Preparing to install on OpenStack
You can install OKD on OpenStack. OKD version 4.14 supports OpenStack Train.
Prerequisites
You reviewed details about the OKD installation and update processes.
You read the documentation on selecting a cluster installation method and preparing it for users.
Choosing a method to install OKD on OpenStack
You can install OKD on installer-provisioned or user-provisioned infrastructure. The default installation type uses installer-provisioned infrastructure, where the installation program provisions the underlying infrastructure for the cluster. You can also install OKD on infrastructure that you provision. If you do not use infrastructure that the installation program provisions, you must manage and maintain the cluster resources yourself.
See Installation process for more information about installer-provisioned and user-provisioned installation processes.
Installing a cluster on installer-provisioned infrastructure
You can install a cluster on OpenStack infrastructure that is provisioned by the OKD installation program, by using one of the following methods:
Installing a cluster on OpenStack with customizations: You can install a customized cluster on OpenStack. The installation program allows for some customization to be applied at the installation stage. Many other customization options are available post-installation.
Installing a cluster on OpenStack with Kuryr: You can install a customized OKD cluster on OpenStack that uses Kuryr SDN. Kuryr and OKD integration is primarily designed for OKD clusters running on OpenStack VMs. Kuryr improves the network performance by plugging OKD pods into OpenStack SDN. In addition, it provides interconnectivity between pods and OpenStack virtual instances.
Installing a cluster on OpenStack in a restricted network: You can install OKD on OpenStack in a restricted or disconnected network by creating an internal mirror of the installation release content. You can use this method to install a cluster that does not require an active internet connection to obtain the software components. You can also use this installation method to ensure that your clusters only use container images that satisfy your organizational controls on external content.
Installing a cluster on user-provisioned infrastructure
You can install a cluster on OpenStack infrastructure that you provision, by using one of the following methods:
Installing a cluster on OpenStack on your own infrastructure: You can install OKD on user-provisioned OpenStack infrastructure. By using this installation method, you can integrate your cluster with existing infrastructure and modifications. For installations on user-provisioned infrastructure, you must create all OpenStack resources, like Nova servers, Neutron ports, and security groups. You can use the provided Ansible playbooks to assist with the deployment process.
Installing a cluster on OpenStack with Kuryr on your own infrastructure: You can install OKD on user-provisioned OpenStack infrastructure that uses Kuryr SDN.
Scanning OpenStack endpoints for legacy HTTPS certificates
Beginning with OKD 4.10, HTTPS certificates must contain subject alternative name (SAN) fields. Run the following script to scan each HTTPS endpoint in a OpenStack catalog for legacy certificates that only contain the CommonName
field.
OKD does not check the underlying OpenStack infrastructure for legacy certificates prior to installation or updates. Use the provided script to check for these certificates yourself. Failing to update legacy certificates prior to installing or updating a cluster will result in cluster dysfunction. |
Prerequisites
On the machine where you run the script, have the following software:
Bash version 4.0 or greater
grep
Populate the machine with OpenStack credentials for the target cloud.
Procedure
Save the following script to your machine:
Details
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -Eeuo pipefail
declare catalog san
catalog="$(mktemp)"
san="$(mktemp)"
readonly catalog san
declare invalid=0
openstack catalog list --format json --column Name --column Endpoints \
| jq -r '.[] | .Name as $name | .Endpoints[] | select(.interface=="public") | [$name, .interface, .url] | join(" ")' \
| sort \
> "$catalog"
while read -r name interface url; do
# Ignore HTTP
if [[ ${url#"http://"} != "$url" ]]; then
continue
fi
# Remove the schema from the URL
noschema=${url#"https://"}
# If the schema was not HTTPS, error
if [[ "$noschema" == "$url" ]]; then
echo "ERROR (unknown schema): $name $interface $url"
exit 2
fi
# Remove the path and only keep host and port
noschema="${noschema%%/*}"
host="${noschema%%:*}"
port="${noschema##*:}"
# Add the port if was implicit
if [[ "$port" == "$host" ]]; then
port='443'
fi
# Get the SAN fields
openssl s_client -showcerts -servername "$host" -connect "$host:$port" </dev/null 2>/dev/null \
| openssl x509 -noout -ext subjectAltName \
> "$san"
# openssl returns the empty string if no SAN is found.
# If a SAN is found, openssl is expected to return something like:
#
# X509v3 Subject Alternative Name:
# DNS:standalone, DNS:osp1, IP Address:192.168.2.1, IP Address:10.254.1.2
if [[ "$(grep -c "Subject Alternative Name" "$san" || true)" -gt 0 ]]; then
echo "PASS: $name $interface $url"
else
invalid=$((invalid+1))
echo "INVALID: $name $interface $url"
fi
done < "$catalog"
# clean up temporary files
rm "$catalog" "$san"
if [[ $invalid -gt 0 ]]; then
echo "${invalid} legacy certificates were detected. Update your certificates to include a SAN field."
exit 1
else
echo "All HTTPS certificates for this cloud are valid."
fi
Run the script.
Replace any certificates that the script reports as
INVALID
with certificates that contain SAN fields.
You must replace all legacy HTTPS certificates before you install OKD 4.10 or update a cluster to that version. Legacy certificates will be rejected with the following message:
|
Scanning OpenStack endpoints for legacy HTTPS certificates manually
Beginning with OKD 4.10, HTTPS certificates must contain subject alternative name (SAN) fields. If you do not have access to the prerequisite tools that are listed in “Scanning OpenStack endpoints for legacy HTTPS certificates”, perform the following steps to scan each HTTPS endpoint in a OpenStack catalog for legacy certificates that only contain the CommonName
field.
OKD does not check the underlying OpenStack infrastructure for legacy certificates prior to installation or updates. Use the following steps to check for these certificates yourself. Failing to update legacy certificates prior to installing or updating a cluster will result in cluster dysfunction. |
Procedure
On a command line, run the following command to view the URL of OpenStack public endpoints:
$ openstack catalog list
Record the URL for each HTTPS endpoint that the command returns.
For each public endpoint, note the host and the port.
Determine the host of an endpoint by removing the scheme, the port, and the path.
For each endpoint, run the following commands to extract the SAN field of the certificate:
Set a
host
variable:$ host=<host_name>
Set a
port
variable:$ port=<port_number>
If the URL of the endpoint does not have a port, use the value
443
.Retrieve the SAN field of the certificate:
$ openssl s_client -showcerts -servername "$host" -connect "$host:$port" </dev/null 2>/dev/null \
| openssl x509 -noout -ext subjectAltName
Example output
X509v3 Subject Alternative Name:
DNS:your.host.example.net
For each endpoint, look for output that resembles the previous example. If there is no output for an endpoint, the certificate of that endpoint is invalid and must be re-issued.
You must replace all legacy HTTPS certificates before you install OKD 4.10 or update a cluster to that version. Legacy certificates are rejected with the following message:
|