You can use the procedures in this section to ensure your clusters only use container images that satisfy your organizational controls on external content. Before you install a cluster on infrastructure that you provision in a restricted network, you must mirror the required container images into that environment. To mirror container images, you must have a registry for mirroring.
You must have access to the internet to obtain the necessary container images. In this procedure, you place your mirror registry on a mirror host that has access to both your network and the Internet. If you do not have access to a mirror host, use the Mirroring an Operator catalog procedure to copy images to a device you can move across network boundaries with. |
You must have a container image registry that supports Docker v2-2 in the location that will host the OpenShift Container Platform cluster, such as one of the following registries:
If you have an entitlement to Red Hat Quay, see the documentation on deploying Red Hat Quay for proof-of-concept purposes or by using the Quay Operator. If you need additional assistance selecting and installing a registry, contact your sales representative or Red Hat support.
If you do not already have an existing solution for a container image registry, subscribers of OpenShift Container Platform are provided a mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift. The mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift is included with your subscription and is a small-scale container registry that can be used to mirror the required container images of OpenShift Container Platform in disconnected installations.
You can mirror the images that are required for OpenShift Container Platform installation and subsequent product updates to a container mirror registry such as Red Hat Quay, JFrog Artifactory, Sonatype Nexus Repository, or Harbor. If you do not have access to a large-scale container registry, you can use the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift, a small-scale container registry included with OpenShift Container Platform subscriptions.
You can use any container registry that supports Docker v2-2, such as Red Hat Quay, the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift, Artifactory, Sonatype Nexus Repository, or Harbor. Regardless of your chosen registry, the procedure to mirror content from Red Hat hosted sites on the internet to an isolated image registry is the same. After you mirror the content, you configure each cluster to retrieve this content from your mirror registry.
The internal registry of the OpenShift Container Platform cluster cannot be used as the target registry because it does not support pushing without a tag, which is required during the mirroring process. |
If choosing a container registry that is not the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift, it must be reachable by every machine in the clusters that you provision. If the registry is unreachable, installation, updating, or normal operations such as workload relocation might fail. For that reason, you must run mirror registries in a highly available way, and the mirror registries must at least match the production availability of your OpenShift Container Platform clusters.
When you populate your mirror registry with OpenShift Container Platform images, you can follow two scenarios. If you have a host that can access both the internet and your mirror registry, but not your cluster nodes, you can directly mirror the content from that machine. This process is referred to as connected mirroring. If you have no such host, you must mirror the images to a file system and then bring that host or removable media into your restricted environment. This process is referred to as disconnected mirroring.
For mirrored registries, to view the source of pulled images, you must review the Trying to access
log entry in the CRI-O logs. Other methods to view the image pull source, such as using the crictl images
command on a node, show the non-mirrored image name, even though the image is pulled from the mirrored location.
Red Hat does not test third party registries with OpenShift Container Platform. |
For information on viewing the CRI-O logs to view the image source, see Viewing the image pull source.
Before you perform the mirror procedure, you must prepare the host to retrieve content and push it to the remote location.
You can install the OpenShift CLI (oc
) in order to interact with OpenShift Container Platform from a
command-line interface. You can install oc
on Linux, Windows, or macOS.
If you installed an earlier version of |
You can install the OpenShift CLI (oc
) binary on Linux by using the following procedure.
Navigate to the OpenShift Container Platform downloads page on the Red Hat Customer Portal.
Select the appropriate version in the Version drop-down menu.
Click Download Now next to the OpenShift v4.6 Linux Client entry and save the file.
Unpack the archive:
$ tar xvzf <file>
Place the oc
binary in a directory that is on your PATH
.
To check your PATH
, execute the following command:
$ echo $PATH
After you install the OpenShift CLI, it is available using the oc
command:
$ oc <command>
You can install the OpenShift CLI (oc
) binary on Windows by using the following procedure.
Navigate to the OpenShift Container Platform downloads page on the Red Hat Customer Portal.
Select the appropriate version in the Version drop-down menu.
Click Download Now next to the OpenShift v4.6 Windows Client entry and save the file.
Unzip the archive with a ZIP program.
Move the oc
binary to a directory that is on your PATH
.
To check your PATH
, open the command prompt and execute the following command:
C:\> path
After you install the OpenShift CLI, it is available using the oc
command:
C:\> oc <command>
You can install the OpenShift CLI (oc
) binary on macOS by using the following procedure.
Navigate to the OpenShift Container Platform downloads page on the Red Hat Customer Portal.
Select the appropriate version in the Version drop-down menu.
Click Download Now next to the OpenShift v4.6 MacOSX Client entry and save the file.
Unpack and unzip the archive.
Move the oc
binary to a directory on your PATH.
To check your PATH
, open a terminal and execute the following command:
$ echo $PATH
After you install the OpenShift CLI, it is available using the oc
command:
$ oc <command>
Create a container image registry credentials file that allows mirroring images from Red Hat to your mirror.
Do not use this image registry credentials file as the pull secret when you install a cluster. If you provide this file when you install cluster, all of the machines in the cluster will have write access to your mirror registry. |
This process requires that you have write access to a container image registry on the mirror registry and adds the credentials to a registry pull secret. |
You configured a mirror registry to use in your restricted network.
You identified an image repository location on your mirror registry to mirror images into.
You provisioned a mirror registry account that allows images to be uploaded to that image repository.
Complete the following steps on the installation host:
Download your registry.redhat.io
pull secret from the Red Hat OpenShift Cluster Manager and save it to a .json
file.
Generate the base64-encoded user name and password or token for your mirror registry:
$ echo -n '<user_name>:<password>' | base64 -w0 (1)
BGVtbYk3ZHAtqXs=
1 | For <user_name> and <password> , specify the user name and password that
you configured for your registry. |
Make a copy of your pull secret in JSON format:
$ cat ./pull-secret.text | jq . > <path>/<pull_secret_file_in_json>(1)
1 | Specify the path to the folder to store the pull secret in and a name for the JSON file that you create. |
The contents of the file resemble the following example:
{
"auths": {
"cloud.openshift.com": {
"auth": "b3BlbnNo...",
"email": "you@example.com"
},
"quay.io": {
"auth": "b3BlbnNo...",
"email": "you@example.com"
},
"registry.connect.redhat.com": {
"auth": "NTE3Njg5Nj...",
"email": "you@example.com"
},
"registry.redhat.io": {
"auth": "NTE3Njg5Nj...",
"email": "you@example.com"
}
}
}
Edit the new file and add a section that describes your registry to it:
"auths": {
"<mirror_registry>": { (1)
"auth": "<credentials>", (2)
"email": "you@example.com"
},
1 | For <mirror_registry> , specify the registry domain name, and optionally the
port, that your mirror registry uses to serve content. For example,
registry.example.com or registry.example.com:8443 |
2 | For <credentials> , specify the base64-encoded user name and password for
the mirror registry. |
The file resembles the following example:
{
"auths": {
"registry.example.com": {
"auth": "BGVtbYk3ZHAtqXs=",
"email": "you@example.com"
},
"cloud.openshift.com": {
"auth": "b3BlbnNo...",
"email": "you@example.com"
},
"quay.io": {
"auth": "b3BlbnNo...",
"email": "you@example.com"
},
"registry.connect.redhat.com": {
"auth": "NTE3Njg5Nj...",
"email": "you@example.com"
},
"registry.redhat.io": {
"auth": "NTE3Njg5Nj...",
"email": "you@example.com"
}
}
}
The mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift is a small and streamlined container registry that you can use as a target for mirroring the required container images of OpenShift Container Platform for disconnected installations.
If you already have a container image registry, such as Red Hat Quay, you can skip these steps and go straight to Mirroring the OpenShift Container Platform image repository.
An OpenShift Container Platform subscription.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 8 with Podman 3.3 and OpenSSL installed.
Fully qualified domain name for the Red Hat Quay service, which must resolve through a DNS server.
Passwordless sudo
access on the target host.
Key-based SSH connectivity on the target host. SSH keys are automatically generated for local installs. For remote hosts, you must generate your own SSH keys.
2 or more vCPUs.
8 GB of RAM.
About 6.8 GB for OpenShift Container Platform 4.6 Release images, or about 696 GB for OpenShift Container Platform 4.6 Release images and OpenShift Container Platform 4.6 Red Hat Operator images. Up to 1 TB per stream or more is suggested.
These requirements are based on local testing results with only Release images and Operator images tested. Storage requirements can vary based on your organization’s needs. Some users might require more space, for example, when they mirror multiple z-streams. You can use standard Red Hat Quay functionality to remove unnecessary images and free up space. |
For disconnected deployments of OpenShift Container Platform, a container registry is required to carry out the installation of the clusters. To run a production-grade registry service on such a cluster, you must create a separate registry deployment to install the first cluster. The mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift addresses this need and is included in every OpenShift subscription. It is available for download on the OpenShift console Downloads page.
The mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift allows users to install a small-scale version of Red Hat Quay and its required components using the mirror-registry
command line interface (CLI) tool. The mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift is deployed automatically with pre-configured local storage and a local database. It also includes auto-generated user credentials and access permissions with a single set of inputs and no additional configuration choices to get started.
The mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift provides a pre-determined network configuration and reports deployed component credentials and access URLs upon success. A limited set of optional configuration inputs like fully qualified domain name (FQDN) services, superuser name and password, and custom TLS certificates are also provided. This provides users with a container registry so that they can easily create an offline mirror of all OpenShift Container Platform release content when running OpenShift Container Platform in restricted network environments.
The mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift is limited to hosting images that are required to install a disconnected OpenShift Container Platform cluster, such as Release images or Red Hat Operator images. It uses local storage on your Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) machine, and storage supported by RHEL is supported by the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift. Content built by customers should not be hosted by the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift.
Unlike Red Hat Quay, the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift is not a highly-available registry and only local file system storage is supported. Using the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift with more than one cluster is discouraged, because multiple clusters can create a single point of failure when updating your cluster fleet. It is advised to leverage the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift to install a cluster that can host a production-grade, highly-available registry such as Red Hat Quay, which can serve OpenShift Container Platform content to other clusters.
Use of the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift is optional if another container registry is already available in the install environment.
This procedure explains how to install the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift on a local host using the mirror-registry
installer tool. By doing so, users can create a local host registry running on port 443 for the purpose of storing a mirror of OpenShift Container Platform images.
Installing the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift using the |
Download the mirror-registry.tar.gz
package for the latest version of the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift found on the OpenShift console Downloads page.
Install the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift on your local host with your current user account by using the mirror-registry
tool. For a full list of available flags, see "mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift flags".
$ sudo ./mirror-registry install \
--quayHostname <host_example_com> \
--quayRoot <example_directory_name>
Use the user name and password generated during installation to log into the registry by running the following command:
$ podman login --authfile pull-secret.txt \
-u init \
-p <password> \
<host_example_com>:8443> \
--tls-verify=false (1)
1 | You can avoid running --tls-verify=false by configuring your system to trust the generated rootCA certificates. See "Using SSL to protect connections to Red Hat Quay" and "Configuring the system to trust the certificate authority" for more information. |
You can also log in by accessing the UI at |
You can mirror OpenShift Container Platform images after logging in. Depending on your needs, see either the "Mirroring the OpenShift Container Platform image repository" or the "Mirroring an Operator catalog" sections of this document.
If there are issues with images stored by the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift due to storage layer problems, you can remirror the OpenShift Container Platform images, or reinstall mirror registry on more stable storage. |
This procedure explains how to install the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift on a remote host using the mirror-registry
tool. By doing so, users can create a registry to hold a mirror of OpenShift Container Platform images.
Installing the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift using the |
Download the mirror-registry.tar.gz
package for the latest version of the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift found on the OpenShift console Downloads page.
Install the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift on your local host with your current user account by using the mirror-registry
tool. For a full list of available flags, see "mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift flags".
$ sudo ./mirror-registry install -v \
--targetHostname <host_example_com> \
--targetUsername <example_user> \
-k ~/.ssh/my_ssh_key \
--quayHostname <host_example_com> \
--quayRoot <example_directory_name>
Use the user name and password generated during installation to log into the mirror registry by running the following command:
$ podman login --authfile pull-secret.txt \
-u init \
-p <password> \
<host_example_com>:8443> \
--tls-verify=false (1)
1 | You can avoid running --tls-verify=false by configuring your system to trust the generated rootCA certificates. See "Using SSL to protect connections to Red Hat Quay" and "Configuring the system to trust the certificate authority" for more information. |
You can also log in by accessing the UI at |
You can mirror OpenShift Container Platform images after logging in. Depending on your needs, see either the "Mirroring the OpenShift Container Platform image repository" or the "Mirroring an Operator catalog" sections of this document.
If there are issues with images stored by the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift due to storage layer problems, you can remirror the OpenShift Container Platform images, or reinstall mirror registry on more stable storage. |
You can upgrade the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift from your local host by running the following command:
$ sudo ./mirror-registry upgrade
|
You can uninstall the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift from your local host by running the following command:
$ sudo ./mirror-registry uninstall -v \
--quayRoot <example_directory_name>
|
The following flags are available for the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift:
Flags | Description |
---|---|
|
A boolean value that disables interactive prompts. If set to |
|
The password of the init user created during Quay installation. Must be at least eight characters and contain no whitespace. |
|
Shows the username of the initial user. Defaults to |
|
The fully-qualified domain name of the mirror registry that clients will use to contact the registry. Equivalent to |
|
The directory where container image layer and configuration data is saved, including |
|
The path of your SSH identity key. Defaults to |
|
The path to the SSL/TLS public key / certificate. Defaults to |
|
Skips the check for the certificate hostname against the |
|
The path to the SSL/TLS private key used for HTTPS communication. Defaults to |
|
The hostname of the target you want to install Quay to. Defaults to |
|
The user on the target host which will be used for SSH. Defaults to |
|
Shows debug logs and Ansible playbook outputs. |
|
Shows the version for the mirror registry for Red Hat OpenShift. |
--quayHostname
must be modified if the public DNS name of your system is different from the local hostname.
--sslCheckSkip
is used in cases when the mirror registry is set behind a proxy and the exposed hostname is different from the internal Quay hostname. It can also be used when users do not want the certificates to be validated against the provided Quay hostname during installation.
Mirror the OpenShift Container Platform image repository to your registry to use during cluster installation or upgrade.
Your mirror host has access to the Internet.
You configured a mirror registry to use in your restricted network and can access the certificate and credentials that you configured.
You downloaded the pull secret from the Red Hat OpenShift Cluster Manager and modified it to include authentication to your mirror repository.
If you use self-signed certificates that do not set a Subject Alternative Name, you must precede the oc
commands in this procedure with GODEBUG=x509ignoreCN=0
. If you do not set this variable, the oc
commands will fail with the following error:
x509: certificate relies on legacy Common Name field, use SANs or temporarily enable Common Name matching with GODEBUG=x509ignoreCN=0
Complete the following steps on the mirror host:
Review the OpenShift Container Platform downloads page to determine the version of OpenShift Container Platform that you want to install and determine the corresponding tag on the Repository Tags page.
Set the required environment variables:
Export the release version:
$ OCP_RELEASE=<release_version>
For <release_version>
, specify the tag that corresponds to the version of OpenShift Container Platform to
install, such as 4.5.4
.
Export the local registry name and host port:
$ LOCAL_REGISTRY='<local_registry_host_name>:<local_registry_host_port>'
For <local_registry_host_name>
, specify the registry domain name for your mirror
repository, and for <local_registry_host_port>
, specify the port that it
serves content on.
Export the local repository name:
$ LOCAL_REPOSITORY='<local_repository_name>'
For <local_repository_name>
, specify the name of the repository to create in your
registry, such as ocp4/openshift4
.
Export the name of the repository to mirror:
$ PRODUCT_REPO='openshift-release-dev'
For a production release, you must specify openshift-release-dev
.
Export the path to your registry pull secret:
$ LOCAL_secret_JSON='<path_to_pull_secret>'
For <path_to_pull_secret>
, specify the absolute path to and file name of the pull secret for your mirror registry that you created.
Export the release mirror:
$ RELEASE_NAME="ocp-release"
For a production release, you must specify ocp-release
.
Export the type of architecture for your server, such as x86_64
.:
$ ARCHITECTURE=<server_architecture>
Export the path to the directory to host the mirrored images:
$ REMOVABLE_MEDIA_PATH=<path> (1)
1 | Specify the full path, including the initial forward slash (/) character. |
Mirror the version images to the mirror registry:
If your mirror host does not have internet access, take the following actions:
Connect the removable media to a system that is connected to the internet.
Review the images and configuration manifests to mirror:
$ oc adm release mirror -a ${LOCAL_secret_JSON} \
--from=quay.io/${PRODUCT_REPO}/${RELEASE_NAME}:${OCP_RELEASE}-${ARCHITECTURE} \
--to=${LOCAL_REGISTRY}/${LOCAL_REPOSITORY} \
--to-release-image=${LOCAL_REGISTRY}/${LOCAL_REPOSITORY}:${OCP_RELEASE}-${ARCHITECTURE} --dry-run
Record the entire imageContentSources
section from the output of the previous
command. The information about your mirrors is unique to your mirrored repository, and you must add the imageContentSources
section to the install-config.yaml
file during installation.
Mirror the images to a directory on the removable media:
$ oc adm release mirror -a ${LOCAL_secret_JSON} --to-dir=${REMOVABLE_MEDIA_PATH}/mirror quay.io/${PRODUCT_REPO}/${RELEASE_NAME}:${OCP_RELEASE}-${ARCHITECTURE}
Take the media to the restricted network environment and upload the images to the local container registry.
$ oc image mirror -a ${LOCAL_secret_JSON} --from-dir=${REMOVABLE_MEDIA_PATH}/mirror "file://openshift/release:${OCP_RELEASE}*" ${LOCAL_REGISTRY}/${LOCAL_REPOSITORY} (1)
1 | For REMOVABLE_MEDIA_PATH , you must use the same path that you specified when you mirrored the images. |
If the local container registry is connected to the mirror host, take the following actions:
Directly push the release images to the local registry by using following command:
$ oc adm release mirror -a ${LOCAL_secret_JSON} \
--from=quay.io/${PRODUCT_REPO}/${RELEASE_NAME}:${OCP_RELEASE}-${ARCHITECTURE} \
--to=${LOCAL_REGISTRY}/${LOCAL_REPOSITORY} \
--to-release-image=${LOCAL_REGISTRY}/${LOCAL_REPOSITORY}:${OCP_RELEASE}-${ARCHITECTURE}
This command pulls the release information as a digest, and its output includes
the imageContentSources
data that you require when you install your cluster.
Record the entire imageContentSources
section from the output of the previous
command. The information about your mirrors is unique to your mirrored repository, and you must add the imageContentSources
section to the install-config.yaml
file during installation.
The image name gets patched to Quay.io during the mirroring process, and the podman images will show Quay.io in the registry on the bootstrap virtual machine. |
To create the installation program that is based on the content that you mirrored, extract it and pin it to the release:
If your mirror host does not have Internet access, run the following command:
$ oc adm release extract -a ${LOCAL_secret_JSON} --command=openshift-install "${LOCAL_REGISTRY}/${LOCAL_REPOSITORY}:${OCP_RELEASE}"
If the local container registry is connected to the mirror host, run the following command:
$ oc adm release extract -a ${LOCAL_secret_JSON} --command=openshift-install "${LOCAL_REGISTRY}/${LOCAL_REPOSITORY}:${OCP_RELEASE}-${ARCHITECTURE}"
To ensure that you use the correct images for the version of OpenShift Container Platform that you selected, you must extract the installation program from the mirrored content. You must perform this step on a machine with an active Internet connection. If you are in a disconnected environment, use the |
In a disconnected environment, you must take additional steps after you install a cluster to configure the Cluster Samples Operator.
Mirror the OperatorHub images for the Operators that you want to install in your cluster.
Install a cluster on infrastructure that you provision in your restricted network, such as on VMware vSphere, bare metal, or Amazon Web Services.
See Gathering data about specific features for more information about using must-gather.