VSphereCSIDriverOperatorCRupgradeable: VMwareVSphereControllerupgradeable:
found existing unsupported csi.vsphere.vmware.com driver
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.
If you use a firewall and plan to use Telemetry, you configured the firewall to allow the sites required by your cluster.
You reviewed your VMware platform licenses. Red Hat does not place any restrictions on your VMware licenses, but some VMware infrastructure components require licensing.
You can install OKD on vSphere by using 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 provide. If you do not use infrastructure that the installation program provisions, you must manage and maintain the cluster resources yourself.
See the Installation process for more information about installer-provisioned and user-provisioned installation processes.
The steps for performing a user-provisioned infrastructure installation are provided as an example only. Installing a cluster with infrastructure you provide requires knowledge of the vSphere platform and the installation process of OKD. Use the user-provisioned infrastructure installation instructions as a guide; you are free to create the required resources through other methods. |
Installer-provisioned infrastructure allows the installation program to pre-configure and automate the provisioning of resources required by OKD.
Installing a cluster on vSphere: You can install OKD on vSphere by using installer-provisioned infrastructure installation with no customization.
Installing a cluster on vSphere with customizations: You can install OKD on vSphere by using installer-provisioned infrastructure installation with the default customization options.
Installing a cluster on vSphere with network customizations: You can install OKD on installer-provisioned vSphere infrastructure, with network customizations. You can customize your OKD network configuration during installation, so that your cluster can coexist with your existing IP address allocations and adhere to your network requirements.
Installing a cluster on vSphere in a restricted network: You can install a cluster on VMware vSphere infrastructure in a restricted network by creating an internal mirror of the installation release content. You can use this method to deploy OKD on an internal network that is not visible to the internet.
User-provisioned infrastructure requires the user to provision all resources required by OKD.
Installing a cluster on vSphere with user-provisioned infrastructure: You can install OKD on VMware vSphere infrastructure that you provision.
Installing a cluster on vSphere with network customizations with user-provisioned infrastructure: You can install OKD on VMware vSphere infrastructure that you provision with customized network configuration options.
Installing a cluster on vSphere in a restricted network with user-provisioned infrastructure: OKD can be installed on VMware vSphere infrastructure that you provision in a restricted network.
You must install the OKD cluster on a VMware vSphere version 7 instance that meets the requirements for the components that you use.
OKD version 4.10 does not support VMware vSphere version 8.0. |
You can host the VMware vSphere infrastructure on-premise or on a VMware Cloud Verified provider that meets the requirements outlined in the following table:
Virtual environment product | Required version |
---|---|
VM hardware version |
15 or later |
vSphere ESXi hosts |
7 |
vCenter host |
7 |
Installing a cluster on VMware vSphere version 7.0 Update 1 is now deprecated. These versions are still fully supported, but version 4.10 of OKD requires vSphere virtual hardware version 15 or later. Hardware version 15 is now the default for vSphere virtual machines in OKD. To update the hardware version for your vSphere nodes, see the "Updating hardware on nodes running in vSphere" article. If your vSphere nodes are below hardware version 15 or your VMware vSphere version is earlier than 6.7U3, upgrading from OKD 4.10 to OKD 4.11 is not available. |
Component | Minimum supported versions | Description |
---|---|---|
Hypervisor |
vSphere 7 with HW version 15 |
This version is the minimum version that Fedora CoreOS (FCOS) supports. For more information about supported hardware on the latest version of Fedora that is compatible with FCOS, see Hardware on the Red Hat Customer Portal. |
Storage with in-tree drivers |
vSphere 7 |
This plugin creates vSphere storage by using the in-tree storage drivers for vSphere included in OKD. |
Optional: Networking (NSX-T) |
vSphere 7 |
vSphere 7 is required for OKD. For more information about the compatibility of NSX and OKD, see the Release Notes section of VMware’s NSX container plugin documentation. |
If you use a vSphere version 6.5 instance, upgrade to 7.0 before you install OKD.
You must ensure that the time on your ESXi hosts is synchronized before you install OKD. See Edit Time Configuration for a Host in the VMware documentation. |
To install the vSphere CSI Driver Operator, the following requirements must be met:
VMware vSphere version 6.7U3 or later
Virtual machines of hardware version 15 or later
No third-party vSphere CSI driver already installed in the cluster
If a third-party vSphere CSI driver is present in the cluster, OKD does not overwrite it. If you continue with the third-party vSphere CSI driver when upgrading to the next major version of OKD, the
The previous message informs you that Red Hat does not support the third-party vSphere CSI driver during an OKD upgrade operation. You can choose to ignore this message and continue with the upgrade operation. |
To remove a third-party vSphere CSI driver, see Removing a third-party vSphere CSI Driver.
Uninstalling a cluster on vSphere that uses installer-provisioned infrastructure: You can remove a cluster that you deployed on VMware vSphere infrastructure that used installer-provisioned infrastructure.