The |
You can use the OKD web console to deploy the Red Hat OpenShift Logging Operator.
Prerequisites
The logging subsystem for Red Hat OpenShift is provided as an installable component, with a distinct release cycle from the core OKD. The Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform Life Cycle Policy outlines release compatibility. |
To deploy the Red Hat OpenShift Logging Operator using the OKD web console:
Install the Red Hat OpenShift Logging Operator:
In the OKD web console, click Operators → OperatorHub.
Type Logging in the Filter by keyword field.
Choose Red Hat OpenShift Logging from the list of available Operators, and click Install.
Select stable or stable-5.y as the Update Channel.
The |
Ensure that A specific namespace on the cluster is selected under Installation Mode.
Ensure that Operator recommended namespace is openshift-logging under Installed Namespace.
Select Enable Operator recommended cluster monitoring on this Namespace.
Select an option for Update approval.
The Automatic option allows Operator Lifecycle Manager (OLM) to automatically update the Operator when a new version is available.
The Manual option requires a user with appropriate credentials to approve the Operator update.
Select Enable or Disable for the Console plugin.
Click Install.
Verify that the Red Hat OpenShift Logging Operator is installed by switching to the Operators → Installed Operators page.
Ensure that Red Hat OpenShift Logging is listed in the openshift-logging project with a Status of Succeeded.
Create a ClusterLogging instance.
The form view of the web console does not include all available options. The YAML view is recommended for completing your setup. |
In the collection section, select a Collector Implementation.
As of logging version 5.6 Fluentd is deprecated and is planned to be removed in a future release. Red Hat will provide bug fixes and support for this feature during the current release lifecycle, but this feature will no longer receive enhancements and will be removed. As an alternative to Fluentd, you can use Vector instead. |
In the logStore section, select a type.
As of logging version 5.4.3 the Elasticsearch Operator is deprecated and is planned to be removed in a future release. Red Hat will provide bug fixes and support for this feature during the current release lifecycle, but this feature will no longer receive enhancements and will be removed. As an alternative to using the Elasticsearch Operator to manage the default log storage, you can use the Loki Operator. |
Click Create.
You can use the OKD web console to install the Loki Operator.
Supported Log Store (AWS S3, Google Cloud Storage, Azure, Swift, Minio, OpenShift Data Foundation)
To install the Loki Operator using the OKD web console:
In the OKD web console, click Operators → OperatorHub.
Type Loki in the Filter by keyword field.
Choose Loki Operator from the list of available Operators, and click Install.
Select stable or stable-5.y as the Update Channel.
The |
Ensure that All namespaces on the cluster is selected under Installation Mode.
Ensure that openshift-operators-redhat is selected under Installed Namespace.
Select Enable Operator recommended cluster monitoring on this Namespace.
This option sets the openshift.io/cluster-monitoring: "true"
label in the Namespace object. You must select this option to ensure that cluster monitoring scrapes the openshift-operators-redhat
namespace.
Select an option for Update approval.
The Automatic option allows Operator Lifecycle Manager (OLM) to automatically update the Operator when a new version is available.
The Manual option requires a user with appropriate credentials to approve the Operator update.
Click Install.
Verify that the LokiOperator installed by switching to the Operators → Installed Operators page.
Ensure that LokiOperator is listed with Status as Succeeded in all the projects.
Create a secret
YAML file that uses the access_key_id
and access_key_secret
fields to specify your credentials and bucketnames
, endpoint
, and region
to define the object storage location. AWS is used in the following example:
apiVersion: v1
kind: secret
metadata:
name: logging-loki-s3
namespace: openshift-logging
stringData:
access_key_id: AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE
access_key_secret: wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY
bucketnames: s3-bucket-name
endpoint: https://s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com
region: eu-central-1
Select Create instance under LokiStack on the Details tab. Then select YAML view. Paste in the following template, subsituting values where appropriate.
apiVersion: loki.grafana.com/v1
kind: LokiStack
metadata:
name: logging-loki (1)
namespace: openshift-logging
spec:
size: 1x.small (2)
storage:
schemas:
- version: v12
effectiveDate: '2022-06-01'
secret:
name: logging-loki-s3 (3)
type: s3 (4)
storageClassName: <storage_class_name> (5)
tenants:
mode: openshift-logging
1 | Name should be logging-loki . |
2 | Select your Loki deployment size. |
3 | Define the secret used for your log storage. |
4 | Define corresponding storage type. |
5 | Enter the name of an existing storage class for temporary storage. For best performance, specify a storage class that allocates block storage. Available storage classes for your cluster can be listed using oc get storageclasses .
|
Create or edit a ClusterLogging
CR:
apiVersion: logging.openshift.io/v1
kind: ClusterLogging
metadata:
name: instance
namespace: openshift-logging
spec:
managementState: Managed
logStore:
type: lokistack
lokistack:
name: logging-loki
collection:
type: vector
Apply the configuration:
oc apply -f cr-lokistack.yaml
Instead of using the OKD web console, you can install an Operator from OperatorHub using the CLI. Use the oc
command to create or update a Subscription
object.
Access to an OKD cluster using an account with
cluster-admin
permissions.
Install the oc
command to your local system.
View the list of Operators available to the cluster from OperatorHub:
$ oc get packagemanifests -n openshift-marketplace
NAME CATALOG AGE
3scale-operator Red Hat Operators 91m
advanced-cluster-management Red Hat Operators 91m
amq7-cert-manager Red Hat Operators 91m
...
couchbase-enterprise-certified Certified Operators 91m
crunchy-postgres-operator Certified Operators 91m
mongodb-enterprise Certified Operators 91m
...
etcd Community Operators 91m
jaeger Community Operators 91m
kubefed Community Operators 91m
...
Note the catalog for your desired Operator.
Inspect your desired Operator to verify its supported install modes and available channels:
$ oc describe packagemanifests <operator_name> -n openshift-marketplace
An Operator group, defined by an OperatorGroup
object, selects target namespaces in which to generate required RBAC access for all Operators in the same namespace as the Operator group.
The namespace to which you subscribe the Operator must have an Operator group that matches the install mode of the Operator, either the AllNamespaces
or SingleNamespace
mode. If the Operator you intend to install uses the AllNamespaces
, then the openshift-operators
namespace already has an appropriate Operator group in place.
However, if the Operator uses the SingleNamespace
mode and you do not already have an appropriate Operator group in place, you must create one.
The web console version of this procedure handles the creation of the |
Create an OperatorGroup
object YAML file, for example operatorgroup.yaml
:
OperatorGroup
objectapiVersion: operators.coreos.com/v1
kind: OperatorGroup
metadata:
name: <operatorgroup_name>
namespace: <namespace>
spec:
targetNamespaces:
- <namespace>
Create the OperatorGroup
object:
$ oc apply -f operatorgroup.yaml
Create a Subscription
object YAML file to subscribe a namespace to an Operator, for example sub.yaml
:
Subscription
objectapiVersion: operators.coreos.com/v1alpha1
kind: Subscription
metadata:
name: <subscription_name>
namespace: openshift-operators (1)
spec:
channel: <channel_name> (2)
name: <operator_name> (3)
source: redhat-operators (4)
sourceNamespace: openshift-marketplace (5)
config:
env: (6)
- name: ARGS
value: "-v=10"
envFrom: (7)
- secretRef:
name: license-secret
volumes: (8)
- name: <volume_name>
configMap:
name: <configmap_name>
volumeMounts: (9)
- mountPath: <directory_name>
name: <volume_name>
tolerations: (10)
- operator: "Exists"
resources: (11)
requests:
memory: "64Mi"
cpu: "250m"
limits:
memory: "128Mi"
cpu: "500m"
nodeSelector: (12)
foo: bar
1 | For AllNamespaces install mode usage, specify the openshift-operators namespace. Otherwise, specify the relevant single namespace for SingleNamespace install mode usage. |
2 | Name of the channel to subscribe to. |
3 | Name of the Operator to subscribe to. |
4 | Name of the catalog source that provides the Operator. |
5 | Namespace of the catalog source. Use openshift-marketplace for the default OperatorHub catalog sources. |
6 | The env parameter defines a list of Environment Variables that must exist in all containers in the pod created by OLM. |
7 | The envFrom parameter defines a list of sources to populate Environment Variables in the container. |
8 | The volumes parameter defines a list of Volumes that must exist on the pod created by OLM. |
9 | The volumeMounts parameter defines a list of VolumeMounts that must exist in all containers in the pod created by OLM. If a volumeMount references a volume that does not exist, OLM fails to deploy the Operator. |
10 | The tolerations parameter defines a list of Tolerations for the pod created by OLM. |
11 | The resources parameter defines resource constraints for all the containers in the pod created by OLM. |
12 | The nodeSelector parameter defines a NodeSelector for the pod created by OLM. |
Create the Subscription
object:
$ oc apply -f sub.yaml
At this point, OLM is now aware of the selected Operator. A cluster service version (CSV) for the Operator should appear in the target namespace, and APIs provided by the Operator should be available for creation.
Cluster administrators can delete installed Operators from a selected namespace by using the web console.
Access to an OKD cluster web console using an account with
cluster-admin
permissions.
Navigate to the Operators → Installed Operators page.
Scroll or enter a keyword into the Filter by name field to find the Operator that you want to remove. Then, click on it.
On the right side of the Operator Details page, select Uninstall Operator from the Actions list.
An Uninstall Operator? dialog box is displayed.
Select Uninstall to remove the Operator, Operator deployments, and pods. Following this action, the Operator stops running and no longer receives updates.
This action does not remove resources managed by the Operator, including custom resource definitions (CRDs) and custom resources (CRs). Dashboards and navigation items enabled by the web console and off-cluster resources that continue to run might need manual clean up. To remove these after uninstalling the Operator, you might need to manually delete the Operator CRDs. |
Cluster administrators can delete installed Operators from a selected namespace by using the CLI.
Access to an OKD cluster using an account with
cluster-admin
permissions.
oc
command installed on workstation.
Check the current version of the subscribed Operator (for example, jaeger
) in the currentCSV
field:
$ oc get subscription jaeger -n openshift-operators -o yaml | grep currentCSV
currentCSV: jaeger-operator.v1.8.2
Delete the subscription (for example, jaeger
):
$ oc delete subscription jaeger -n openshift-operators
subscription.operators.coreos.com "jaeger" deleted
Delete the CSV for the Operator in the target namespace using the currentCSV
value from the previous step:
$ oc delete clusterserviceversion jaeger-operator.v1.8.2 -n openshift-operators
clusterserviceversion.operators.coreos.com "jaeger-operator.v1.8.2" deleted