Deploying OpenShift Data Foundation using IBM Power

Red Hat OpenShift Data Foundation 4.12

Instructions on deploying Red Hat OpenShift Data Foundation on IBM Power

Red Hat Storage Documentation Team

Abstract

Read this document for instructions about how to install Red Hat OpenShift Data Foundation to use local storage on IBM Power.

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Preface

Red Hat OpenShift Data Foundation supports deployment on existing Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform (RHOCP) IBM Power clusters in connected or disconnected environments along with out-of-the-box support for proxy environments.

Both internal and external OpenShift Data Foundation clusters are supported on IBM Power. See Planning your deployment and Preparing to deploy OpenShift Data Foundation for more information about deployment requirements.

To deploy OpenShift Data Foundation, follow the appropriate deployment process based on your requirement:

Chapter 1. Preparing to deploy OpenShift Data Foundation

Deploying OpenShift Data Foundation on OpenShift Container Platform using local storage devices provided by IBM Power enables you to create internal cluster resources. This approach internally provisions base services. Then, all applications can access additional storage classes.

Before you begin the deployment of Red Hat OpenShift Data Foundation using local storage, ensure that your resource requirements are met. See requirements for installing OpenShift Data Foundation using local storage devices.

After you have addressed the above, follow the below steps in the order given:

1.1. Requirements for installing OpenShift Data Foundation using local storage devices

Node requirements

  • The cluster must consist of at least three OpenShift Container Platform worker nodes in the cluster with locally attached storage devices on each of them.

    • Each of the three selected nodes must have at least one raw block device available to be used by OpenShift Data Foundation.
    • The devices to be used must be empty, that is, there should be no persistent volumes (PVs), volume groups (VGs), or local volumes (LVs) remaining on the disks.
  • You must have a minimum of three labeled nodes.

    • Each node that has local storage devices to be used by OpenShift Data Foundation must have a specific label to deploy OpenShift Data Foundation pods. To label the nodes, use the following command:

      $ oc label nodes <NodeNames> cluster.ocs.openshift.io/openshift-storage=''

For more information, see the Resource requirements section in the Planning guide.

Chapter 2. Deploy OpenShift Data Foundation using local storage devices

Use this section to deploy OpenShift Data Foundation on IBM Power infrastructure where OpenShift Container Platform is already installed.

Also, it is possible to deploy only the Multicloud Object Gateway (MCG) component with OpenShift Data Foundation. For more information, see Deploy standalone Multicloud Object Gateway.

Perform the following steps to deploy OpenShift Data Foundation:

2.1. Installing Local Storage Operator

Use this procedure to install the Local Storage Operator from the Operator Hub before creating OpenShift Data Foundation clusters on local storage devices.

Procedure

  1. Log in to the OpenShift Web Console.
  2. Click Operators → OperatorHub.
  3. Type local storage in the Filter by keyword…​ box to find the Local Storage Operator from the list of operators and click on it.
  4. Set the following options on the Install Operator page:

    1. Update channel as stable.
    2. Installation Mode as A specific namespace on the cluster.
    3. Installed Namespace as Operator recommended namespace openshift-local-storage.
    4. Approval Strategy as Automatic.
  5. Click Install.

Verification steps

  • Verify that the Local Storage Operator shows a green tick indicating successful installation.

2.2. Installing Red Hat OpenShift Data Foundation Operator

You can install Red Hat OpenShift Data Foundation Operator using the Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform Operator Hub.

For information about the hardware and software requirements, see Planning your deployment.

Prerequisites

  • Access to an OpenShift Container Platform cluster using an account with cluster-admin and Operator installation permissions.
  • You must have at least three worker nodes in the Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform cluster.
Important
  • When you need to override the cluster-wide default node selector for OpenShift Data Foundation, you can use the following command in the command line interface to specify a blank node selector for the openshift-storage namespace (create openshift-storage namespace in this case):
$ oc annotate namespace openshift-storage openshift.io/node-selector=

Procedure

  1. Log in to the OpenShift Web Console.
  2. Click Operators → OperatorHub.
  3. Scroll or type OpenShift Data Foundation into the Filter by keyword box to find the OpenShift Data Foundation Operator.
  4. Click Install.
  5. Set the following options on the Install Operator page:

    1. Update Channel as stable-4.12.
    2. Installation Mode as A specific namespace on the cluster.
    3. Installed Namespace as Operator recommended namespace openshift-storage. If Namespace openshift-storage does not exist, it is created during the operator installation.
  6. Select Approval Strategy as Automatic or Manual.

    If you select Automatic updates, then the Operator Lifecycle Manager (OLM) automatically upgrades the running instance of your Operator without any intervention.

    If you select Manual updates, then the OLM creates an update request. As a cluster administrator, you must then manually approve that update request to update the Operator to a newer version.

  7. Ensure that the Enable option is selected for the Console plugin.
  8. Click Install.

Verification steps

  • Verify that the OpenShift Data Foundation Operator shows a green tick indicating successful installation.
  • After the operator is successfully installed, a pop-up with a message, Web console update is available appears on the user interface. Click Refresh web console from this pop-up for the console changes to reflect.

    • In the Web Console, navigate to Storage and verify if Data Foundation is available.

2.3. Enabling cluster-wide encryption with KMS using the Token authentication method

You can enable the key value backend path and policy in the vault for token authentication.

Prerequisites

  • Administrator access to the vault.
  • A valid Red Hat OpenShift Data Foundation Advanced subscription. For more information, see the knowledgebase article on OpenShift Data Foundation subscriptions.
  • Carefully, select a unique path name as the backend path that follows the naming convention since you cannot change it later.

Procedure

  1. Enable the Key/Value (KV) backend path in the vault.

    For vault KV secret engine API, version 1:

    $ vault secrets enable -path=odf kv

    For vault KV secret engine API, version 2:

    $ vault secrets enable -path=odf kv-v2
  2. Create a policy to restrict the users to perform a write or delete operation on the secret:

    echo '
    path "odf/*" {
      capabilities = ["create", "read", "update", "delete", "list"]
    }
    path "sys/mounts" {
    capabilities = ["read"]
    }'| vault policy write odf -
  3. Create a token that matches the above policy:

    $ vault token create -policy=odf -format json

2.4. Enabling cluster-wide encryption with KMS using the Kubernetes authentication method

You can enable the Kubernetes authentication method for cluster-wide encryption using the Key Management System (KMS).

Prerequisites

  • Administrator access to Vault.
  • A valid Red Hat OpenShift Data Foundation Advanced subscription. For more information, see the knowledgebase article on OpenShift Data Foundation subscriptions.
  • The OpenShift Data Foundation operator must be installed from the Operator Hub.
  • Select a unique path name as the backend path that follows the naming convention carefully. You cannot change this path name later.

Procedure

  1. Create a service account:

    $ oc -n openshift-storage create serviceaccount <serviceaccount_name>

    where, <serviceaccount_name> specifies the name of the service account.

    For example:

    $ oc -n openshift-storage create serviceaccount odf-vault-auth
  2. Create clusterrolebindings and clusterroles:

    $ oc -n openshift-storage create clusterrolebinding vault-tokenreview-binding --clusterrole=system:auth-delegator --serviceaccount=openshift-storage:_<serviceaccount_name>_

    For example:

    $ oc -n openshift-storage create clusterrolebinding vault-tokenreview-binding --clusterrole=system:auth-delegator --serviceaccount=openshift-storage:odf-vault-auth
  3. Create a secret for the serviceaccount token and CA certificate.

    $ cat <<EOF | oc create -f -
    apiVersion: v1
    kind: Secret
    metadata:
      name: odf-vault-auth-token
      namespace: openshift-storage
      annotations:
        kubernetes.io/service-account.name: <serviceaccount_name>
    type: kubernetes.io/service-account-token
    data: {}
    EOF

    where, <serviceaccount_name> is the service account created in the earlier step.

  4. Get the token and the CA certificate from the secret.

    $ SA_JWT_TOKEN=$(oc -n openshift-storage get secret odf-vault-auth-token -o jsonpath="{.data['token']}" | base64 --decode; echo)
    $ SA_CA_CRT=$(oc -n openshift-storage get secret odf-vault-auth-token -o jsonpath="{.data['ca\.crt']}" | base64 --decode; echo)
  5. Retrieve the OCP cluster endpoint.

    $ OCP_HOST=$(oc config view --minify --flatten -o jsonpath="{.clusters[0].cluster.server}")
  6. Fetch the service account issuer:

    $ oc proxy &
    $ proxy_pid=$!
    $ issuer="$( curl --silent http://127.0.0.1:8001/.well-known/openid-configuration | jq -r .issuer)"
    $ kill $proxy_pid
  7. Use the information collected in the previous step to setup the Kubernetes authentication method in Vault:

    $ vault auth enable kubernetes
    $ vault write auth/kubernetes/config \
              token_reviewer_jwt="$SA_JWT_TOKEN" \
              kubernetes_host="$OCP_HOST" \
              kubernetes_ca_cert="$SA_CA_CRT" \
              issuer="$issuer"
    Important

    To configure the Kubernetes authentication method in Vault when the issuer is empty:

    $ vault write auth/kubernetes/config \
              token_reviewer_jwt="$SA_JWT_TOKEN" \
              kubernetes_host="$OCP_HOST" \
              kubernetes_ca_cert="$SA_CA_CRT"
  8. Enable the Key/Value (KV) backend path in Vault.

    For Vault KV secret engine API, version 1:

    $ vault secrets enable -path=odf kv

    For Vault KV secret engine API, version 2:

    $ vault secrets enable -path=odf kv-v2
  9. Create a policy to restrict the users to perform a write or delete operation on the secret:

    echo '
    path "odf/*" {
      capabilities = ["create", "read", "update", "delete", "list"]
    }
    path "sys/mounts" {
    capabilities = ["read"]
    }'| vault policy write odf -
  10. Generate the roles:

    $ vault write auth/kubernetes/role/odf-rook-ceph-op \
            bound_service_account_names=rook-ceph-system,rook-ceph-osd,noobaa \
            bound_service_account_namespaces=openshift-storage \
            policies=odf \
            ttl=1440h

    The role odf-rook-ceph-op is later used while you configure the KMS connection details during the creation of the storage system.

    $ vault write auth/kubernetes/role/odf-rook-ceph-osd \
            bound_service_account_names=rook-ceph-osd \
            bound_service_account_namespaces=openshift-storage \
            policies=odf \
            ttl=1440h

2.5. Finding available storage devices

Use this procedure to identify the device names for each of the three or more worker nodes that you have labeled with the OpenShift Data Foundation label cluster.ocs.openshift.io/openshift-storage='' before creating PVs for IBM Power.

Procedure

  1. List and verify the name of the worker nodes with the OpenShift Data Foundation label.

    $ oc get nodes -l cluster.ocs.openshift.io/openshift-storage=

    Example output:

    NAME       STATUS   ROLES    AGE     VERSION
    worker-0   Ready    worker   2d11h   v1.23.3+e419edf
    worker-1   Ready    worker   2d11h   v1.23.3+e419edf
    worker-2   Ready    worker   2d11h   v1.23.3+e419edf
  2. Log in to each worker node that is used for OpenShift Data Foundation resources and find the name of the additional disk that you have attached while deploying Openshift Container Platform.

    $ oc debug node/<node name>

    Example output:

    $ oc debug node/worker-0
    Starting pod/worker-0-debug ...
    To use host binaries, run `chroot /host`
    Pod IP: 192.168.0.63
    If you don't see a command prompt, try pressing enter.
    sh-4.4#
    sh-4.4# chroot /host
    sh-4.4# lsblk
    NAME   MAJ:MIN RM   SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT
    loop1    7:1    0   500G  0 loop
    sda      8:0    0   500G  0 disk
    sdb      8:16   0   120G  0 disk
    |-sdb1   8:17   0     4M  0 part
    |-sdb3   8:19   0   384M  0 part
    `-sdb4   8:20   0 119.6G  0 part
    sdc      8:32   0   500G  0 disk
    sdd      8:48   0   120G  0 disk
    |-sdd1   8:49   0     4M  0 part
    |-sdd3   8:51   0   384M  0 part
    `-sdd4   8:52   0 119.6G  0 part
    sde      8:64   0   500G  0 disk
    sdf      8:80   0   120G  0 disk
    |-sdf1   8:81   0     4M  0 part
    |-sdf3   8:83   0   384M  0 part
    `-sdf4   8:84   0 119.6G  0 part
    sdg      8:96   0   500G  0 disk
    sdh      8:112  0   120G  0 disk
    |-sdh1   8:113  0     4M  0 part
    |-sdh3   8:115  0   384M  0 part
    `-sdh4   8:116  0 119.6G  0 part
    sdi      8:128  0   500G  0 disk
    sdj      8:144  0   120G  0 disk
    |-sdj1   8:145  0     4M  0 part
    |-sdj3   8:147  0   384M  0 part
    `-sdj4   8:148  0 119.6G  0 part
    sdk      8:160  0   500G  0 disk
    sdl      8:176  0   120G  0 disk
    |-sdl1   8:177  0     4M  0 part
    |-sdl3   8:179  0   384M  0 part
    `-sdl4   8:180  0 119.6G  0 part /sysroot
    sdm      8:192  0   500G  0 disk
    sdn      8:208  0   120G  0 disk
    |-sdn1   8:209  0     4M  0 part
    |-sdn3   8:211  0   384M  0 part /boot
    `-sdn4   8:212  0 119.6G  0 part
    sdo      8:224  0   500G  0 disk
    sdp      8:240  0   120G  0 disk
    |-sdp1   8:241  0     4M  0 part
    |-sdp3   8:243  0   384M  0 part
    `-sdp4   8:244  0 119.6G  0 part

    In this example, for worker-0, the available local devices of 500G are sda, sdc, sde,sdg, sdi, sdk, sdm,sdo.

  3. Repeat the above step for all the other worker nodes that have the storage devices to be used by OpenShift Data Foundation. See this Knowledge Base article for more details.

2.6. Creating OpenShift Data Foundation cluster on IBM Power

Use this procedure to create an OpenShift Data Foundation cluster after you install the OpenShift Data Foundation operator.

Prerequisites

  • Ensure that all the requirements in the Requirements for installing OpenShift Data Foundation using local storage devices section are met.
  • You must have a minimum of three worker nodes with the same storage type and size attached to each node (for example, 200 GB SSD) to use local storage devices on IBM Power.
  • Verify your OpenShift Container Platform worker nodes are labeled for OpenShift Data Foundation:

    oc get nodes -l cluster.ocs.openshift.io/openshift-storage -o jsonpath='{range .items[*]}{.metadata.name}{"\n"}'

To identify storage devices on each node, refer to Finding available storage devices.

Procedure

  1. Log into the OpenShift Web Console.
  2. In openshift-local-storage namespace Click OperatorsInstalled Operators to view the installed operators.
  3. Click the Local Storage installed operator.
  4. On the Operator Details page, click the Local Volume link.
  5. Click Create Local Volume.
  6. Click on YAML view for configuring Local Volume.
  7. Define a LocalVolume custom resource for block PVs using the following YAML.

    apiVersion: local.storage.openshift.io/v1
    kind: LocalVolume
    metadata:
      name: localblock
      namespace: openshift-local-storage
    spec:
      logLevel: Normal
      managementState: Managed
      nodeSelector:
        nodeSelectorTerms:
          - matchExpressions:
              - key: kubernetes.io/hostname
                operator: In
                values:
                  - worker-0
                  - worker-1
                  - worker-2
      storageClassDevices:
        - devicePaths:
            - /dev/sda
          storageClassName: localblock
          volumeMode: Block

    The above definition selects sda local device from the worker-0, worker-1 and worker-2 nodes. The localblock storage class is created and persistent volumes are provisioned from sda.

    Important

    Specify appropriate values of nodeSelector as per your environment. The device name should be same on all the worker nodes. You can also specify more than one devicePaths.

  8. Click Create.
  9. Confirm whether diskmaker-manager pods and Persistent Volumes are created.

    1. For Pods

      1. Click Workloads → Pods from the left pane of the OpenShift Web Console.
      2. Select openshift-local-storage from the Project drop-down list.
      3. Check if there are diskmaker-manager pods for each of the worker node that you used while creating LocalVolume CR.
    2. For Persistent Volumes

      1. Click Storage → PersistentVolumes from the left pane of the OpenShift Web Console.
      2. Check the Persistent Volumes with the name local-pv-*. Number of Persistent Volumes will be equivalent to the product of number of worker nodes and number of storage devices provisioned while creating localVolume CR.

        Important
        • The flexible scaling feature is enabled only when the storage cluster that you created with three or more nodes are spread across fewer than the minimum requirement of three availability zones.

          This feature is available only in new deployments of Red Hat OpenShift Data Foundation versions 4.7 and later. Storage clusters upgraded from a previous version to version 4.7 or later do not support flexible scaling. For more information, see Flexible scaling of OpenShift Data Foundation cluster in the New features section of Release Notes.

        • Flexible scaling features get enabled at the time of deployment and can not be enabled or disabled later on.
  10. In the OpenShift Web Console, click Operators → Installed Operators to view all the installed operators.

    Ensure that the Project selected is openshift-storage.

  11. Click on the OpenShift Data Foundation operator and then click Create StorageSystem.
  12. In the Backing storage page, perform the following:

    1. Select Full Deployment for the Deployment type option.
    2. Select the Use an existing StorageClass option.
    3. Select the required Storage Class that you used while installing LocalVolume.

      By default, it is set to none.

    4. Click Next.
  13. In the Capacity and nodes page, configure the following:

    1. Available raw capacity is populated with the capacity value based on all the attached disks associated with the storage class. This takes some time to show up.
    2. The Selected nodes list shows the nodes based on the storage class.
    3. Optional: Select the Taint nodes checkbox to dedicate the selected nodes for OpenShift Data Foundation.
    4. Click Next.
  14. Optional: In the Security and network page, configure the following based on your requirement:

    1. To enable encryption, select Enable data encryption for block and file storage.
    2. Choose one or both of the following Encryption level:

      • Cluster-wide encryption

        Encrypts the entire cluster (block and file).

      • StorageClass encryption

        Creates encrypted persistent volume (block only) using encryption enabled storage class.

    3. Select Connect to an external key management service checkbox. This is optional for cluster-wide encryption.

      1. From the Key Management Service Provider drop-down list, either select Vault or Thales CipherTrust Manager (using KMIP). If you selected Vault, go to the next step. If you selected KMS Vendor (using KMIP), go to step iii.
      2. Select an Authentication Method.

        Using Token authentication method
        • Enter a unique Connection Name, host Address of the Vault server ('https://<hostname or ip>'), Port number and Token.
        • Expand Advanced Settings to enter additional settings and certificate details based on your Vault configuration:

          • Enter the Key Value secret path in Backend Path that is dedicated and unique to OpenShift Data Foundation.
          • Optional: Enter TLS Server Name and Vault Enterprise Namespace.
          • Upload the respective PEM encoded certificate file to provide the CA Certificate, Client Certificate and Client Private Key .
          • Click Save and skip to step d.
        Using Kubernetes authentication method
        • Enter a unique Vault Connection Name, host Address of the Vault server ('https://<hostname or ip>'), Port number and Role name.
        • Expand Advanced Settings to enter additional settings and certificate details based on your Vault configuration:

          • Enter the Key Value secret path in Backend Path that is dedicated and unique to OpenShift Data Foundation.
          • Optional: Enter TLS Server Name and Authentication Path if applicable.
          • Upload the respective PEM encoded certificate file to provide the CA Certificate, Client Certificate and Client Private Key .
          • Click Save and skip to step d.
      3. Enter a unique Connection Name for the Key Management service within the project.
      4. In the Address and Port sections, enter the endpoints. For example:

        • Address: 123.34.3.2 <IP>)
        • Port: 5696
      5. Upload the Client Certificate, CA certificate, and Client Private Key.
      6. If StorageClass encryption is enabled, enter the Unique Identifier to be used for encryption and decryption generated above.
      7. The TLS Server field is optional and used when there is no DNS entry for the KMIP endpoint. For example, kmip_all_<port>.ciphertrustmanager.local.
      8. Select a Network.
    4. Select Default (SDN) network as Multus is not yet supported on OpenShift Data Foundation on IBM Power.
    5. Click Next.
  15. In the Review and create page::

    1. Review the configurations details. To modify any configuration settings, click Back to go back to the previous configuration page.
    2. Click Create StorageSystem.

Verification steps

  • To verify the final Status of the installed storage cluster:

    1. In the OpenShift Web Console, navigate to Installed OperatorsOpenShift Data FoundationStorage Systemocs-storagecluster-storagesystemResources.
    2. Verify that Status of StorageCluster is Ready and has a green tick mark next to it.
  • To verify if flexible scaling is enabled on your storage cluster, perform the following steps:

    1. In the OpenShift Web Console, navigate to Installed OperatorsOpenShift Data FoundationStorage Systemocs-storagecluster-storagesystemResourcesocs-storagecluster.
    2. In the YAML tab, search for the keys flexibleScaling in spec section and failureDomain in status section. If flexible scaling is true and failureDomain is set to host, flexible scaling feature is enabled.

      spec:
      flexibleScaling: true
      […]
      status:
      failureDomain: host
  • To verify that all the components for OpenShift Data Foundation are successfully installed, see Verifying your OpenShift Data Foundation deployment.

Additional resources

  • To expand the capacity of the initial cluster, see the Scaling Storage guide.

Chapter 3. Verifying OpenShift Data Foundation deployment for internal mode

Use this section to verify that OpenShift Data Foundation is deployed correctly.

3.1. Verifying the state of the pods

To determine if OpenShift Data Foundation is deployed successfully, you can verify that the pods are in Running state.

Procedure

  1. Click Workloads → Pods from the left pane of the OpenShift Web Console.
  2. Select openshift-storage from the Project drop-down list.

    Note

    If the Show default projects option is disabled, use the toggle button to list all the default projects.

    For more information on the expected number of pods for each component and how it varies depending on the number of nodes, see Table 3.1, “Pods corresponding to OpenShift Data Foundation cluster”.

  3. Verify that the following pods are in running and completed state by clicking the Running and the Completed tabs:

    Table 3.1. Pods corresponding to OpenShift Data Foundation cluster

    ComponentCorresponding pods

    OpenShift Data Foundation Operator

    • ocs-operator-* (1 pod on any worker node)
    • ocs-metrics-exporter-* (1 pod on any worker node)
    • odf-operator-controller-manager-* (1 pod on any worker node)
    • odf-console-* (1 pod on any worker node)
    • csi-addons-controller-manager-* (1 pod on any worker node)

    Rook-ceph Operator

    rook-ceph-operator-* (1  pod on any worker node)

    Multicloud Object Gateway

    • noobaa-operator-* (1 pod on any worker node)
    • noobaa-core-* (1 pod on any storage node)
    • noobaa-db-pg-* (1 pod on any storage node)
    • noobaa-endpoint-* (1 pod on any storage node)

    MON

    rook-ceph-mon-* (3  pods on each storage node)

    MGR

    rook-ceph-mgr-* (1 pod on any storage node)

    MDS

    rook-ceph-mds-ocs-storagecluster-cephfilesystem-* (2 pods distributed across storage node)

    RGW

    rook-ceph-rgw-ocs-storagecluster-cephobjectstore-* (1 pod on any storage node)

    CSI

    • cephfs

      • csi-cephfsplugin-* (1 pod on each worker node)
      • csi-cephfsplugin-provisioner-* (2 pods distributed across worker nodes)
    • rbd

      • csi-rbdplugin-* (1 pod on each worker node)
      • csi-rbdplugin-provisioner-* (2 pods distributed across worker nodes)

    rook-ceph-crashcollector

    rook-ceph-crashcollector-* (1  pod on each storage node)

    OSD

    • rook-ceph-osd-* (1 pod for each device)
    • rook-ceph-osd-prepare-* (1 pod for each device)

3.2. Verifying the OpenShift Data Foundation cluster is healthy

Procedure

  1. In the OpenShift Web Console, click StorageData Foundation.
  2. Click the Storage Systems tab and then click on ocs-storagecluster-storagesystem.
  3. In the Status card of Block and File dashboard under Overview tab, verify that both Storage Cluster and Data Resiliency has a green tick mark.
  4. In the Details card, verify that the cluster information is displayed.

For more information on the health of the OpenShift Data Foundation cluster using the Block and File dashboard, see Monitoring OpenShift Data Foundation.

3.3. Verifying the Multicloud Object Gateway is healthy

Procedure

  1. In the OpenShift Web Console, click StorageData Foundation.
  2. In the Status card of the Overview tab, click Storage System and then click the storage system link from the pop up that appears.

    1. In the Status card of the Object tab, verify that both Object Service and Data Resiliency have a green tick.
    2. In the Details card, verify that the MCG information is displayed.

For more information on the health of the OpenShift Data Foundation cluster using the object service dashboard, see link: Monitoring OpenShift Data Foundation.

3.4. Verifying that the specific storage classes exist

Procedure

  1. Click Storage → Storage Classes from the left pane of the OpenShift Web Console.
  2. Verify that the following storage classes are created with the OpenShift Data Foundation cluster creation:

    • ocs-storagecluster-ceph-rbd
    • ocs-storagecluster-cephfs
    • openshift-storage.noobaa.io
    • ocs-storagecluster-ceph-rgw

Chapter 4. Deploy standalone Multicloud Object Gateway

Deploying only the Multicloud Object Gateway component with the OpenShift Data Foundation provides the flexibility in deployment and helps to reduce the resource consumption. Use this section to deploy only the standalone Multicloud Object Gateway component, which involves the following steps:

  • Installing the Local Storage Operator.
  • Installing Red Hat OpenShift Data Foundation Operator
  • Creating standalone Multicloud Object Gateway

4.1. Installing Local Storage Operator

Use this procedure to install the Local Storage Operator from the Operator Hub before creating OpenShift Data Foundation clusters on local storage devices.

Procedure

  1. Log in to the OpenShift Web Console.
  2. Click Operators → OperatorHub.
  3. Type local storage in the Filter by keyword…​ box to find the Local Storage Operator from the list of operators and click on it.
  4. Set the following options on the Install Operator page:

    1. Update channel as stable.
    2. Installation Mode as A specific namespace on the cluster.
    3. Installed Namespace as Operator recommended namespace openshift-local-storage.
    4. Approval Strategy as Automatic.
  5. Click Install.

Verification steps

  • Verify that the Local Storage Operator shows a green tick indicating successful installation.

4.2. Installing Red Hat OpenShift Data Foundation Operator

You can install Red Hat OpenShift Data Foundation Operator using the Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform Operator Hub.

For information about the hardware and software requirements, see Planning your deployment.

Prerequisites

  • Access to an OpenShift Container Platform cluster using an account with cluster-admin and Operator installation permissions.
  • You must have at least three worker nodes in the Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform cluster.
Important
  • When you need to override the cluster-wide default node selector for OpenShift Data Foundation, you can use the following command in the command line interface to specify a blank node selector for the openshift-storage namespace (create openshift-storage namespace in this case):
$ oc annotate namespace openshift-storage openshift.io/node-selector=

Procedure

  1. Log in to the OpenShift Web Console.
  2. Click Operators → OperatorHub.
  3. Scroll or type OpenShift Data Foundation into the Filter by keyword box to find the OpenShift Data Foundation Operator.
  4. Click Install.
  5. Set the following options on the Install Operator page:

    1. Update Channel as stable-4.12.
    2. Installation Mode as A specific namespace on the cluster.
    3. Installed Namespace as Operator recommended namespace openshift-storage. If Namespace openshift-storage does not exist, it is created during the operator installation.
  6. Select Approval Strategy as Automatic or Manual.

    If you select Automatic updates, then the Operator Lifecycle Manager (OLM) automatically upgrades the running instance of your Operator without any intervention.

    If you select Manual updates, then the OLM creates an update request. As a cluster administrator, you must then manually approve that update request to update the Operator to a newer version.

  7. Ensure that the Enable option is selected for the Console plugin.
  8. Click Install.

Verification steps

  • Verify that the OpenShift Data Foundation Operator shows a green tick indicating successful installation.
  • After the operator is successfully installed, a pop-up with a message, Web console update is available appears on the user interface. Click Refresh web console from this pop-up for the console changes to reflect.

    • In the Web Console, navigate to Storage and verify if Data Foundation is available.

4.3. Creating standalone Multicloud Object Gateway on IBM Power

You can create only the standalone Multicloud Object Gateway component while deploying OpenShift Data Foundation.

Prerequisites

  • Ensure that the OpenShift Data Foundation Operator is installed.
  • (For deploying using local storage devices only) Ensure that Local Storage Operator is installed.

To identify storage devices on each node, refer to Finding available storage devices.

Procedure

  1. Log into the OpenShift Web Console.
  2. In openshift-local-storage namespace, click OperatorsInstalled Operators to view the installed operators.
  3. Click the Local Storage installed operator.
  4. On the Operator Details page, click the Local Volume link.
  5. Click Create Local Volume.
  6. Click on YAML view for configuring Local Volume.
  7. Define a LocalVolume custom resource for filesystem PVs using the following YAML.

    apiVersion: local.storage.openshift.io/v1
    kind: LocalVolume
    metadata:
      name: localblock
      namespace: openshift-local-storage
    spec:
      logLevel: Normal
      managementState: Managed
      nodeSelector:
        nodeSelectorTerms:
          - matchExpressions:
              - key: kubernetes.io/hostname
                operator: In
                values:
                  - worker-0
                  - worker-1
                  - worker-2
      storageClassDevices:
        - devicePaths:
            - /dev/sda
          storageClassName: localblock
          volumeMode: Filesystem

    The above definition selects sda local device from the worker-0, worker-1 and worker-2 nodes. The localblock storage class is created and persistent volumes are provisioned from sda.

    Important

    Specify appropriate values of nodeSelector as per your environment. The device name should be same on all the worker nodes. You can also specify more than one devicePaths.

  8. Click Create.
  9. In the OpenShift Web Console, click OperatorsInstalled Operators to view all the installed operators.

    Ensure that the Project selected is openshift-storage.

  10. Click OpenShift Data Foundation operator and then click Create StorageSystem.
  11. In the Backing storage page, select Multicloud Object Gateway for Deployment type.
  12. Select the Use an existing StorageClass option for Backing storage type .

    1. Select the Storage Class that you used while installing LocalVolume.
  13. Click Next.
  14. Optional: In the Security page, select Connect to an external key management service.

    1. Key Management Service Provider is set to Vault by default.
    2. Enter Vault Service Name, host Address of Vault server ('https://<hostname or ip>'), Port number, and Token.
    3. Expand Advanced Settings to enter additional settings and certificate details based on your Vault configuration:

      1. Enter the Key Value secret path in the Backend Path that is dedicated and unique to OpenShift Data Foundation.
      2. Optional: Enter TLS Server Name and Vault Enterprise Namespace.
      3. Upload the respective PEM encoded certificate file to provide the CA Certificate, Client Certificate, and Client Private Key.
      4. Click Save.
    4. Click Next.
  15. In the Review and create page, review the configuration details:

    To modify any configuration settings, click Back.

  16. Click Create StorageSystem.

Verification steps

Verifying that the OpenShift Data Foundation cluster is healthy
  1. In the OpenShift Web Console, click StorageData Foundation.
  2. Click the Storage Systems tab and then click on ocs-storagecluster-storagesystem.

    1. In the Status card of the Object tab, verify that both Object Service and Data Resiliency have a green tick.
    2. In the Details card, verify that the MCG information is displayed.
Verifying the state of the pods
  1. Click WorkloadsPods from the OpenShift Web Console.
  2. Select openshift-storage from the Project drop-down list and verify that the following pods are in Running state.

    Note

    If the Show default projects option is disabled, use the toggle button to list all the default projects.

    ComponentCorresponding pods

    OpenShift Data Foundation Operator

    • ocs-operator-* (1 pod on any worker node)
    • ocs-metrics-exporter-* (1 pod on any worker node)
    • odf-operator-controller-manager-* (1 pod on any worker node)
    • odf-console-* (1 pod on any worker node)
    • csi-addons-controller-manager-* (1 pod on any worker node)

    Rook-ceph Operator

    rook-ceph-operator-*

    (1 pod on any worker node)

    Multicloud Object Gateway

    • noobaa-operator-* (1 pod on any worker node)
    • noobaa-core-* (1 pod on any worker node)
    • noobaa-db-pg-* (1 pod on any worker node)
    • noobaa-endpoint-* (1 pod on any worker node)
    • noobaa-default-backing-store-noobaa-pod-* (1 pod on any worker node)

Chapter 5. Uninstalling OpenShift Data Foundation

5.1. Uninstalling OpenShift Data Foundation in Internal mode

To uninstall OpenShift Data Foundation in Internal mode, refer to the knowledge base article on Uninstalling OpenShift Data Foundation.

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