- Configuring the registry for vSphere
Configuring the registry for vSphere
Image registry removed during installation
On platforms that do not provide shareable object storage, the OpenShift Image Registry Operator bootstraps itself as Removed
. This allows openshift-installer
to complete installations on these platform types.
After installation, you must edit the Image Registry Operator configuration to switch the managementState
from Removed
to Managed
.
The Prometheus console provides an “Image Registry has been removed. |
Changing the image registry’s management state
To start the image registry, you must change the Image Registry Operator configuration’s managementState
from Removed
to Managed
.
Procedure
Change
managementState
Image Registry Operator configuration fromRemoved
toManaged
. For example:$ oc patch configs.imageregistry.operator.openshift.io cluster --type merge --patch '{"spec":{"managementState":"Managed"}}'
Image registry storage configuration
The Image Registry Operator is not initially available for platforms that do not provide default storage. After installation, you must configure your registry to use storage so that the Registry Operator is made available.
Instructions are shown for configuring a persistent volume, which is required for production clusters. Where applicable, instructions are shown for configuring an empty directory as the storage location, which is available for only non-production clusters.
Additional instructions are provided for allowing the image registry to use block storage types by using the Recreate
rollout strategy during upgrades.
Configuring registry storage for VMware vSphere
As a cluster administrator, following installation you must configure your registry to use storage.
Prerequisites
Cluster administrator permissions.
A cluster on VMware vSphere.
Persistent storage provisioned for your cluster, such as Red Hat OpenShift Data Foundation.
OKD supports
ReadWriteOnce
access for image registry storage when you have only one replica. To deploy an image registry that supports high availability with two or more replicas,ReadWriteMany
access is required.Must have “100Gi” capacity.
Testing shows issues with using the NFS server on RHEL as storage backend for core services. This includes the OpenShift Container Registry and Quay, Prometheus for monitoring storage, and Elasticsearch for logging storage. Therefore, using RHEL NFS to back PVs used by core services is not recommended. Other NFS implementations on the marketplace might not have these issues. Contact the individual NFS implementation vendor for more information on any testing that was possibly completed against these OKD core components. |
Procedure
To configure your registry to use storage, change the
spec.storage.pvc
in theconfigs.imageregistry/cluster
resource.When using shared storage, review your security settings to prevent outside access.
Verify that you do not have a registry pod:
$ oc get pod -n openshift-image-registry
If the storage type is
emptyDIR
, the replica number cannot be greater than1
.Check the registry configuration:
$ oc edit configs.imageregistry.operator.openshift.io
Example output
storage:
pvc:
claim: (1)
1 Leave the claim
field blank to allow the automatic creation of animage-registry-storage
PVC.Check the
clusteroperator
status:$ oc get clusteroperator image-registry
Configuring storage for the image registry in non-production clusters
You must configure storage for the Image Registry Operator. For non-production clusters, you can set the image registry to an empty directory. If you do so, all images are lost if you restart the registry.
Procedure
To set the image registry storage to an empty directory:
$ oc patch configs.imageregistry.operator.openshift.io cluster --type merge --patch '{"spec":{"storage":{"emptyDir":{}}}}'
Configure this option for only non-production clusters.
If you run this command before the Image Registry Operator initializes its components, the
oc patch
command fails with the following error:Error from server (NotFound): configs.imageregistry.operator.openshift.io "cluster" not found
Wait a few minutes and run the command again.
Configuring block registry storage for VMware vSphere
To allow the image registry to use block storage types such as vSphere Virtual Machine Disk (VMDK) during upgrades as a cluster administrator, you can use the Recreate
rollout strategy.
Block storage volumes are supported but not recommended for use with image registry on production clusters. An installation where the registry is configured on block storage is not highly available because the registry cannot have more than one replica. |
Procedure
To set the image registry storage as a block storage type, patch the registry so that it uses the
Recreate
rollout strategy and runs with only1
replica:$ oc patch config.imageregistry.operator.openshift.io/cluster --type=merge -p '{"spec":{"rolloutStrategy":"Recreate","replicas":1}}'
Provision the PV for the block storage device, and create a PVC for that volume. The requested block volume uses the ReadWriteOnce (RWO) access mode.
Create a
pvc.yaml
file with the following contents to define a VMware vSpherePersistentVolumeClaim
object:kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
name: image-registry-storage (1)
namespace: openshift-image-registry (2)
spec:
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce (3)
resources:
requests:
storage: 100Gi (4)
1 A unique name that represents the PersistentVolumeClaim
object.2 The namespace for the PersistentVolumeClaim
object, which isopenshift-image-registry
.3 The access mode of the persistent volume claim. With ReadWriteOnce
, the volume can be mounted with read and write permissions by a single node.4 The size of the persistent volume claim. Create the
PersistentVolumeClaim
object from the file:$ oc create -f pvc.yaml -n openshift-image-registry
Edit the registry configuration so that it references the correct PVC:
$ oc edit config.imageregistry.operator.openshift.io -o yaml
Example output
storage:
pvc:
claim: (1)
1 Creating a custom PVC allows you to leave the claim
field blank for the default automatic creation of animage-registry-storage
PVC.
For instructions about configuring registry storage so that it references the correct PVC, see Configuring the registry for vSphere.
Additional resources
- For more details about configuring registry storage for vSphere, see Recommended configurable storage technology.