networkConfig: clusterNetworkCIDR: 10.1.0.0/16 serviceNetworkCIDR: 172.30.0.0/16
Production environments can deny direct access to the Internet and instead have an HTTP or HTTPS proxy available. Configuring OpenShift Enterprise to use these proxies can be as simple as setting standard environment variables in configuration or JSON files. This can be done during an advanced installation or configured after installation.
The proxy configuration must be the same on each host in the cluster. Therefore, when setting up the proxy or modifying it, you must update the files on each OpenShift Enterprise host to the same values. Then, you must restart OpenShift Enterprise services on each host in the cluster.
The NO_PROXY
, HTTP_PROXY
, and HTTPS_PROXY
environment variables are found in
each host’s /etc/sysconfig/atomic-openshift-master file (for single
master configuration), /etc/sysconfig/atomic-openshift-master-api, or
/etc/sysconfig/atomic-openshift-master-controllers files (for multi-master
configuration) and /etc/sysconfig/atomic-openshift-node.
The NO_PROXY
environment variable lists all of the OpenShift Enterprise
components and all IP addresses that are managed by OpenShift Enterprise.
NO_PROXY
accepts a comma-separated list of hosts, IP addresses, or IP ranges
in CIDR format:
Node host name
master IP or host name
master IP or host name
Registry service IP and host name
NO_PROXY
also includes the SDN network and service IP addresses as found
in the master-config.yaml file.
networkConfig: clusterNetworkCIDR: 10.1.0.0/16 serviceNetworkCIDR: 172.30.0.0/16
OpenShift Enterprise does not accept *
as a wildcard attached to a domain suffix. For
example, this works:
NO_PROXY=.example.com
However, this does not:
NO_PROXY=*.example.com
The only wildcard NO_PROXY
accepts is a single *
character, which matches
all hosts, and effectively disables the proxy.
Each name in this list is matched as either a domain which contains the host name as a suffix, or the host name itself.
For instance, example.com would match example.com, example.com:80, and www.example.com.
Edit the proxy environment variables in the OpenShift Enterprise control files. Ensure all of the files in the cluster are correct.
HTTP_PROXY=http://USERNAME:PASSWORD@10.0.1.1:8080/ HTTPS_PROXY=https://USERNAME:PASSWORD@10.0.0.1:8080/ NO_PROXY=master.hostname.example.com,10.1.0.0/16,172.30.0.0/16 (1)
1 | Supports host names and CIDRs. Must include the SDN network and service IP ranges 10.1.0.0/16,172.30.0.0/16 by default. |
Restart the master or node host as appropriate:
# systemctl restart atomic-openshift-master # systemctl restart atomic-openshift-node
For multi-master installations:
# systemctl restart atomic-openshift-master-controllers # systemctl restart atomic-openshift-master-api
During
advanced installations,
the NO_PROXY
, HTTP_PROXY
, and HTTPS_PROXY
environment variables can
be configured using the
openshift_no_proxy
, openshift_http_proxy
, and openshift_https_proxy
parameters,
which are configurable in the inventory file.
# Global Proxy Configuration # These options configure HTTP_PROXY, HTTPS_PROXY, and NOPROXY environment # variables for docker and master services. openshift_http_proxy=http://USER:PASSWORD@IPADDR:PORT openshift_https_proxy=https://USER:PASSWORD@IPADDR:PORT openshift_no_proxy='.hosts.example.com,some-host.com' # # Most environments do not require a proxy between OpenShift masters, nodes, and # etcd hosts. So automatically add those host names to the openshift_no_proxy list. # If all of your hosts share a common domain you may wish to disable this and # specify that domain above. # openshift_generate_no_proxy_hosts=True
There are additional proxy settings that can be configured for builds using Ansible parameters. For example: The The |
OpenShift Enterprise node hosts need to perform push and pull operations to Docker
registries. If you have a registry that does not need a proxy for nodes to
access, include the NO_PROXY
parameter with the registry’s host name, the
registry service’s IP address, and service name. This blacklists that registry,
leaving the external HTTP proxy as the only option.
Edit the /etc/sysconfig/docker file and add the variables in shell format:
HTTP_PROXY=http://USERNAME:PASSWORD@10.0.1.1:8080/ HTTPS_PROXY=https://USERNAME:PASSWORD@10.0.0.1:8080/ NO_PROXY=master.hostname.example.com,172.30.123.45,docker-registry.default.svc.cluster.local
Restart the Docker service:
# systemctl restart docker
S2I builds fetch dependencies from various locations. You can use a .s2i/environment file to specify simple shell variables and OpenShift Enterprise will react accordingly when seeing build images.
The following are the supported proxy environment variables with example values:
HTTP_PROXY=http://USERNAME:PASSWORD@10.0.1.1:8080/ HTTPS_PROXY=https://USERNAME:PASSWORD@10.0.0.1:8080/ NO_PROXY=master.hostname.example.com
The
example
templates available in OpenShift Enterprise by default do not include settings for
HTTP proxies. For existing applications based on these templates, modify the
source
section of the application’s build configuration and add proxy
settings:
... source: type: Git git: uri: https://github.com/openshift/ruby-hello-world httpProxy: http://proxy.example.com httpsProxy: https://proxy.example.com ...
This is similar to the process for using proxies for Git cloning.
You can set the NO_PROXY
, HTTP_PROXY
, and HTTPS_PROXY
environment
variables in the templates.spec.containers
stanza in a deployment
configuration to pass proxy connection information. The same can be done for
configuring a Pod’s proxy at runtime:
... containers: - env: - name: "HTTP_PROXY" value: "http://USER:PASSWORD@IPADDR:PORT" ...
You can also use the oc set env
command to update an existing deployment
configuration with a new environment variable:
$ oc set env dc/frontend HTTP_PROXY=http://USER:PASSWORD@IPADDR:PORT
If you have a ConfigChange trigger set up in your OpenShift Enterprise instance, the changes happen automatically. Otherwise, manually redeploy your application for the changes to take effect.
If your Git repository can only be accessed using a proxy, you can define the
proxy to use in the source
section of the BuildConfig
. You can configure
both a HTTP and HTTPS proxy to use. Both fields are optional.
Your source URI must use the HTTP or HTTPS protocol for this to work. |
source:
type: Git
git:
uri: "https://github.com/openshift/ruby-hello-world"
httpProxy: http://proxy.example.com
httpsProxy: https://proxy.example.com
Cluster administrators can also configure a global proxy for Git cloning using Ansible.