Installation Quickstart

Download the Automation Code

You'll need to use git to clone the deployment code when working off the master branch

$ git clone https://github.com/ocp-power-automation/ocp4-upi-powervm.git
$ cd ocp4_upi_powervm

All further instructions assumes you are in the code directory eg. ocp4-upi-powervm

Setup Terraform Variables

Update the var.tfvars based on your environment. Description of the variables are available in the following link. You can use environment variables for sensitive data that should not be saved to disk.

$ set +o history
$ export POWERVC_USERNAME=xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
$ export POWERVC_PASSWORD=xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
$ export RHEL_SUBS_USERNAME=xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
$ export RHEL_SUBS_PASSWORD=xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
$ set -o history

Start Install

Run the following commands from within the directory.

$ terraform init
$ terraform apply -var-file var.tfvars

If using environment variables for sensitive data, then do the following, instead.

$ terraform init
$ terraform apply -var-file var.tfvars -var user_name="$POWERVC_USERNAME" -var password="$POWERVC_PASSWORD" -var rhel_subscription_username="$RHEL_SUBS_USERNAME" -var rhel_subscription_password="$RHEL_SUBS_PASSWORD"

Now wait for the installation to complete. It may take around 40 mins to complete provisioning.

On successful install cluster details will be printed as shown below.

bastion_private_ip = 192.168.25.171
bastion_public_ip = 16.20.34.5
bastion_ssh_command = ssh -i data/id_rsa root@16.20.34.5
bootstrap_ip = 192.168.25.182
cluster_authentication_details = Cluster authentication details are available in 16.20.34.5 under ~/openstack-upi/auth
cluster_id = test-cluster-9a4f
etc_hosts_entries =
16.20.34.5 api.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com console-openshift-console.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com integrated-oauth-server-openshift-authentication.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com oauth-openshift.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com prometheus-k8s-openshift-monitoring.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com grafana-openshift-monitoring.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com example.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com

install_status = COMPLETED
master_ips = [
  "192.168.25.147",
  "192.168.25.176",
]
oc_server_url = https://test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com:6443
storageclass_name = nfs-storage-provisioner
web_console_url = https://console-openshift-console.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com
worker_ips = [
  "192.168.25.220",
  "192.168.25.134",
]

When using wildcard domain like nip.io or xip.io then etc_host_entries is empty

bastion_private_ip = 192.168.25.171
bastion_public_ip = 16.20.34.5
bastion_ssh_command = ssh -i data/id_rsa root@16.20.34.5
bootstrap_ip = 192.168.25.182
cluster_authentication_details = Cluster authentication details are available in 16.20.34.5 under ~/openstack-upi/auth
cluster_id = test-cluster-9a4f
etc_hosts_entries =
install_status = COMPLETED
master_ips = [
  "192.168.25.147",
  "192.168.25.176",
]
oc_server_url = https://test-cluster-9a4f.16.20.34.5.nip.io:6443
storageclass_name = nfs-storage-provisioner
web_console_url = https://console-openshift-console.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.16.20.34.5.nip.io
worker_ips = [
  "192.168.25.220",
  "192.168.25.134",
]

These details can be retrieved anytime by running the following command from the root folder of the code

$ terraform output

In case of any errors, you'll have to re-apply. Please refer to known issues to get more details on potential issues and workarounds.

Post Install

Delete Bootstrap Node

Once the deployment is completed successfully, you can safely delete the bootstrap node. This step is optional but recommended so as to free up the resources used.

  1. Change the count value to 0 in bootstrap map variable and re-run the apply command. Eg: bootstrap = {instance_type = "medium", image_id = "468863e6-4b33-4e8b-b2c5-c9ef9e6eedf4", "count" = 0}

  2. Run command terraform apply -var-file var.tfvars

Create API and Ingress DNS Records

Please skip this section if your cluster_domain is one of the online wildcard DNS domains: nip.io, xip.io and sslip.io.

For all other domains, you can use one of the following options.

  1. Add entries to your DNS server

    The general format is shown below: api.<cluster_id>. IN A <bastion_public_ip> *.apps.<cluster_id>. IN A <bastion_public_ip> You'll need bastion_public_ip and cluster_id. This is printed at the end of a successful install. Or you can retrieve it anytime by running terraform output from the install directory. For example, if bastion_public_ip = 16.20.34.5 and cluster_id = test-cluster-9a4f then the following DNS records will need to be added. api.test-cluster-9a4f. IN A 16.20.34.5 *.apps.test-cluster-9a4f. IN A 16.20.34.5

  2. Add entries to your client system hosts file

    For Linux and Mac hosts file is located at /etc/hosts and for Windows it's located at c:\Windows\System32\Drivers\etc\hosts.

    The general format is shown below: <bastion_public_ip> api.<cluster_id> <bastion_public_ip> console-openshift-console.apps.<cluster_id> <bastion_public_ip> integrated-oauth-server-openshift-authentication.apps.<cluster_id> <bastion_public_ip> oauth-openshift.apps.<cluster_id> <bastion_public_ip> prometheus-k8s-openshift-monitoring.apps.<cluster_id> <bastion_public_ip> grafana-openshift-monitoring.apps.<cluster_id> <bastion_public_ip> <app name>.apps.<cluster_id>

    You'll need etc_host_entries. This is printed at the end of a successful install. Alternatively you can retrieve it anytime by running terraform output from the install directory.

    As an example, for the following etc_hosts_entries etc_hosts_entries = 16.20.34.5 api.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com console-openshift-console.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com integrated-oauth-server-openshift-authentication.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com oauth-openshift.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com prometheus-k8s-openshift-monitoring.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com grafana-openshift-monitoring.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com example.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com just add the following entry to the hosts file ``` [existing entries in hosts file]

    16.20.34.5 api.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com console-openshift-console.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com integrated-oauth-server-openshift-authentication.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com oauth-openshift.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com prometheus-k8s-openshift-monitoring.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com grafana-openshift-monitoring.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com example.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com ```

Cluster Access

OpenShift login credentials are in the bastion host and the location will be printed at the end of a successful install. Alternatively you can retrieve it anytime by running terraform output from the install directory.

[...]
bastion_public_ip = 16.20.34.5
bastion_ssh_command = ssh -i data/id_rsa root@16.20.34.5
cluster_authentication_details = Cluster authentication details are available in 16.20.34.5 under ~/openstack-upi/auth
[...]

There are two files under ~/openstack-upi/auth - kubeconfig: can be used for CLI access - kubeadmin-password: Password for kubeadmin user which can be used for CLI, UI access

Note: Ensure you securely store the OpenShift cluster access credentials. If desired delete the access details from the bastion node after securely storing the same.

You can copy the access details to your local system

$ scp -r -i data/id_rsa root@158.175.161.118:~/openstack-upi/auth/\* .

Using CLI

OpenShift CLI oc can be downloaded from the following links. Use the one specific to your client system architecture.

Download the specific file, extract it and place the binary in a directory that is on your PATH For more details check the following link

The CLI login URL oc_server_url will be printed at the end of successful install. Alternatively you can retrieve it anytime by running terraform output from the install directory.

[...]
oc_server_url = https://test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com:6443
[...]

In order to login the cluster you can use the oc login <oc_server_url> -u kubeadmin -p <kubeadmin-password> Example:

$ oc login https://test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com:6443 -u kubeadmin -p $(cat kubeadmin-password)

You can also use the kubeconfig file

$ export KUBECONFIG=$(pwd)/kubeconfig
$ oc cluster-info
Kubernetes master is running at https://test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com:6443

To further debug and diagnose cluster problems, use 'kubectl cluster-info dump'

$ oc get nodes
NAME       STATUS   ROLES    AGE   VERSION
master-0   Ready    master   13h   v1.18.3+b74c5ed
master-1   Ready    master   13h   v1.18.3+b74c5ed
master-2   Ready    master   13h   v1.18.3+b74c5ed
worker-0   Ready    worker   13h   v1.18.3+b74c5ed
worker-1   Ready    worker   13h   v1.18.3+b74c5ed

Note: The OpenShift command-line client oc is already configured on the bastion node with kubeconfig placed at ~/.kube/config.

Using Web UI

The web console URL will be printed at the end of a successful install. Alternatively you can retrieve it anytime by running terraform output from the install directory.

[...]
web_console_url = https://console-openshift-console.apps.test-cluster-9a4f.mydomain.com
[...]

Open this URL in your browser and login with user kubeadmin and password mentioned in the kubeadmin-password file.

Clean up

To destroy after you are done using the cluster you can run command terraform destroy -var-file var.tfvars to make sure that all resources are properly cleaned up. Do not manually clean up your environment unless both of the following are true:

  1. You know what you are doing
  2. Something went wrong with an automated deletion.