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OpenShift is a computer software product from Red Hat for container-based software deployment and management. It is a supported distribution of Kubernetes using Docker containers and DevOps tools for accelerated application development.
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OpenShift Origin is the upstream community project used in OpenShift Online, OpenShift Dedicated, and OpenShift Container Platform. Built around a core of Docker container packaging and Kubernetes container cluster management, Origin is augmented by application lifecycle management functionality and DevOps tooling. Origin provides an open source application container platform. All source code for the Origin project is available under the Apache License (Version 2.0) on GitHub.
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OpenShift Online is Red Hat's public cloud application development and hosting service.
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Online offered version 2 of the Origin project source code, which is also available under the Apache License Version 2.0. This version supported a variety of languages, frameworks, and databases via pre-built "cartridges" running under resource-quota "gears". Developers could add other language, database, or components via the OpenShift Cartridge application programming interface. This was deprecated in favour of OpenShift 3 and will be withdrawn on 30th September 2017 for non-paying customers and 31st December 2017 for paying customers.
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OpenShift 3 is built around Kubernetes. It can run any Docker-based container, but Openshift Online is limited to running containers that do not require root.
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OpenShift Dedicated is Red Hat's managed private cluster offering, built around a core of application containers powered by Docker, with orchestration and management provided by Kubernetes, on a foundation of Red Hat Enterprise Linux. It's available on the Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Google Cloud Platform (GCP) marketplaces.
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OpenShift Container Platform (formerly known as OpenShift Enterprise) is Red Hat's on-premises private platform as a service product, built around a core of application containers powered by Docker, with orchestration and management provided by Kubernetes, on a foundation of Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
oc whoami
oc status
oc get all
oc describe RESOURCE RESOURCE_NAME
oc export
oc create
oc edit
oc exec POD_NAME <options> <command>
oc rsh POD_NAME <options>
oc delete RESOURCE_TYPE name
oc version
docker version
oc cluster up \
--host-data-dir=... \
--host-config-dir=...
oc cluster down
oc cluster up \
--host-data-dir=... \
--host-config-dir=... \
--use-existing-config
oc logout
oc login -u developer -p developer
oc project myproject
oc new-app --name='cotd' --labels name='cotd' php~https://github.com/devops-with-openshift/cotd.git -e SELECTOR=cats
oc expose service cotd
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Supports stateful applications
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Volumes backed by shared storage which are mounted into running pods
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iSCSI, AWS EBS, NFS etc.
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Manifests that pods use to retreive and mount the volume into pod at initialization time
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Access modes: REadWriteOnce, REadOnlyMany, ReadWriteMany
oc new-app https://github.com/devops-with-openshift/bluegreen#green --name=green
oc patch route/bluegreen -p '{"spec":{"to":{"name":"green"}}}'
oc patch route/bluegreen -p '{"spec":{"to":{"name":"blue"}}}'
oc annotate route/ab haproxy.router.openshift.io/balance=roundrobin
oc set route-backends ab cats=100 city=0
oc set route-backends ab --adjust city=+10%
oc rollback cotd --to-version=1 --dry-run
oc rollback cotd --to-version=1
oc describe dc cotd
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Comes with all necessary OpenShift plugins (OpenShift login, OpenShift sync, OpenShift pipeline, Kubernetes)
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Comes with example
Jenkinsfile
oc get templates -n openshift | grep jenkins-pipeline-example
oc new-app jenkins-ephemeral # to keep the logs when Jenkins container shuts down
oc get pods
oc new-app jenkins-pipeline-example
oc start-build sample-pipeline
oc get pods
- Customizing Jenkins:
vim openshift.local.config/master/master-confi.yaml
jenkinsPipelineConfig:
autoProvisionEnabled: true
parameters:
JENKINS_IMAGE_STREAM_TAG: jenkins-2-rhel7:latest
ENABLE_OAUTH: true
serviceName: jenkins
templateName: jenkins-ephemeral
templateNamespace: openshift
- Good resource for Jenkinsfiles: https://github.com/fabric8io/fabric8-jenkinsfile-library
- /!\ Maximum size 1MB /!\
oc secret new test-secret cert.pem
oc secret new ssl-secret keys=key.pem certs=cert.pem
oc label secret ssl-secret env=test
oc get secrets --show-labels=true
oc delete secret ssl-secret
- Mounting the secret as a volume
oc volume dc/nodejs-ex --add -t secret --secret-name=ssl-secret -m /etc/keys --name=ssl-keys deploymentconfigs/nodejs-ex
oc rsh nodejs-ex-22-8noey ls /etc/keys
- Injecting the secret as an env var
oc secret new env-secrets username=user-file password=password-file
oc set env dc/nodejs-ex --from=secret/env-secret
oc env dc/nodejs-ex --list
- Similar to secrets, but with non-sensitive text-based configuration
oc create configmap test-config --from-literal=key1=config1 --from-literal=key2=config2 --from-file=filters.properties
oc volume dc/nodejs-ex --add -t configmap -m /etc/config --name=app-config --configmap-name=test-config
oc rsh nodejs-ex-26-44kdm ls /etc/config
oc delete configmap test-config
<CREATE AGAIN WITH NEW VALUES>
<NO NEED FOR MOUNTING AS VOLUME AGAIN>
oc set env dc/nodejs-ex --from=configmap/test-config
oc describe pod nodejs-ex-27-mqurr
oc set env dc/nodejs-ex ENV=TEST DB_ENV=TEST1 AUTO_COMMIT=true
oc set env dc/nodejs-ex --list
oc set env dc/nodejs-ex DB_ENV-
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ImageChange
- when uderlying image stream changes -
ConfigChange
- when the config of the pod template changes
- Label examples: release, environment, relationship, dmzbased, tier, node type, user type
- Identifying metadata consisting of key/value pairs attached to resources
- Annotation examples: example.com/skipValidation=true, example.com/MD5checksum-1234ABC, example.com/BUILDDATE=20171217
- Primarily concerned with attaching non-identifying information, which is used by other clients such as tools or libraries
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Source-to-Image (S2I): uses the opensource S2I tool to enable developers to reporducibly build images by layering the application's soure onto a container image
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Docker: using the Dockerfile
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Pipeline: uses Jenkins, developers provide Jenkinsfile containing the requisite build commands
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Custom: allows the developer to provide a customized builder image to build runtime image
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Git
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Dockerfile
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Image
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Binary
- contains the details of the chosen build strategy as well as the source
oc new-app https://github.com/openshift/nodejs-ex
oc get bc/nodejs-ex -o yaml
- unless specified otherwise, the
oc new-app
command will scan the supplied Git repo. If it finds a Dockerfile, the Docker build strategy will be used; otherwise source strategy will be used and an S2I builder will be configured
oc new-build openshift/nodejs-010-centos7~https://github.com/openshift/nodejs-ex.git --name='newbuildtest'
- Components:
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Builder image - installation and runtime dependencies for the app
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S2I script - assemble/run/usage/save-artifacts/test/run
- Process:
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Start an instance of the builder image
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Retreive the source artifacts from the specified repository
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Place the source artifacts as well as the S2I scripts into the builder image (bundle into .tar and stream into builder image)
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Execute assemble script
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Commit the image and push to OCP registry
- Customize the build process:
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Custom S2I scripts - their own assemble/run etc. by placing scripts in .s2i/bin at the base of the source code, can also contain environment file
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Custom S2I builder - write your own custom builder
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Adding the --follow flag to the start-build command
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oc get builds
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oc logs build/test-app-3
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oc set env bc/test-app BUILD_LOGLEVEL=5 S2I_DEBUG=true
- Operational layers:
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Operating system infrastructure operations - compute, network, storage, OS
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Cluster operations - cluster managemebt OpenShift/Kubernetes
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Application operations - deployments, telemetry, logging
- the EFK (Elasticsearch/Fluentd/Kibana) stack aggregates logs from nodes and application pods
oc cluster up --logging=true
- the Kubelet/Heapster/Cassandra and you can use Grafana to build dashboard
oc cluster up --metrics=true
- default behavior:
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best effor isolation = no primises what resources can be allocated for your project
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might get defaulted values
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out of memory killed randomly
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might get CPU starved (wait to schedule your workload)
- hard constraints how much memory/CPU your project can consume
oc login -u developer -p developer
oc new-project development --display-name='Development' --description='Development'
oc login -u system:admin
oc create -n development -f <YAML FILE HERE kind: ResourceQuota>
oc describe quota -n development
- mechanism for specifying default project CPU and memory limits and requests
oc get limits -n development
oc describe limits core-resource-limits -n development
- you may use project labels or annotations when creating multiproject spanning quotas
oc login -u system:admin
oc create clusterquota for-user-developer --project-annotation-selector openshift.io/requester=developer --hard pods=8
oc login -u developer -p developer
oc describe AppliedClusterResourceQuota
oc autoscale dc myapp --min 1 --max 4 --cpu-percent=75
oc get hpa myapp