
Run the following command to retrieve information about the control plane machine set resource:
$ oc describe controlplanemachineset.machine.openshift.io/cluster --namespace openshift-machine-api
Run the following command to edit the resource:
$ oc edit controlplanemachineset.machine.openshift.io/cluster --namespace openshift-machine-api
-
For that resource, set the value of the
spec.state
property toActive
to activate control plane machine sets for your cluster.
Your control plane is ready to be managed by the Cluster Control Plane Machine Set Operator.
12.7.4.2. Configuring RHOSP clusters that have control plane machines with availability zones after an upgrade
For some clusters that run on Red Hat OpenStack Platform (RHOSP) that you upgrade, you must manually update machine resources before you can use control plane machine sets if the following configurations are true:
- The upgraded cluster was created with OpenShift Container Platform 4.13 or earlier.
- The cluster infrastructure is installer-provisioned.
- Control plane machines were distributed across multiple compute availability zones.
To understand why this procedure is necessary, see Solution #7013893.
Procedure
For the
master-1
andmaster-2
control plane machines, open the provider specs for editing. For example, to edit the first machine, enter the following command:$ oc edit machine/<cluster_id>-master-1 -n openshift-machine-api
where:
<cluster_id>
- Specifies the ID of the upgraded cluster.
For the
master-1
andmaster-2
control plane machines, edit the value of theserverGroupName
property in their provider specs to match that of the machinemaster-0
.An example RHOSP provider spec
providerSpec: value: apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1alpha1 availabilityZone: az0 cloudName: openstack cloudsSecret: name: openstack-cloud-credentials namespace: openshift-machine-api flavor: m1.xlarge image: rhcos-4.17 kind: OpenstackProviderSpec metadata: creationTimestamp: null networks: - filter: {} subnets: - filter: name: refarch-lv7q9-nodes tags: openshiftClusterID=refarch-lv7q9 securityGroups: - filter: {} name: refarch-lv7q9-master serverGroupName: refarch-lv7q9-master-az0 1 serverMetadata: Name: refarch-lv7q9-master openshiftClusterID: refarch-lv7q9 tags: - openshiftClusterID=refarch-lv7q9 trunk: true userDataSecret: name: master-user-data
- 1
- This value must match for machines
master-0
,master-1
, andmaster-3
.
NoteIf you edited or recreated machine resources after your initial cluster deployment, you might have to adapt these steps for your configuration.
In your RHOSP cluster, find the server group that your control plane instances are in and use that as the value.
Run the following command to retrieve information about the control plane machine set resource:
$ oc describe controlplanemachineset.machine.openshift.io/cluster --namespace openshift-machine-api
Run the following command to edit the resource:
$ oc edit controlplanemachineset.machine.openshift.io/cluster --namespace openshift-machine-api
-
For that resource, set the value of the
spec.state
property toActive
to activate control plane machine sets for your cluster.
Your control plane is ready to be managed by the Cluster Control Plane Machine Set Operator.
12.8. Disabling the control plane machine set
The .spec.state
field in an activated ControlPlaneMachineSet
custom resource (CR) cannot be changed from Active
to Inactive
. To disable the control plane machine set, you must delete the CR so that it is removed from the cluster.
When you delete the CR, the Control Plane Machine Set Operator performs cleanup operations and disables the control plane machine set. The Operator then removes the CR from the cluster and creates an inactive control plane machine set with default settings.
12.8.1. Deleting the control plane machine set
To stop managing control plane machines with the control plane machine set on your cluster, you must delete the ControlPlaneMachineSet
custom resource (CR).
Procedure
Delete the control plane machine set CR by running the following command:
$ oc delete controlplanemachineset.machine.openshift.io cluster \ -n openshift-machine-api
Verification
-
Check the control plane machine set custom resource state. A result of
Inactive
indicates that the removal and replacement process is successful. AControlPlaneMachineSet
CR exists but is not activated.
12.8.2. Checking the control plane machine set custom resource state
You can verify the existence and state of the ControlPlaneMachineSet
custom resource (CR).
Procedure
Determine the state of the CR by running the following command:
$ oc get controlplanemachineset.machine.openshift.io cluster \ --namespace openshift-machine-api
-
A result of
Active
indicates that theControlPlaneMachineSet
CR exists and is activated. No administrator action is required. -
A result of
Inactive
indicates that aControlPlaneMachineSet
CR exists but is not activated. -
A result of
NotFound
indicates that there is no existingControlPlaneMachineSet
CR.
-
A result of
12.8.3. Re-enabling the control plane machine set
To re-enable the control plane machine set, you must ensure that the configuration in the CR is correct for your cluster and activate it.
Additional resources