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Chapter 4. Architecture models


Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS has the following cluster topology:

Hosted control plane (HCP) - The control plane is hosted in a Red Hat account and the worker nodes are deployed in the customer’s AWS account.

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Table 4.1. Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS and Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS (classic architecture) architectures comparison table
 
Hosted Control Plane (HCP)Classic

Control plane hosting

Control plane components, such as the API server etcd database, are hosted in a Red Hat-owned AWS account.

Control plane components, such as the API server etcd database, are hosted in a customer-owned AWS account.

Virtual Private Cloud (VPC)

Worker nodes communicate with the control plane over AWS PrivateLink.

Worker nodes and control plane nodes are deployed in the customer’s VPC.

Multi-zone deployment

The control plane is always deployed across multiple availability zones (AZs).

The control plane can be deployed within a single AZ or across multiple AZs.

Machine pools

Each machine pool is deployed in a single AZ (private subnet).

Machine pools can be deployed in single AZ or across multiple AZs.

Infrastructure nodes

Does not use any dedicated infrastructure nodes to host platform components, such as ingress and image registry.

Uses 2 (single-AZ) or 3 (multi-AZ) dedicated infrastructure nodes to host platform components.

OpenShift capabilities

Platform monitoring, image registry, and the ingress controller are deployed in the worker nodes.

Platform monitoring, image registry, and the ingress controller are deployed in the dedicated infrastructure nodes.

Cluster upgrades

The control plane and each machine pool can be upgraded separately.

The entire cluster must be upgraded at the same time.

Minimum EC2 footprint

2 EC2 instances are needed to create a cluster.

7 (single-AZ) or 9 (multi-AZ) EC2 instances are needed to create a cluster.

Additional resources

4.2. Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS with HCP architecture

Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS hosts a highly-available, single-tenant OpenShift control plane. The hosted control plane is deployed across 3 availability zones with 2 API server instances and 3 etcd instances.

You can create a Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS cluster with or without an internet-facing API server, with the latter considered a “private” cluster and the former considered a “public” cluster. Private API servers are only accessible from your VPC subnets. You access the hosted control plane through an AWS PrivateLink endpoint regardless of API privacy.

The worker nodes are deployed in your AWS account and run on your VPC private subnets. You can add additional private subnets from one or more availability zones to ensure high availability. Worker nodes are shared by OpenShift components and applications. OpenShift components such as the ingress controller, image registry, and monitoring are deployed on the worker nodes hosted on your VPC.

Figure 4.1. Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS architecture

With Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS, you can create your clusters on public or private networks. The following images depict the architecture of both public and private networks.

Figure 4.2. Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS deployed on a public network

Figure 4.3. Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS deployed on a private network

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