You must complete the prerequisites before installing Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security Cloud Service (RHACS Cloud Service) for supported Kubernetes platforms.
RHACS has some system requirements that must be met before installing.
You must not install Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes on:
|
To install Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes, you must have:
A supported managed Kubernetes platform. For more information, see Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes Support Policy.
Cluster nodes with a supported operating system:
Operating system: Amazon Linux, CentOS, Container-Optimized OS from Google, Red Hat Enterprise Linux CoreOS (RHCOS), Debian, Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL), or Ubuntu.
Processor and memory: 2 CPU cores and at least 3GiB of RAM.
For deploying Central, use a machine type with four or more cores and apply scheduling policies to launch Central on such nodes. |
Architectures: AMD64, ppc64le, or s390x.
For ppc64le, or s390x architectures, you can only install RHACS Secured cluster services on IBM Power, IBM zSystems, and IBM® LinuxONE clusters. Central is not supported at this time. |
Persistent storage by using persistent volume claim (PVC).
You must not use Ceph FS storage with Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes. Red Hat recommends using RBD block mode PVCs for Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes. |
Use Solid-State Drives (SSDs) for best performance. However, you can use another storage type if you do not have SSDs available.
To install using helm charts:
You must have helm command-line interface (CLI) v3.2 or newer, if you are installing or configuring Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes using helm charts.
Use the helm version
command to verify the version of helm you have installed.
You must have access to the Red Hat Container Registry. For information about downloading images from registry.redhat.io
, see Red Hat Container Registry Authentication.
Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes includes an image vulnerability scanner called Scanner. This service scans images that are not already scanned by scanners integrated into image registries.
Scanner | CPU | Memory |
---|---|---|
Request |
1.2 cores |
2700 MiB |
Limit |
5 cores |
8000 MiB |
Sensor monitors your Kubernetes and OpenShift Container Platform clusters. These services currently deploy in a single deployment, which handles interactions with the Kubernetes API and coordinates with Collector.
Sensor | CPU | Memory |
---|---|---|
Request |
2 cores |
4 GiB |
Limit |
4 cores |
8 GiB |
The Admission controller prevents users from creating workloads that violate policies you configure.
By default, the admission control service runs 3 replicas. The following table lists the request and limits for each replica.
Admission controller | CPU | Memory |
---|---|---|
Request |
.05 cores |
100 MiB |
Limit |
.5 cores |
500 MiB |
Collector monitors runtime activity on each node in your secured clusters. It connects to Sensor to report this information.
To install Collector on systems that have Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) and that have Secure Boot enabled, you must use eBPF probes because kernel modules are unsigned, and the UEFI firmware cannot load unsigned packages. Collector identifies Secure Boot status at the start and switches to eBPF probes if required. |
Collector | CPU | Memory |
---|---|---|
Request |
.05 cores |
320 MiB |
Limit |
.75 cores |
1 GiB |
Collector uses a mutable image tag ( |