OpenShift Container Platform 4.6 introduces architectural changes and enhancements. The procedures that you used to manage your OpenShift Container Platform 3 cluster might not apply to OpenShift Container Platform 4.
For information on configuring your OpenShift Container Platform 4 cluster, review the appropriate sections of the OpenShift Container Platform documentation. For information on new features and other notable technical changes, review the OpenShift Container Platform 4.6 release notes.
It is not possible to upgrade your existing OpenShift Container Platform 3 cluster to OpenShift Container Platform 4. You must start with a new OpenShift Container Platform 4 installation. Tools are available to assist in migrating your control plane settings and application workloads.
With OpenShift Container Platform 3, administrators individually deployed Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) hosts, and then installed OpenShift Container Platform on top of these hosts to form a cluster. Administrators were responsible for properly configuring these hosts and performing updates.
OpenShift Container Platform 4 represents a significant change in the way that OpenShift Container Platform clusters are deployed and managed. OpenShift Container Platform 4 includes new technologies and functionality, such as Operators, machine sets, and Red Hat Enterprise Linux CoreOS (RHCOS), which are core to the operation of the cluster. This technology shift enables clusters to self-manage some functions previously performed by administrators. This also ensures platform stability and consistency, and simplifies installation and scaling.
For more information, see OpenShift Container Platform architecture.
OpenShift Container Platform 4 uses Red Hat Enterprise Linux CoreOS (RHCOS), which is designed to run containerized applications, and provides efficient installation, Operator-based management, and simplified upgrades. RHCOS is an immutable container host, rather than a customizable operating system like RHEL. RHCOS enables OpenShift Container Platform 4 to manage and automate the deployment of the underlying container host. RHCOS is a part of OpenShift Container Platform, which means that everything runs inside a container and is deployed using OpenShift Container Platform.
In OpenShift Container Platform 4, control plane nodes must run RHCOS, ensuring that full-stack automation is maintained for the control plane. This makes rolling out updates and upgrades a much easier process than in OpenShift Container Platform 3.
For more information, see Red Hat Enterprise Linux CoreOS (RHCOS).
Operators are a method of packaging, deploying, and managing a Kubernetes application. Operators ease the operational complexity of running another piece of software. They watch over your environment and use the current state to make decisions in real time. Advanced Operators are designed to upgrade and react to failures automatically.
For more information, see Understanding Operators.
To install OpenShift Container Platform 3.11, you prepared your Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) hosts, set all of the configuration values your cluster needed, and then ran an Ansible playbook to install and set up your cluster.
In OpenShift Container Platform 4.6, you use the OpenShift installation program to create a minimum set of resources required for a cluster. Once the cluster is running, you use Operators to further configure your cluster and to install new services. After first boot, Red Hat Enterprise Linux CoreOS (RHCOS) systems are managed by the Machine Config Operator (MCO) that runs in the OpenShift Container Platform cluster.
For more information, see Installation process.
If you want to add Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) worker machines to your OpenShift Container Platform 4.6 cluster, you use an Ansible playbook to join the RHEL worker machines after the cluster is running. For more information, see Adding RHEL compute machines to an OpenShift Container Platform cluster.
In OpenShift Container Platform 3.11, you installed your cluster on infrastructure that you prepared and maintained. In addition to providing your own infrastructure, OpenShift Container Platform 4 offers an option to deploy a cluster on infrastructure that the OpenShift Container Platform installation program provisions and the cluster maintains.
For more information, see OpenShift Container Platform installation overview.
In OpenShift Container Platform 3.11, you upgraded your cluster by running Ansible playbooks. In OpenShift Container Platform 4.6, the cluster manages its own updates, including updates to Red Hat Enterprise Linux CoreOS (RHCOS) on cluster nodes. You can easily upgrade your cluster by using the web console or by using the oc adm upgrade
command from the OpenShift CLI and the Operators will automatically upgrade themselves. If your OpenShift Container Platform 4.6 cluster has RHEL worker machines, then you will still need to run an Ansible playbook to upgrade those worker machines.
For more information, see Updating clusters.
Review the changes and other considerations that might affect your transition from OpenShift Container Platform 3.11 to OpenShift Container Platform 4.
Review the following storage changes to consider when transitioning from OpenShift Container Platform 3.11 to OpenShift Container Platform 4.6.
Local storage is only supported by using the Local Storage Operator in OpenShift Container Platform 4.6. It is not supported to use the local provisioner method from OpenShift Container Platform 3.11.
For more information, see Persistent storage using local volumes.
The FlexVolume plug-in location changed from OpenShift Container Platform 3.11. The new location in OpenShift Container Platform 4.6 is /etc/kubernetes/kubelet-plugins/volume/exec
. Attachable FlexVolume plug-ins are no longer supported.
For more information, see Persistent storage using FlexVolume.
Persistent storage using the Container Storage Interface (CSI) was Technology Preview in OpenShift Container Platform 3.11. OpenShift Container Platform 4.6 ships with several CSI drivers. You can also install your own driver.
For more information, see Persistent storage using the Container Storage Interface (CSI).
Red Hat OpenShift Container Storage 3, which is available for use with OpenShift Container Platform 3.11, uses Red Hat Gluster Storage as the backing storage.
Red Hat OpenShift Container Storage 4, which is available for use with OpenShift Container Platform 4, uses Red Hat Ceph Storage as the backing storage.
For more information, see Persistent storage using Red Hat OpenShift Container Storage and the interoperability matrix article.
Support for the following persistent storage options from OpenShift Container Platform 3.11 has changed in OpenShift Container Platform 4.6:
GlusterFS is no longer supported.
CephFS as a standalone product is no longer supported.
Ceph RBD as a standalone product is no longer supported.
If you used one of these in OpenShift Container Platform 3.11, you must choose a different persistent storage option for full support in OpenShift Container Platform 4.6.
For more information, see Understanding persistent storage.
Review the following networking changes to consider when transitioning from OpenShift Container Platform 3.11 to OpenShift Container Platform 4.6.
The default network isolation mode for OpenShift Container Platform 3.11 was ovs-subnet
, though users frequently switched to use ovn-multitenant
. The default network isolation mode for OpenShift Container Platform 4.6 is controlled by a network policy.
If your OpenShift Container Platform 3.11 cluster used the ovs-subnet
or ovs-multitenant
mode, it is recommended to switch to a network policy for your OpenShift Container Platform 4.6 cluster. Network policies are supported upstream, are more flexible, and they provide the functionality that ovs-multitenant
does. If you want to maintain the ovs-multitenant
behavior while using a network policy in OpenShift Container Platform 4.6, follow the steps to configure multitenant isolation using network policy.
For more information, see About network policy.
In OpenShift Container Platform 3.11, you could use IPsec to encrypt traffic between hosts. OpenShift Container Platform 4.6 does not support IPsec. It is recommended to use Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh to enable mutual TLS between services.
For more information, see Understanding Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh.
Review the following logging changes to consider when transitioning from OpenShift Container Platform 3.11 to OpenShift Container Platform 4.6.
OpenShift Container Platform 4 provides a simple deployment mechanism for cluster logging, by using a Cluster Logging custom resource.
For more information, see Installing OpenShift Logging.
You cannot transition your aggregate logging data from OpenShift Container Platform 3.11 into your new OpenShift Container Platform 4 cluster.
For more information, see About OpenShift Logging.
Some logging configurations that were available in OpenShift Container Platform 3.11 are no longer supported in OpenShift Container Platform 4.6.
For more information on the explicitly unsupported logging cases, see Maintenance and support.
Review the following security changes to consider when transitioning from OpenShift Container Platform 3.11 to OpenShift Container Platform 4.6.
In OpenShift Container Platform 3.11, an unauthenticated user could access the discovery endpoints (for example, /api/*
and /apis/*
). For security reasons, unauthenticated access to the discovery endpoints is no longer allowed in OpenShift Container Platform 4.6. If you do need to allow unauthenticated access, you can configure the RBAC settings as necessary; however, be sure to consider the security implications as this can expose internal cluster components to the external network.
Configuration for identity providers has changed for OpenShift Container Platform 4, including the following notable changes:
The request header identity provider in OpenShift Container Platform 4.6 requires mutual TLS, where in OpenShift Container Platform 3.11 it did not.
The configuration of the OpenID Connect identity provider was simplified in OpenShift Container Platform 4.6. It now obtains data, which previously had to specified in OpenShift Container Platform 3.11, from the provider’s /.well-known/openid-configuration
endpoint.
For more information, see Understanding identity provider configuration.
Newly created OAuth HTTP bearer tokens no longer match the names of their OAuth access token objects. The object names are now a hash of the bearer token and are no longer sensitive. This reduces the risk of leaking sensitive information.
Review the following monitoring changes to consider when transitioning from OpenShift Container Platform 3.11 to OpenShift Container Platform 4.6.
The default alert that triggers to ensure the availability of the monitoring structure was called DeadMansSwitch
in OpenShift Container Platform 3.11. This was renamed to Watchdog
in OpenShift Container Platform 4. If you had PagerDuty integration set up with this alert in OpenShift Container Platform 3.11, you must set up the PagerDuty integration for the Watchdog
alert in OpenShift Container Platform 4.
For more information, see Applying custom Alertmanager configuration.