Configuring proxy support in Operator Lifecycle Manager
If a global proxy is configured on the OKD cluster, Operator Lifecycle Manager (OLM) automatically configures Operators that it manages with the cluster-wide proxy. However, you can also configure installed Operators to override the global proxy or inject a custom CA certificate.
Additional resources
Configuring a custom PKI (custom CA certificate)
Developing Operators that support proxy settings for Go, Ansible, and Helm
Overriding proxy settings of an Operator
If a cluster-wide egress proxy is configured, Operators running with Operator Lifecycle Manager (OLM) inherit the cluster-wide proxy settings on their deployments. Cluster administrators can also override these proxy settings by configuring the subscription of an Operator.
Operators must handle setting environment variables for proxy settings in the pods for any managed Operands. |
Prerequisites
- Access to an OKD cluster using an account with
cluster-admin
permissions.
Procedure
Navigate in the web console to the Operators → OperatorHub page.
Select the Operator and click Install.
On the Install Operator page, modify the
Subscription
object to include one or more of the following environment variables in thespec
section:HTTP_PROXY
HTTPS_PROXY
NO_PROXY
For example:
Subscription
object with proxy setting overridesapiVersion: operators.coreos.com/v1alpha1
kind: Subscription
metadata:
name: etcd-config-test
namespace: openshift-operators
spec:
config:
env:
- name: HTTP_PROXY
value: test_http
- name: HTTPS_PROXY
value: test_https
- name: NO_PROXY
value: test
channel: clusterwide-alpha
installPlanApproval: Automatic
name: etcd
source: community-operators
sourceNamespace: openshift-marketplace
startingCSV: etcdoperator.v0.9.4-clusterwide
These environment variables can also be unset using an empty value to remove any previously set cluster-wide or custom proxy settings.
OLM handles these environment variables as a unit; if at least one of them is set, all three are considered overridden and the cluster-wide defaults are not used for the deployments of the subscribed Operator.
Click Install to make the Operator available to the selected namespaces.
After the CSV for the Operator appears in the relevant namespace, you can verify that custom proxy environment variables are set in the deployment. For example, using the CLI:
$ oc get deployment -n openshift-operators \
etcd-operator -o yaml \
| grep -i "PROXY" -A 2
Example output
- name: HTTP_PROXY
value: test_http
- name: HTTPS_PROXY
value: test_https
- name: NO_PROXY
value: test
image: quay.io/coreos/etcd-operator@sha256:66a37fd61a06a43969854ee6d3e21088a98b93838e284a6086b13917f96b0d9c
...
Injecting a custom CA certificate
When a cluster administrator adds a custom CA certificate to a cluster using a config map, the Cluster Network Operator merges the user-provided certificates and system CA certificates into a single bundle. You can inject this merged bundle into your Operator running on Operator Lifecycle Manager (OLM), which is useful if you have a man-in-the-middle HTTPS proxy.
Prerequisites
Access to an OKD cluster using an account with
cluster-admin
permissions.Custom CA certificate added to the cluster using a config map.
Desired Operator installed and running on OLM.
Procedure
Create an empty config map in the namespace where the subscription for your Operator exists and include the following label:
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: trusted-ca (1)
labels:
config.openshift.io/inject-trusted-cabundle: "true" (2)
1 Name of the config map. 2 Requests the Cluster Network Operator to inject the merged bundle. After creating this config map, it is immediately populated with the certificate contents of the merged bundle.
Update your the
Subscription
object to include aspec.config
section that mounts thetrusted-ca
config map as a volume to each container within a pod that requires a custom CA:apiVersion: operators.coreos.com/v1alpha1
kind: Subscription
metadata:
name: my-operator
spec:
package: etcd
channel: alpha
config: (1)
selector:
matchLabels:
<labels_for_pods> (2)
volumes: (3)
- name: trusted-ca
configMap:
name: trusted-ca
items:
- key: ca-bundle.crt (4)
path: tls-ca-bundle.pem (5)
volumeMounts: (6)
- name: trusted-ca
mountPath: /etc/pki/ca-trust/extracted/pem
readOnly: true
1 Add a config
section if it does not exist.2 Specify labels to match pods that are owned by the Operator. 3 Create a trusted-ca
volume.4 ca-bundle.crt
is required as the config map key.5 tls-ca-bundle.pem
is required as the config map path.6 Create a trusted-ca
volume mount.Deployments of an Operator can fail to validate the authority and display a
x509 certificate signed by unknown authority
error. This error can occur even after injecting a custom CA when using the subscription of an Operator. In this case, you can set themountPath
as/etc/ssl/certs
for trusted-ca by using the subscription of an Operator.