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Chapter 2. Deleting users


2.1. About deleting users and their resources

If you have administrator access to OpenShift, you can revoke a user’s access to Jupyter and delete the user’s resources from Red Hat OpenShift AI.

Deleting a user and the user’s resources involves the following tasks:

  • Before you delete a user from OpenShift AI, it is good practice to back up the data on your persistent volume claims (PVCs).
  • Stop notebook servers owned by the user.
  • Revoke user access to Jupyter.
  • Remove the user from the allowed group in your OpenShift identity provider.
  • After you delete a user, delete their associated configuration files from OpenShift.

2.1.1. Backing up storage data from Amazon EBS

Red Hat recommends that you back up the data on your persistent volume claims (PVCs) regularly. Backing up your data is particularly important before deleting a user and before uninstalling OpenShift AI, as all PVCs are deleted when you uninstall OpenShift AI.

Prerequisites

  • You have credentials for Red Hat OpenShift Cluster Manager (https://console.redhat.com/openshift/).
  • You have administrator access to the OpenShift Dedicated cluster.
  • You have credentials for the Amazon Web Services (AWS) account that the OpenShift Dedicated cluster is deployed under.

Procedure

  1. Determine the IDs of the persistent volumes (PVs) that you want to back up.

    1. In the OpenShift Dedicated web console, change into the Administrator perspective.
    2. Click Home Projects.
    3. Click the rhods-notebooks project.

      The Details page for the project opens.

    4. Click the PersistentVolumeClaims in the Inventory section.

      The PersistentVolumeClaims page opens.

    5. Note the ID of the persistent volume (PV) that you want to back up.

      Note

      The persistent volumes (PV) that you make a note of are required to identify the correct EBS volume to back up in your AWS instance.

  2. Locate the EBS volume containing the PVs that you want to back up.

    See Amazon Web Services documentation: Create Amazon EBS snapshots for more information.

    1. Log in to AWS (https://aws.amazon.com) and ensure that you are viewing the region that your OpenShift Dedicated cluster is deployed in.
    2. Click Services.
    3. Click Compute EC2.
    4. Click Elastic Block Storage Volumes in the side navigation.

      The Volumes page opens.

    5. In the search bar, enter the ID of the persistent volume (PV) that you made a note of earlier.

      The Volumes page reloads to display the search results.

    6. Click the volume shown and verify that any kubernetes.io/created-for/pvc/namespace tags contain the value rhods-notebooks, and any kubernetes.io/created-for/pvc/name tags match the name of the persistent volume that the EC2 volume is being used for, for example, jupyter-nb-user1-pvc.
  3. Back up the EBS volume that contains your persistent volume (PV).

    1. Right-click the volume that you want to back up and select Create Snapshot from the list.

      The Create Snapshot page opens.

    2. Enter a Description for the volume.
    3. Click Create Snapshot.

      The snapshot of the volume is created.

    4. Click Close.

Verification

  • The snapshot that you created is visible on the Snapshots page in AWS.

2.1.2. Backing up storage data from Google Persistent Disk

Red Hat recommends that you back up the data on your persistent volume claims (PVCs) regularly. Backing up your data is particularly important before deleting a user and before uninstalling OpenShift AI, as all PVCs are deleted when OpenShift AI is uninstalled.

Prerequisites

  • You have credentials for Red Hat OpenShift Cluster Manager (https://console.redhat.com/openshift/).
  • You have administrator access to the OpenShift Dedicated cluster.
  • You have credentials for the Google Cloud Platform (GCP) account that the OpenShift Dedicated cluster is deployed under.

Procedure

  1. Determine the IDs of the persistent volumes (PVs) that you want to back up.

    1. In the OpenShift Dedicated web console, change into the Administrator perspective.
    2. Click Home Projects.
    3. Click the rhods-notebooks project.

      The Details page for the project opens.

    4. Click the PersistentVolumeClaims in the Inventory section.

      The PersistentVolumeClaims page opens.

    5. Note the ID of the persistent volume (PV) that you want to back up.

      The persistent volume (PV) IDs are required to identify the correct persistent disk to back up in your GCP instance.

  2. Locate the persistent disk containing the PVs that you want to back up.

    1. Log in to the Google Cloud console (https://console.cloud.google.com) and ensure that you are viewing the region that your OpenShift Dedicated cluster is deployed in.
    2. Click the navigation menu (≡) and then click Compute Engine.
    3. From the side navigation, under Storage, click Disks.

      The Disks page opens.

    4. In the Filter query box, enter the ID of the persistent volume (PV) that you made a note of earlier.

      The Disks page reloads to display the search results.

    5. Click the disk shown and verify that any kubernetes.io/created-for/pvc/namespace tags contain the value rhods-notebooks, and any kubernetes.io/created-for/pvc/name tags match the name of the persistent volume that the persistent disk is being used for, for example, jupyterhub-nb-user1-pvc.
  3. Back up the persistent disk that contains your persistent volume (PV).

    1. Select CREATE SNAPSHOT from the top navigation.

      The Create a snapshot page opens.

    2. Enter a unique Name for the snapshot.
    3. Under Source disk, verify the persistent disk you want to back up is displayed.
    4. Change any optional settings as needed.
    5. Click CREATE.

      The snapshot of the persistent disk is created.

Verification

  • The snapshot that you created is visible on the Snapshots page in GCP.

2.2. Stopping notebook servers owned by other users

Administrators can stop notebook servers that are owned by other users to reduce resource consumption on the cluster, or as part of removing a user and their resources from the cluster.

Prerequisites

  • If you are using specialized OpenShift AI groups, you are part of the administrator group (for example, rhoai-admins). If you are not using specialized groups, you are part of the OpenShift administrator group. For more information, see Adding administrative users in OpenShift.
  • You have launched the Jupyter application, as described in Starting a Jupyter notebook server.
  • The notebook server that you want to stop is running.

Procedure

  1. On the page that opens when you launch Jupyter, click the Administration tab.
  2. Stop one or more servers.

    • If you want to stop one or more specific servers, perform the following actions:

      1. In the Users section, locate the user that the notebook server belongs to.
      2. To stop the notebook server, perform one of the following actions:

        • Click the action menu () beside the relevant user and select Stop server.
        • Click View server beside the relevant user and then click Stop notebook server.

          The Stop server dialog box appears.

      3. Click Stop server.
    • If you want to stop all servers, perform the following actions:

      1. Click the Stop all servers button.
      2. Click OK to confirm stopping all servers.

Verification

  • The Stop server link beside each server changes to a Start server link when the notebook server has stopped.

2.3. Revoking user access to Jupyter

You can revoke a user’s access to Jupyter by removing the user from the specialized user groups that define access to OpenShift AI. When you remove a user from the specialized user groups, the user is prevented from accessing the OpenShift AI dashboard and from using associated services that consume resources in your cluster.

Important

Follow these steps only if you have implemented specialized user groups to restrict access to OpenShift AI. To completely remove a user from OpenShift AI, you must remove them from the allowed group in your OpenShift identity provider.

Prerequisites

  • You have stopped any notebook servers owned by the user you want to delete.
  • You are part of the cluster-admins or dedicated-admins user group in your OpenShift cluster. The dedicated-admins user group applies only to OpenShift Dedicated.
  • You are using specialized user groups for OpenShift AI, and the user is part of the specialized user group, administrator group, or both.

Procedure

  1. In the OpenShift web console, click User Management Groups.
  2. Click the name of the group that you want to remove the user from.

    • For administrative users, click the name of your administrator group, for example, rhoai-admins.
    • For non-administrator users, click the name of your user group, for example, rhoai-users.

    The Group details page for the group appears.

  3. In the Users section on the Details tab, locate the user that you want to remove.
  4. Click the action menu () beside the user that you want to remove and click Remove user.

Verification

  • Check the Users section on the Details tab and confirm that the user that you removed is not visible.
  • In the rhods-notebooks project, check under Workloads Pods and ensure that there is no notebook server pod for this user. If you see a pod named jupyter-nb-<username>-* for the user that you have removed, delete that pod to ensure that the deleted user is not consuming resources on the cluster.
  • In the OpenShift AI dashboard, check the list of data science projects. Delete any projects that belong to the user.

2.4. Cleaning up after deleting users

After you remove a user’s access to Red Hat OpenShift AI or Jupyter, you must also delete the configuration files for the user from OpenShift. Red Hat recommends that you back up the user’s data before removing their configuration files.

Prerequisites

  • (Optional) If you want to completely remove the user’s access to OpenShift AI, you have removed their credentials from your identity provider.
  • You have revoked the user’s access to Jupyter.
  • You have backed up the user’s storage data from Amazon EBS or Google Persistent Disk.
  • If you are using specialized OpenShift AI groups, you are part of the administrator group (for example, rhoai-admins). If you are not using specialized groups, you are part of the OpenShift Dedicated or Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS (ROSA) administrator group. For more information, see Adding administrative users in OpenShift.
  • You have logged in to the OpenShift web console.
  • You have logged in to OpenShift AI.

Procedure

  1. Delete the user’s persistent volume claim (PVC).

    1. Click Storage PersistentVolumeClaims.
    2. If it is not already selected, select the rhods-notebooks project from the project list.
    3. Locate the jupyter-nb-<username> PVC.

      Replace <username> with the relevant user name.

    4. Click the action menu (⋮) and select Delete PersistentVolumeClaim from the list.

      The Delete PersistentVolumeClaim dialog appears.

    5. Inspect the dialog and confirm that you are deleting the correct PVC.
    6. Click Delete.
  2. Delete the user’s ConfigMap.

    1. Click Workloads ConfigMaps.
    2. If it is not already selected, select the rhods-notebooks project from the project list.
    3. Locate the jupyterhub-singleuser-profile-<username> ConfigMap.

      Replace <username> with the relevant user name.

    4. Click the action menu (⋮) and select Delete ConfigMap from the list.

      The Delete ConfigMap dialog appears.

    5. Inspect the dialog and confirm that you are deleting the correct ConfigMap.
    6. Click Delete.

Verification

  • The user cannot access Jupyter any more, and sees an "Access permission needed" message if they try.
  • The user’s single-user profile, persistent volume claim (PVC), and ConfigMap are not visible in OpenShift.
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