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Chapter 2. Projects
2.1. Working with projects
A project allows a community of users to organize and manage their content in isolation from other communities.
Projects starting with openshift-
and kube-
are default projects. These projects host cluster components that run as pods and other infrastructure components. As such, Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS does not allow you to create projects starting with openshift-
or kube-
using the oc new-project
command. Cluster administrators can create these projects using the oc adm new-project
command.
Do not run workloads in or share access to default projects. Default projects are reserved for running core cluster components.
The following default projects are considered highly privileged: default
, kube-public
, kube-system
, openshift
, openshift-infra
, openshift-node
, and other system-created projects that have the openshift.io/run-level
label set to 0
or 1
. Functionality that relies on admission plugins, such as pod security admission, security context constraints, cluster resource quotas, and image reference resolution, does not work in highly privileged projects.
2.1.1. Creating a project
You can use the Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS web console or the OpenShift CLI (oc
) to create a project in your cluster.
2.1.1.1. Creating a project by using the web console
You can use the Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS web console to create a project in your cluster.
Projects starting with openshift-
and kube-
are considered critical by Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS. As such, Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS does not allow you to create projects starting with openshift-
using the web console.
Prerequisites
- Ensure that you have the appropriate roles and permissions to create projects, applications, and other workloads in Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS.
Procedure
If you are using the Administrator perspective:
-
Navigate to Home
Projects. Click Create Project:
-
In the Create Project dialog box, enter a unique name, such as
myproject
, in the Name field. - Optional: Add the Display name and Description details for the project.
Click Create.
The dashboard for your project is displayed.
-
In the Create Project dialog box, enter a unique name, such as
- Optional: Select the Details tab to view the project details.
- Optional: If you have adequate permissions for a project, you can use the Project Access tab to provide or revoke admin, edit, and view privileges for the project.
-
Navigate to Home
If you are using the Developer perspective:
Click the Project menu and select Create Project:
Figure 2.1. Create project
-
In the Create Project dialog box, enter a unique name, such as
myproject
, in the Name field. - Optional: Add the Display name and Description details for the project.
- Click Create.
-
In the Create Project dialog box, enter a unique name, such as
- Optional: Use the left navigation panel to navigate to the Project view and see the dashboard for your project.
- Optional: In the project dashboard, select the Details tab to view the project details.
- Optional: If you have adequate permissions for a project, you can use the Project Access tab of the project dashboard to provide or revoke admin, edit, and view privileges for the project.
Additional resources
2.1.1.2. Creating a project by using the CLI
If allowed by your cluster administrator, you can create a new project.
Projects starting with openshift-
and kube-
are considered critical by Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS. As such, Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS does not allow you to create Projects starting with openshift-
or kube-
using the oc new-project
command. Cluster administrators can create these projects using the oc adm new-project
command.
Procedure
Run:
$ oc new-project <project_name> \ --description="<description>" --display-name="<display_name>"
For example:
$ oc new-project hello-openshift \ --description="This is an example project" \ --display-name="Hello OpenShift"
The number of projects you are allowed to create might be limited by the system administrator. After your limit is reached, you might have to delete an existing project in order to create a new one.
2.1.2. Viewing a project
You can use the Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS web console or the OpenShift CLI (oc
) to view a project in your cluster.
2.1.2.1. Viewing a project by using the web console
You can view the projects that you have access to by using the Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS web console.
Procedure
If you are using the Administrator perspective:
-
Navigate to Home
Projects in the navigation menu. - Select a project to view. The Overview tab includes a dashboard for your project.
- Select the Details tab to view the project details.
- Select the YAML tab to view and update the YAML configuration for the project resource.
- Select the Workloads tab to see workloads in the project.
- Select the RoleBindings tab to view and create role bindings for your project.
-
Navigate to Home
If you are using the Developer perspective:
- Navigate to the Project page in the navigation menu.
- Select All Projects from the Project drop-down menu at the top of the screen to list all of the projects in your cluster.
- Select a project to view. The Overview tab includes a dashboard for your project.
- Select the Details tab to view the project details.
- If you have adequate permissions for a project, select the Project access tab view and update the privileges for the project.
2.1.2.2. Viewing a project using the CLI
When viewing projects, you are restricted to seeing only the projects you have access to view based on the authorization policy.
Procedure
To view a list of projects, run:
$ oc get projects
You can change from the current project to a different project for CLI operations. The specified project is then used in all subsequent operations that manipulate project-scoped content:
$ oc project <project_name>
2.1.3. Providing access permissions to your project using the Developer perspective
You can use the Project view in the Developer perspective to grant or revoke access permissions to your project.
Prerequisites
- You have created a project.
Procedure
To add users to your project and provide Admin, Edit, or View access to them:
- In the Developer perspective, navigate to the Project page.
- Select your project from the Project menu.
- Select the Project Access tab.
Click Add access to add a new row of permissions to the default ones.
Figure 2.2. Project permissions
- Enter the user name, click the Select a role drop-down list, and select an appropriate role.
- Click Save to add the new permissions.
You can also use:
- The Select a role drop-down list, to modify the access permissions of an existing user.
- The Remove Access icon, to completely remove the access permissions of an existing user to the project.
Advanced role-based access control is managed in the Roles and Roles Binding views in the Administrator perspective.
2.1.4. Customizing the available cluster roles using the web console
In the Developer perspective of the web console, the Project
As a cluster administrator, you can define which cluster roles are available in the Project access page for all projects cluster-wide. You can specify the available roles by customizing the spec.customization.projectAccess.availableClusterRoles
object in the Console
configuration resource.
Prerequisites
-
You have access to the cluster as a user with the
cluster-admin
role.
Procedure
-
In the Administrator perspective, navigate to Administration
Cluster settings. - Click the Configuration tab.
-
From the Configuration resource list, select Console
operator.openshift.io
. - Navigate to the YAML tab to view and edit the YAML code.
In the YAML code under
spec
, customize the list of available cluster roles for project access. The following example specifies the defaultadmin
,edit
, andview
roles:apiVersion: operator.openshift.io/v1 kind: Console metadata: name: cluster # ... spec: customization: projectAccess: availableClusterRoles: - admin - edit - view
-
Click Save to save the changes to the
Console
configuration resource.
Verification
- In the Developer perspective, navigate to the Project page.
- Select a project from the Project menu.
- Select the Project access tab.
-
Click the menu in the Role column and verify that the available roles match the configuration that you applied to the
Console
resource configuration.
2.1.5. Adding to a project
You can add items to your project by using the +Add page in the Developer perspective.
Prerequisites
- You have created a project.
Procedure
- In the Developer perspective, navigate to the +Add page.
- Select your project from the Project menu.
- Click on an item on the +Add page and then follow the workflow.
You can also use the search feature in the Add* page to find additional items to add to your project. Click * under Add at the top of the page and type the name of a component in the search field.
2.1.6. Checking the project status
You can use the Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS web console or the OpenShift CLI (oc
) to view the status of your project.
2.1.6.1. Checking project status by using the web console
You can review the status of your project by using the web console.
Prerequisites
- You have created a project.
Procedure
If you are using the Administrator perspective:
-
Navigate to Home
Projects. - Select a project from the list.
- Review the project status in the Overview page.
-
Navigate to Home
If you are using the Developer perspective:
- Navigate to the Project page.
- Select a project from the Project menu.
- Review the project status in the Overview page.
2.1.6.2. Checking project status by using the CLI
You can review the status of your project by using the OpenShift CLI (oc
).
Prerequisites
-
You have installed the OpenShift CLI (
oc
). - You have created a project.
Procedure
Switch to your project:
$ oc project <project_name> 1
- 1
- Replace
<project_name>
with the name of your project.
Obtain a high-level overview of the project:
$ oc status
2.1.7. Deleting a project
You can use the Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS web console or the OpenShift CLI (oc
) to delete a project.
When you delete a project, the server updates the project status to Terminating from Active. Then, the server clears all content from a project that is in the Terminating state before finally removing the project. While a project is in Terminating status, you cannot add new content to the project. Projects can be deleted from the CLI or the web console.
2.1.7.1. Deleting a project by using the web console
You can delete a project by using the web console.
Prerequisites
- You have created a project.
- You have the required permissions to delete the project.
Procedure
If you are using the Administrator perspective:
-
Navigate to Home
Projects. - Select a project from the list.
Click the Actions drop-down menu for the project and select Delete Project.
NoteThe Delete Project option is not available if you do not have the required permissions to delete the project.
- In the Delete Project? pane, confirm the deletion by entering the name of your project.
- Click Delete.
-
Navigate to Home
If you are using the Developer perspective:
- Navigate to the Project page.
- Select the project that you want to delete from the Project menu.
Click the Actions drop-down menu for the project and select Delete Project.
NoteIf you do not have the required permissions to delete the project, the Delete Project option is not available.
- In the Delete Project? pane, confirm the deletion by entering the name of your project.
- Click Delete.
2.1.7.2. Deleting a project by using the CLI
You can delete a project by using the OpenShift CLI (oc
).
Prerequisites
-
You have installed the OpenShift CLI (
oc
). - You have created a project.
- You have the required permissions to delete the project.
Procedure
Delete your project:
$ oc delete project <project_name> 1
- 1
- Replace
<project_name>
with the name of the project that you want to delete.
2.2. Configuring project creation
In Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS, projects are used to group and isolate related objects. When a request is made to create a new project using the web console or oc new-project
command, an endpoint in Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS is used to provision the project according to a template, which can be customized.
As a cluster administrator, you can allow and configure how developers and service accounts can create, or self-provision, their own projects.
2.2.1. About project creation
The Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS API server automatically provisions new projects based on the project template that is identified by the projectRequestTemplate
parameter in the cluster’s project configuration resource. If the parameter is not defined, the API server creates a default template that creates a project with the requested name, and assigns the requesting user to the admin
role for that project.
When a project request is submitted, the API substitutes the following parameters into the template:
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
| The name of the project. Required. |
| The display name of the project. May be empty. |
| The description of the project. May be empty. |
| The user name of the administrating user. |
| The user name of the requesting user. |
Access to the API is granted to developers with the self-provisioner
role and the self-provisioners
cluster role binding. This role is available to all authenticated developers by default.
2.2.2. Modifying the template for new projects
As a cluster administrator, you can modify the default project template so that new projects are created using your custom requirements.
To create your own custom project template:
Prerequisites
-
You have access to an Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS cluster using an account with
dedicated-admin
permissions.
Procedure
-
Log in as a user with
cluster-admin
privileges. Generate the default project template:
$ oc adm create-bootstrap-project-template -o yaml > template.yaml
-
Use a text editor to modify the generated
template.yaml
file by adding objects or modifying existing objects. The project template must be created in the
openshift-config
namespace. Load your modified template:$ oc create -f template.yaml -n openshift-config
Edit the project configuration resource using the web console or CLI.
Using the web console:
-
Navigate to the Administration
Cluster Settings page. - Click Configuration to view all configuration resources.
- Find the entry for Project and click Edit YAML.
-
Navigate to the Administration
Using the CLI:
Edit the
project.config.openshift.io/cluster
resource:$ oc edit project.config.openshift.io/cluster
Update the
spec
section to include theprojectRequestTemplate
andname
parameters, and set the name of your uploaded project template. The default name isproject-request
.Project configuration resource with custom project template
apiVersion: config.openshift.io/v1 kind: Project metadata: # ... spec: projectRequestTemplate: name: <template_name> # ...
- After you save your changes, create a new project to verify that your changes were successfully applied.
2.2.3. Disabling project self-provisioning
You can prevent an authenticated user group from self-provisioning new projects.
Procedure
-
Log in as a user with
cluster-admin
privileges. View the
self-provisioners
cluster role binding usage by running the following command:$ oc describe clusterrolebinding.rbac self-provisioners
Example output
Name: self-provisioners Labels: <none> Annotations: rbac.authorization.kubernetes.io/autoupdate=true Role: Kind: ClusterRole Name: self-provisioner Subjects: Kind Name Namespace ---- ---- --------- Group system:authenticated:oauth
Review the subjects in the
self-provisioners
section.Remove the
self-provisioner
cluster role from the groupsystem:authenticated:oauth
.If the
self-provisioners
cluster role binding binds only theself-provisioner
role to thesystem:authenticated:oauth
group, run the following command:$ oc patch clusterrolebinding.rbac self-provisioners -p '{"subjects": null}'
If the
self-provisioners
cluster role binding binds theself-provisioner
role to more users, groups, or service accounts than thesystem:authenticated:oauth
group, run the following command:$ oc adm policy \ remove-cluster-role-from-group self-provisioner \ system:authenticated:oauth
Edit the
self-provisioners
cluster role binding to prevent automatic updates to the role. Automatic updates reset the cluster roles to the default state.To update the role binding using the CLI:
Run the following command:
$ oc edit clusterrolebinding.rbac self-provisioners
In the displayed role binding, set the
rbac.authorization.kubernetes.io/autoupdate
parameter value tofalse
, as shown in the following example:apiVersion: authorization.openshift.io/v1 kind: ClusterRoleBinding metadata: annotations: rbac.authorization.kubernetes.io/autoupdate: "false" # ...
To update the role binding by using a single command:
$ oc patch clusterrolebinding.rbac self-provisioners -p '{ "metadata": { "annotations": { "rbac.authorization.kubernetes.io/autoupdate": "false" } } }'
Log in as an authenticated user and verify that it can no longer self-provision a project:
$ oc new-project test
Example output
Error from server (Forbidden): You may not request a new project via this API.
Consider customizing this project request message to provide more helpful instructions specific to your organization.
2.2.4. Customizing the project request message
When a developer or a service account that is unable to self-provision projects makes a project creation request using the web console or CLI, the following error message is returned by default:
You may not request a new project via this API.
Cluster administrators can customize this message. Consider updating it to provide further instructions on how to request a new project specific to your organization. For example:
-
To request a project, contact your system administrator at
projectname@example.com
. -
To request a new project, fill out the project request form located at
https://internal.example.com/openshift-project-request
.
To customize the project request message:
Procedure
Edit the project configuration resource using the web console or CLI.
Using the web console:
-
Navigate to the Administration
Cluster Settings page. - Click Configuration to view all configuration resources.
- Find the entry for Project and click Edit YAML.
-
Navigate to the Administration
Using the CLI:
-
Log in as a user with
cluster-admin
privileges. Edit the
project.config.openshift.io/cluster
resource:$ oc edit project.config.openshift.io/cluster
-
Log in as a user with
Update the
spec
section to include theprojectRequestMessage
parameter and set the value to your custom message:Project configuration resource with custom project request message
apiVersion: config.openshift.io/v1 kind: Project metadata: # ... spec: projectRequestMessage: <message_string> # ...
For example:
apiVersion: config.openshift.io/v1 kind: Project metadata: # ... spec: projectRequestMessage: To request a project, contact your system administrator at projectname@example.com. # ...
- After you save your changes, attempt to create a new project as a developer or service account that is unable to self-provision projects to verify that your changes were successfully applied.