After installing OpenShift Container Platform, a cluster administrator can configure and customize the following components:
Machine
Bare metal
Cluster
Node
Network
Storage
Users
Alerts and notifications
You can perform the post-installation configuration tasks to configure your environment to meet your need.
The following lists details these configurations:
Configure operating system features: The Machine Config Operator (MCO) manages MachineConfig
objects. By using the MCO, you can configure nodes and custom resources.
Configure cluster features. You can modify the following features of an OpenShift Container Platform cluster:
Image registry
Networking configuration
Image build behavior
Identity provider
The etcd configuration
Machine set creation to handle the workloads
Cloud provider credential management
Configuring a private cluster: By default, the installation program provisions OpenShift Container Platform by using a publicly accessible DNS and endpoints. To make your cluster accessible only from within an internal network, configure the following components to make them private:
DNS
ingress Controller
API server
Perform node operations: By default, OpenShift Container Platform uses Red Hat Enterprise Linux CoreOS (RHCOS) compute machines. You can perform the following node operations:
Add and remove compute machines.
Add and remove taints and tolerations.
Configure the maximum number of pods per node.
Enable Device Manager.
Configure users: OAuth access tokens allow users to authenticate themselves to the API. You can configure OAuth to perform the following tasks:
Specify an identity provider
Use role-based access control to define and supply permissions to users
Install an Operator from OperatorHub
Configuring alert notifications: By default, firing alerts are displayed on the Alerting UI of the web console. You can also configure OpenShift Container Platform to send alert notifications to external systems.