$ aws sts get-caller-identity --output text
Use the Red Hat OpenShift service on AWS (ROSA) command-line interface (CLI), the rosa
command, to create, update, manage, and delete ROSA clusters and resources.
Use the following steps to install and configure the ROSA CLI (rosa
) on your installation host.
Install and configure the latest AWS CLI (aws
).
Follow the AWS Command Line Interface documentation to install and configure the AWS CLI for your operating system.
Specify your aws_access_key_id
, aws_secret_access_key
, and region
in the .aws/credentials
file. See AWS Configuration basics in the AWS documentation.
You can optionally use the |
Query the AWS API to verify if the AWS CLI is installed and configured correctly:
$ aws sts get-caller-identity --output text
<aws_account_id> arn:aws:iam::<aws_account_id>:user/<username> <aws_user_id>
Download the latest version of the ROSA CLI (rosa
) for your operating system from the Downloads page on OpenShift Cluster Manager.
Extract the rosa
binary file from the downloaded archive. The following example extracts the binary from a Linux tar archive:
$ tar xvf rosa-linux.tar.gz
Add rosa
to your path. In the following example, the /usr/local/bin
directory is included in the path of the user:
$ sudo mv rosa /usr/local/bin/rosa
Verify if the ROSA CLI is installed correctly by querying the rosa
version:
$ rosa version
1.2.15
Your ROSA CLI is up to date.
Optional: Enable tab completion for the ROSA CLI. With tab completion enabled, you can press the Tab
key twice to automatically complete subcommands and receive command suggestions:
To enable persistent tab completion for Bash on a Linux host:
Generate a rosa
tab completion configuration file for Bash and save it to your /etc/bash_completion.d/
directory:
# rosa completion bash > /etc/bash_completion.d/rosa
Open a new terminal to activate the configuration.
To enable persistent tab completion for Bash on a macOS host:
Generate a rosa
tab completion configuration file for Bash and save it to your /usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d/
directory:
$ rosa completion bash > /usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d/rosa
Open a new terminal to activate the configuration.
To enable persistent tab completion for Zsh:
If tab completion is not enabled for your Zsh environment, enable it by running the following command:
$ echo "autoload -U compinit; compinit" >> ~/.zshrc
Generate a rosa
tab completion configuration file for Zsh and save it to the first directory in your functions path:
$ rosa completion zsh > "${fpath[1]}/_rosa"
Open a new terminal to activate the configuration.
To enable persistent tab completion for fish:
Generate a rosa
tab completion configuration file for fish and save it to your ~/.config/fish/completions/
directory:
$ rosa completion fish > ~/.config/fish/completions/rosa.fish
Open a new terminal to activate the configuration.
To enable persistent tab completion for PowerShell:
Generate a rosa
tab completion configuration file for PowerShell and save it to a file named rosa.ps1
:
PS> rosa completion powershell | Out-String | Invoke-Expression
Source the rosa.ps1
file from your PowerShell profile.
For more information about configuring |
Use the following commands to configure the Red Hat OpenShift service on AWS (ROSA) CLI, rosa
.
Log in to your Red Hat account, saving the credentials to the rosa
configuration file. You must provide a token when logging in. You can copy your token from the ROSA token page.
The ROSA CLI (rosa
) looks for a token in the following priority order:
Command-line arguments
The ROSA_TOKEN
environment variable
The rosa
configuration file
Interactively from a command-line prompt
$ rosa login [arguments]
Option | Definition |
---|---|
--client-id |
The OpenID client identifier (string). Default: |
--client-secret |
The OpenID client secret (string). |
--insecure |
Enables insecure communication with the server. This disables verification of TLS certificates and host names. |
--scope |
The OpenID scope (string). If this option is used, it replaces the default scopes. This can be repeated multiple times to specify multiple scopes. Default: |
--token |
Accesses or refreshes the token (string). |
--token-url |
The OpenID token URL (string). Default: |
Option | Definition |
---|---|
--help |
Shows help for this command. |
--debug |
Enables debug mode. |
--profile |
Specifies an AWS profile (string) from your credentials file. |
Log out of rosa
. Logging out also removes the rosa
configuration file.
$ rosa logout [arguments]
Option | Definition |
---|---|
--help |
Shows help for this command. |
--debug |
Enables debug mode. |
--profile |
Specifies an AWS profile (string) from your credentials file. |
Verify that the AWS permissions required to create a ROSA cluster are configured correctly:
$ rosa verify permissions [arguments]
This command verifies permissions only for clusters that do not use the AWS Security Token service (STS). |
Option | Definition |
---|---|
--help |
Shows help for this command. |
--debug |
Enables debug mode. |
--region |
The AWS region (string) in which to run the command. This value overrides the |
--profile |
Specifies an AWS profile (string) from your credentials file. |
Verify that the AWS permissions are configured correctly:
$ rosa verify permissions
Verify that the AWS permissions are configured correctly in a specific region:
$ rosa verify permissions --region=us-west-2
Verifies that AWS quotas are configured correctly for your default region.
$ rosa verify quota [arguments]
Option | Definition |
---|---|
--help |
Shows help for this command. |
--debug |
Enables debug mode. |
--region |
The AWS region (string) in which to run the command. This value overrides the |
--profile |
Specifies an AWS profile (string) from your credentials file. |
Verify that the AWS quotas are configured correctly for the default region:
$ rosa verify quota
Verify that the AWS quotas are configured correctly in a specific region:
$ rosa verify quota --region=us-west-2
Download the latest compatible version of the rosa
CLI.
After you download rosa
, extract the contents of the archive and add it to your path.
$ rosa download rosa [arguments]
Option | Definition |
---|---|
--help |
Shows help for this command. |
--debug |
Enables debug mode. |
Download the latest compatible version of the OpenShift Container Platform CLI (oc
).
After you download oc
, you must extract the contents of the archive and add it to your path.
$ rosa download oc [arguments]
Option | Definition |
---|---|
--help |
Shows help for this command. |
--debug |
Enables debug mode. |
Download oc
client tools:
$ rosa download oc
Verifies that the OpenShift Container Platform CLI (oc
) is installed correctly.
$ rosa verify oc [arguments]
Option | Definition |
---|---|
--help |
Shows help for this command. |
--debug |
Enables debug mode. |
Verify oc
client tools:
$ rosa verify oc
Use the init
command to initialize Red Hat OpenShift service on AWS (ROSA) only if you are using non-STS.
Perform a series of checks to verify that you are ready to deploy a ROSA cluster.
The list of checks includes the following:
Checks to see that you have logged in (see login
)
Checks that your AWS credentials are valid
Checks that your AWS permissions are valid (see verify permissions
)
Checks that your AWS quota levels are high enough (see verify quota
)
Runs a cluster simulation to ensure cluster creation will perform as expected
Checks that the osdCcsAdmin
user has been created in your AWS account
Checks that the OpenShift Container Platform command-line tool is available on your system
$ rosa init [arguments]
Option | Definition |
---|---|
--region |
The AWS region (string) in which to verify quota and permissions. This value overrides the |
--delete |
Deletes the stack template that is applied to your AWS account during the |
--client-id |
The OpenID client identifier (string). Default: |
--client-secret |
The OpenID client secret (string). |
--insecure |
Enables insecure communication with the server. This disables verification of TLS certificates and host names. |
--scope |
The OpenID scope (string). If this option is used, it completely replaces the default scopes. This can be repeated multiple times to specify multiple scopes. Default: |
--token |
Accesses or refreshes the token (string). |
--token-url |
The OpenID token URL (string). Default: |
Option | Definition |
---|---|
--help |
Shows help for this command. |
--debug |
Enables debug mode. |
--profile |
Specifies an AWS profile (string) from your credentials file. |
Configure your AWS account to allow ROSA clusters:
$ rosa init
Configure a new AWS account using pre-existing OpenShift Cluster Manager credentials:
$ rosa init --token=$OFFLINE_ACCESS_TOKEN
This is an example workflow of how to use a Bash script with the Red Hat OpenShift service on AWS (ROSA) CLI, rosa
.
Make sure that AWS credentials are available as one of the following options:
AWS profile
Environment variables (AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
)
Initialize rosa
using an Red Hat OpenShift Cluster Manager offline token from Red Hat:
$ rosa init --token=<token>
Create the ROSA cluster:
$ rosa create cluster --cluster-name=<cluster_name>
Add an identity provider (IDP):
$ rosa create idp --cluster=<cluster_name> --type=<identity_provider> [arguments]
Add a dedicated-admin
user:
$ rosa grant user dedicated-admin --user=<idp_user_name> --cluster=<cluster_name>
Update to the latest compatible version of the ROSA CLI (rosa
).
Confirm that a new version of the ROSA CLI (rosa
) is available:
$ rosa version
1.2.12
There is a newer release version '1.2.15', please consider updating: https://mirror.openshift.com/pub/openshift-v4/clients/rosa/latest/
Download the latest compatible version of the ROSA CLI:
$ rosa download rosa
This command downloads an archive called rosa-*.tar.gz
into the current directory. The exact name of the file depends on your operating system and system architecture.
Extract the contents of the archive:
$ tar -xzf rosa-linux.tar.gz
Install the new version of the ROSA CLI by moving the extracted file into your path. In the following example, the /usr/local/bin
directory is included in the path of the user:
$ sudo mv rosa /usr/local/bin/rosa
Verify that the new version of ROSA is installed.
$ rosa version
1.2.15
Your ROSA CLI is up to date.