Compute Engine API
Before you can install OKD, you must configure a Google Cloud Platform (GCP) project to host it.
To install OKD, you must create a project in your Google Cloud Platform (GCP) account to host the cluster.
Create a project to host your OKD cluster. See Creating and Managing Projects in the GCP documentation.
Your GCP project must use the Premium Network service Tier if you are using installer-provisioned infrastructure. The Standard Network service Tier is not supported for clusters installed using the installation program. The installation program configures internal load balancing for the |
Your Google Cloud Platform (GCP) project requires access to several API services to complete OKD installation.
You created a project to host your cluster.
Enable the following required API services in the project that hosts your cluster. You may also enable optional API services which are not required for installation. See Enabling services in the GCP documentation.
API service | Console service name |
---|---|
Compute Engine API |
|
Cloud Resource Manager API |
|
Google DNS API |
|
IAM service Account Credentials API |
|
Identity and Access Management (IAM) API |
|
service Usage API |
|
API service | Console service name |
---|---|
Google Cloud APIs |
|
service Management API |
|
Google Cloud Storage JSON API |
|
Cloud Storage |
|
To install OKD, the Google Cloud Platform (GCP) account you use must have a dedicated public hosted zone in the same project that you host the OKD cluster. This zone must be authoritative for the domain. The DNS service provides cluster DNS resolution and name lookup for external connections to the cluster.
Identify your domain, or subdomain, and registrar. You can transfer an existing domain and registrar or obtain a new one through GCP or another source.
If you purchase a new domain, it can take time for the relevant DNS changes to propagate. For more information about purchasing domains through Google, see Google Domains. |
Create a public hosted zone for your domain or subdomain in your GCP project. See Creating public zones in the GCP documentation.
Use an appropriate root domain, such as openshiftcorp.com
, or subdomain,
such as clusters.openshiftcorp.com
.
Extract the new authoritative name servers from the hosted zone records. See Look up your Cloud DNS name servers in the GCP documentation.
You typically have four name servers.
Update the registrar records for the name servers that your domain uses. For example, if you registered your domain to Google Domains, see the following topic in the Google Domains Help: How to switch to custom name servers.
If you migrated your root domain to Google Cloud DNS, migrate your DNS records. See Migrating to Cloud DNS in the GCP documentation.
If you use a subdomain, follow your company’s procedures to add its delegation records to the parent domain. This process might include a request to your company’s IT department or the division that controls the root domain and DNS services for your company.
The OKD cluster uses a number of Google Cloud Platform (GCP) components, but the default Quotas do not affect your ability to install a default OKD cluster.
A default cluster, which contains three compute and three control plane machines, uses the following resources. Note that some resources are required only during the bootstrap process and are removed after the cluster deploys.
service | Component | Location | Total resources required | Resources removed after bootstrap |
---|---|---|---|---|
service account |
IAM |
Global |
6 |
1 |
Firewall rules |
Compute |
Global |
11 |
1 |
Forwarding rules |
Compute |
Global |
2 |
0 |
In-use global IP addresses |
Compute |
Global |
4 |
1 |
Health checks |
Compute |
Global |
3 |
0 |
Images |
Compute |
Global |
1 |
0 |
Networks |
Compute |
Global |
2 |
0 |
Static IP addresses |
Compute |
Region |
4 |
1 |
Routers |
Compute |
Global |
1 |
0 |
Routes |
Compute |
Global |
2 |
0 |
Subnetworks |
Compute |
Global |
2 |
0 |
Target pools |
Compute |
Global |
3 |
0 |
CPUs |
Compute |
Region |
28 |
4 |
Persistent disk SSD (GB) |
Compute |
Region |
896 |
128 |
If any of the quotas are insufficient during installation, the installation program displays an error that states both which quota was exceeded and the region. |
Be sure to consider your actual cluster size, planned cluster growth, and any usage from other clusters that are associated with your account. The CPU, static IP addresses, and persistent disk SSD (storage) quotas are the ones that are most likely to be insufficient.
If you plan to deploy your cluster in one of the following regions, you will exceed the maximum storage quota and are likely to exceed the CPU quota limit:
asia-east2
asia-northeast2
asia-south1
australia-southeast1
europe-north1
europe-west2
europe-west3
europe-west6
northamerica-northeast1
southamerica-east1
us-west2
You can increase resource quotas from the GCP console, but you might need to file a support ticket. Be sure to plan your cluster size early so that you can allow time to resolve the support ticket before you install your OKD cluster.
OKD requires a Google Cloud Platform (GCP) service account that provides authentication and authorization to access data in the Google APIs. If you do not have an existing IAM service account that contains the required roles in your project, you must create one.
You created a project to host your cluster.
Create a service account in the project that you use to host your OKD cluster. See Creating a service account in the GCP documentation.
Grant the service account the appropriate permissions. You can either
grant the individual permissions that follow or assign the Owner
role to it.
See Granting roles to a service account for specific resources.
While making the service account an owner of the project is the easiest way to gain the required permissions, it means that service account has complete control over the project. You must determine if the risk that comes from offering that power is acceptable. |
You can create the service account key in JSON format, or attach the service account to a GCP virtual machine. See Creating service account keys and Creating and enabling service accounts for instances in the GCP documentation.
You must have a service account key or a virtual machine with an attached service account to create the cluster.
If you use a virtual machine with an attached service account to create your cluster, you must set |
When you attach the Owner
role to the service account that you create, you grant that service account all permissions, including those that are required to install OKD. If the security policies for your organization require a more restrictive set of permissions, you can create a service account with the following permissions.
If you configure the Cloud Credential Operator to operate in passthrough mode, you must use roles rather than granular permissions. |
If you deploy your cluster into an existing virtual private cloud (VPC), the service account does not require certain networking permissions, which are noted in the following lists:
Compute Admin
IAM Security Admin
service Account Admin
service Account Key Admin
service Account User
Storage Admin
DNS Administrator
Compute Load Balancer Admin
IAM Role Viewer
The roles are applied to the service accounts that the control plane and compute machines use:
Account | Roles |
---|---|
Control Plane |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Compute |
|
|
When you attach the Owner
role to the service account that you create, you grant that service account all permissions, including those that are required to install OKD.
If the security policies for your organization require a more restrictive set of permissions, you can create custom roles with the necessary permissions. The following permissions are required for the installer-provisioned infrastructure for creating and deleting the OKD cluster.
If you configure the Cloud Credential Operator to operate in passthrough mode, you must use roles rather than granular permissions. For more information, see "Required roles for using passthrough credentials mode" in the "Required GCP roles" section. |
compute.addresses.create
compute.addresses.createInternal
compute.addresses.delete
compute.addresses.get
compute.addresses.list
compute.addresses.use
compute.addresses.useInternal
compute.firewalls.create
compute.firewalls.delete
compute.firewalls.get
compute.firewalls.list
compute.forwardingRules.create
compute.forwardingRules.get
compute.forwardingRules.list
compute.forwardingRules.setLabels
compute.networks.create
compute.networks.get
compute.networks.list
compute.networks.updatePolicy
compute.routers.create
compute.routers.get
compute.routers.list
compute.routers.update
compute.routes.list
compute.subnetworks.create
compute.subnetworks.get
compute.subnetworks.list
compute.subnetworks.use
compute.subnetworks.useExternalIp
compute.regionBackendservices.create
compute.regionBackendservices.get
compute.regionBackendservices.list
compute.regionBackendservices.update
compute.regionBackendservices.use
compute.targetPools.addInstance
compute.targetPools.create
compute.targetPools.get
compute.targetPools.list
compute.targetPools.removeInstance
compute.targetPools.use
dns.changes.create
dns.changes.get
dns.managedZones.create
dns.managedZones.get
dns.managedZones.list
dns.networks.bindPrivateDNSZone
dns.resourceRecordSets.create
dns.resourceRecordSets.list
iam.serviceAccountKeys.create
iam.serviceAccountKeys.delete
iam.serviceAccountKeys.get
iam.serviceAccountKeys.list
iam.serviceAccounts.actAs
iam.serviceAccounts.create
iam.serviceAccounts.delete
iam.serviceAccounts.get
iam.serviceAccounts.list
resourcemanager.projects.get
resourcemanager.projects.getIamPolicy
resourcemanager.projects.setIamPolicy
compute.disks.create
compute.disks.get
compute.disks.list
compute.disks.setLabels
compute.instanceGroups.create
compute.instanceGroups.delete
compute.instanceGroups.get
compute.instanceGroups.list
compute.instanceGroups.update
compute.instanceGroups.use
compute.instances.create
compute.instances.delete
compute.instances.get
compute.instances.list
compute.instances.setLabels
compute.instances.setMetadata
compute.instances.setserviceAccount
compute.instances.setTags
compute.instances.use
compute.machineTypes.get
compute.machineTypes.list
storage.buckets.create
storage.buckets.delete
storage.buckets.get
storage.buckets.list
storage.objects.create
storage.objects.delete
storage.objects.get
storage.objects.list
compute.healthChecks.create
compute.healthChecks.get
compute.healthChecks.list
compute.healthChecks.useReadOnly
compute.httpHealthChecks.create
compute.httpHealthChecks.get
compute.httpHealthChecks.list
compute.httpHealthChecks.useReadOnly
compute.globalOperations.get
compute.regionOperations.get
compute.regions.list
compute.zoneOperations.get
compute.zones.get
compute.zones.list
monitoring.timeSeries.list
serviceusage.quotas.get
serviceusage.services.list
iam.roles.get
compute.images.list
compute.instances.getSerialPortOutput
compute.addresses.delete
compute.addresses.deleteInternal
compute.addresses.list
compute.firewalls.delete
compute.firewalls.list
compute.forwardingRules.delete
compute.forwardingRules.list
compute.networks.delete
compute.networks.list
compute.networks.updatePolicy
compute.routers.delete
compute.routers.list
compute.routes.list
compute.subnetworks.delete
compute.subnetworks.list
compute.regionBackendservices.delete
compute.regionBackendservices.list
compute.targetPools.delete
compute.targetPools.list
dns.changes.create
dns.managedZones.delete
dns.managedZones.get
dns.managedZones.list
dns.resourceRecordSets.delete
dns.resourceRecordSets.list
iam.serviceAccounts.delete
iam.serviceAccounts.get
iam.serviceAccounts.list
resourcemanager.projects.getIamPolicy
resourcemanager.projects.setIamPolicy
compute.disks.delete
compute.disks.list
compute.instanceGroups.delete
compute.instanceGroups.list
compute.instances.delete
compute.instances.list
compute.instances.stop
compute.machineTypes.list
storage.buckets.delete
storage.buckets.getIamPolicy
storage.buckets.list
storage.objects.delete
storage.objects.list
compute.healthChecks.delete
compute.healthChecks.list
compute.httpHealthChecks.delete
compute.httpHealthChecks.list
compute.images.list
When you are installing a cluster to a shared VPC, you must configure the service account for both the host project and the service project. If you are not installing to a shared VPC, you can skip this section.
You must apply the minimum roles required for a standard installation as listed above, to the service project.
You can use granular permissions for a Cloud Credential Operator that operates in either manual or mint credentials mode. You cannot use granular permissions in passthrough credentials mode. |
Ensure that the host project applies one of the following configurations to the service account:
projects/<host-project>/roles/dns.networks.bindPrivateDNSZone
roles/compute.networkAdmin
roles/compute.securityAdmin
projects/<host-project>/roles/dns.networks.bindPrivateDNSZone
roles/compute.networkUser
You can deploy an OKD cluster to the following Google Cloud Platform (GCP) regions:
asia-east1
(Changhua County, Taiwan)
asia-east2
(Hong Kong)
asia-northeast1
(Tokyo, Japan)
asia-northeast2
(Osaka, Japan)
asia-northeast3
(Seoul, South Korea)
asia-south1
(Mumbai, India)
asia-south2
(Delhi, India)
asia-southeast1
(Jurong West, Singapore)
asia-southeast2
(Jakarta, Indonesia)
australia-southeast1
(Sydney, Australia)
australia-southeast2
(Melbourne, Australia)
europe-central2
(Warsaw, Poland)
europe-north1
(Hamina, Finland)
europe-southwest1
(Madrid, Spain)
europe-west1
(St. Ghislain, Belgium)
europe-west2
(London, England, UK)
europe-west3
(Frankfurt, Germany)
europe-west4
(Eemshaven, Netherlands)
europe-west6
(Zürich, Switzerland)
europe-west8
(Milan, Italy)
europe-west9
(Paris, France)
europe-west12
(Turin, Italy)
me-central1
(Doha, Qatar, Middle East)
me-west1
(Tel Aviv, Israel)
northamerica-northeast1
(Montréal, Québec, Canada)
northamerica-northeast2
(Toronto, Ontario, Canada)
southamerica-east1
(São Paulo, Brazil)
southamerica-west1
(Santiago, Chile)
us-central1
(Council Bluffs, Iowa, USA)
us-east1
(Moncks Corner, South Carolina, USA)
us-east4
(Ashburn, Northern Virginia, USA)
us-east5
(Columbus, Ohio)
us-south1
(Dallas, Texas)
us-west1
(The Dalles, Oregon, USA)
us-west2
(Los Angeles, California, USA)
us-west3
(Salt Lake City, Utah, USA)
us-west4
(Las Vegas, Nevada, USA)
To determine which machine type instances are available by region and zone, see the Google documentation. |
Install an OKD cluster on GCP. You can install a customized cluster or quickly install a cluster with default options.