$ oc login --username=<NAMEOFUSER> https://<HOSTNAME>:6443
A project contains services; however, the services are only available if you add the project to the service mesh.
After installing the Operators and creating the ServiceMeshControlPlane
resource, add one or more projects to the service mesh.
In OpenShift Dedicated, a project is essentially a Kubernetes namespace with additional annotations, such as the range of user IDs that can be used in the project. Typically, the OpenShift Dedicated web console uses the term project, and the CLI uses the term namespace, but the terms are essentially synonymous. |
You can add projects to an existing service mesh using either the OpenShift Dedicated web console or the CLI. There are three methods to add a project to a service mesh:
Specifying the project name in the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource.
Configuring label selectors in the spec.memberSelectors
field of the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource.
Creating the ServiceMeshMember
resource in the project.
If you use the first method, then you must create the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource.
The ServiceMeshMemberRoll
lists the projects that belong to the Service Mesh control plane. Only projects listed in the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
are affected by the control plane. A project does not belong to a service mesh until you add it to the member roll for a particular control plane deployment.
You must create a ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource named default
in the same project as the ServiceMeshControlPlane
, for example istio-system
.
You can add one or more projects to the Service Mesh member roll from the web console. In this example, istio-system
is the name of the Service Mesh control plane project.
An installed, verified Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh Operator.
List of existing projects to add to the service mesh.
Log in to the OpenShift Dedicated web console.
If you do not already have services for your mesh, or you are starting from scratch, create a project for your applications. It must be different from the project where you installed the Service Mesh control plane.
Navigate to Home → Projects.
Enter a name in the Name field.
Click Create.
Navigate to Operators → Installed Operators.
Click the Project menu and choose the project where your ServiceMeshControlPlane
resource is deployed from the list, for example istio-system
.
Click the Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh Operator.
Click the Istio Service Mesh Member Roll tab.
Click Create ServiceMeshMemberRoll
Click Members, then enter the name of your project in the Value field. You can add any number of projects, but a project can only belong to one ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource.
Click Create.
You can add a project to the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
from the command line.
An installed, verified Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh Operator.
List of projects to add to the service mesh.
Access to the OpenShift CLI (oc
).
Log in to the OpenShift Dedicated CLI.
$ oc login --username=<NAMEOFUSER> https://<HOSTNAME>:6443
If you do not already have services for your mesh, or you are starting from scratch, create a project for your applications. It must be different from the project where you installed the Service Mesh control plane.
$ oc new-project <your-project>
To add your projects as members, modify the following example YAML. You can add any number of projects, but a project can only belong to one ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource. In this example, istio-system
is the name of the Service Mesh control plane project.
apiVersion: maistra.io/v1
kind: ServiceMeshMemberRoll
metadata:
name: default
namespace: istio-system
spec:
members:
# a list of projects joined into the service mesh
- your-project-name
- another-project-name
Run the following command to upload and create the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource in the istio-system
namespace.
$ oc create -n istio-system -f servicemeshmemberroll-default.yaml
Run the following command to verify the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
was created successfully.
$ oc get smmr -n istio-system default
The installation has finished successfully when the STATUS
column is Configured
.
Using the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource is the simplest way to add a project to a service mesh. To add a project, specify the project name in the spec.members
field of the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource. The ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource specifies which projects are controlled by the ServiceMeshControlPlane
resource.
Adding projects using this method requires the user to have the |
If you already have an application, workload, or service to add to the service mesh, see the following:
Adding or removing projects from the mesh using the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource with the web console
Adding or removing projects from the mesh using the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource with the CLI
Alternatively, to install a sample application called Bookinfo and add it to a ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource, see the Bookinfo example application tutorial.
You can add or remove projects from the mesh using the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource with the OpenShift Dedicated web console. You can add any number of projects, but a project can only belong to one mesh.
The ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource is deleted when its corresponding ServiceMeshControlPlane
resource is deleted.
An installed, verified Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh Operator.
An existing ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource.
The name of the project with the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource.
The names of the projects you want to add or remove from the mesh.
Log in to the OpenShift Dedicated web console.
Navigate to Operators → Installed Operators.
Click the Project menu and choose the project where your ServiceMeshControlPlane
resource is deployed from the list. For example istio-system
.
Click the Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh Operator.
Click the Istio Service Mesh Member Roll tab.
Click the default
link.
Click the YAML tab.
Modify the YAML to add projects as members (or delete them to remove existing members). You can add any number of projects, but a project can only belong to one ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource.
apiVersion: maistra.io/v1
kind: ServiceMeshMemberRoll
metadata:
name: default
namespace: istio-system #control plane project
spec:
members:
# a list of projects joined into the service mesh
- your-project-name
- another-project-name
Click Save.
Click Reload.
You can add one or more projects to the mesh using the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource with the CLI. You can add any number of projects, but a project can only belong to one mesh.
The ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource is deleted when its corresponding ServiceMeshControlPlane
resource is deleted.
An installed, verified Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh Operator.
An existing ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource.
The name of the project with the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource.
The names of the projects you want to add or remove from the mesh.
Access to the OpenShift CLI (oc
).
Log in to the OpenShift Dedicated CLI.
Edit the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource.
$ oc edit smmr -n <controlplane-namespace>
Modify the YAML to add or remove projects as members. You can add any number of projects, but a project can only belong to one ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource.
apiVersion: maistra.io/v1
kind: ServiceMeshMemberRoll
metadata:
name: default
namespace: istio-system #control plane project
spec:
members:
# a list of projects joined into the service mesh
- your-project-name
- another-project-name
Save the file and exit the editor.
A ServiceMeshMember
resource provides a way to add a project to a service mesh without modifying the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource. To add a project, create a ServiceMeshMember
resource in the project that you want to add to the service mesh. When the Service Mesh Operator processes the ServiceMeshMember
object, the project appears in the status.members
list of the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource. Then, the services that reside in the project are made available to the mesh.
The mesh administrator must grant each mesh user permission to reference the ServiceMeshControlPlane
resource in the ServiceMeshMember
resource. With this permission in place, a mesh user can add a project to a mesh even when that user does not have direct access rights for the service mesh project or the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource. For more information, see Creating the Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh members.
You can add one or more projects to the mesh using the ServiceMeshMember
resource with the OpenShift Dedicated web console.
You have installed the Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh Operator.
You know the name of the ServiceMeshControlPlane
resource and the name of the project that the resource belongs to.
You know the name of the project you want to add to the mesh.
A service mesh administrator must explicitly grant access to the service mesh. Administrators can grant users permissions to access the mesh by assigning them the mesh-user
Role
using a RoleBinding
or ClusterRoleBinding
. For more information, see Creating the Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh members.
Log in to the OpenShift Dedicated web console.
Navigate to Operators → Installed Operators.
Click the Project menu and choose the project that you want to add to the mesh from the drop-down list. For example, istio-system
.
Click the Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh Operator.
Click the Istio Service Mesh Member tab.
Click Create ServiceMeshMember
Accept the default name for the ServiceMeshMember
.
Click to expand ControlPlaneRef.
In the Namespace field, select the project that the ServiceMeshControlPlane
resource belongs to. For example, istio-system
.
In the Name field, enter the name of the ServiceMeshControlPlane
resource that this namespace belongs to. For example, basic
.
Click Create.
Confirm the ServiceMeshMember
resource was created and that the project was added to the mesh by using the following steps:
Click the resource name, for example, default
.
View the Conditions section shown at the end of the screen.
Confirm that the Status
of the Reconciled
and Ready
conditions is True
.
If the Status
is False
, see the Reason
and Message
columns for more information.
You can add one or more projects to the mesh using the ServiceMeshMember
resource with the CLI.
You have installed the Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh Operator.
You know the name of the ServiceMeshControlPlane
resource and the name of the project it belongs to.
You know the name of the project you want to add to the mesh.
A service mesh administrator must explicitly grant access to the service mesh. Administrators can grant users permissions to access the mesh by assigning them the mesh-user
Role
using a RoleBinding
or ClusterRoleBinding
. For more information, see Creating the Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh members.
Log in to the OpenShift Dedicated CLI.
Create the YAML file for the ServiceMeshMember
manifest. The manifest adds the my-application
project to the service mesh that was created by the ServiceMeshControlPlane
resource deployed in the istio-system
namespace:
apiVersion: maistra.io/v1
kind: ServiceMeshMember
metadata:
name: default
namespace: my-application
spec:
controlPlaneRef:
namespace: istio-system
name: basic
Apply the YAML file to create the ServiceMeshMember
resource:
$ oc apply -f <file-name>
Verify that the namespace is part of the mesh by running the following command. Confirm the that the value True
appears in the READY
column.
$ oc get smm default -n my-application
NAME CONTROL PLANE READY AGE
default istio-system/basic True 2m11s
Alternatively, view the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource to confirm that the my-application
namespace is displayed in the status.members
and status.configuredMembers
fields of the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource.
$ oc describe smmr default -n istio-system
Name: default
Namespace: istio-system
Labels: <none>
# ...
Status:
# ...
Configured Members:
default
my-application
# ...
Members:
default
my-application
For cluster-wide deployments, you can use label selectors to add projects to the mesh. Label selectors specified in the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource enable the Service Mesh Operator to add or remove namespaces to or from the mesh based on namespace labels. Unlike other standard OpenShift Dedicated resources that you can use to specify a single label selector, you can use the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource to specify multiple label selectors.
If the labels for a namespace match any of the selectors specified in the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource, then the namespace is included in the mesh.
In OpenShift Dedicated, a project is essentially a Kubernetes namespace with additional annotations, such as the range of user IDs that can be used in the project. Typically, the OpenShift Dedicated web console uses the term project, and the CLI uses the term namespace, but the terms are essentially synonymous. |
You can use labels selectors to add a project to the Service Mesh with the OpenShift Dedicated web console.
You have installed the Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh Operator.
The deployment has an existing ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource.
You are logged in to the OpenShift Dedicated web console as a user with the dedicated-admin
role.
Navigate to Operators → Installed Operators.
Click the Project menu, and from the drop-down list, select the project where your ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource is deployed. For example, istio-system.
Click the Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh Operator.
Click the Istio Service Mesh Member Roll tab.
Click Create ServiceMeshMember Roll.
Accept the default name for the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
.
In the Labels field, enter key-value pairs to define the labels that identify which namespaces to include in the service mesh. If a project namespace has either label specified by the selectors, then the project namespace is included in the service mesh. You do not need to include both labels.
For example, entering mykey=myvalue
includes all namespaces with this label as part of the mesh. When the selector identifies a match, the project namespace is added to the service mesh.
Entering myotherkey=myothervalue
includes all namespaces with this label as part of the mesh. When the selector identifies a match, the project namespace is added to the service mesh.
Click Create.
You can use label selectors to add a project to the Service Mesh with the CLI.
You have installed the Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh Operator.
The deployment has an existing ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource.
You are logged in to OpenShift Dedicated as a user with the dedicated-admin
role.
Log in to the OpenShift Dedicated CLI.
Edit the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource.
$ oc edit smmr default -n istio-system
You can deploy the Service Mesh control plane to any project provided that it is separate from the project that contains your services.
Modify the YAML file to include namespace label selectors in the spec.memberSelectors
field of the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource.
Instead of using the |
apiVersion: maistra.io/v1
kind: ServiceMeshMemberRoll
metadata:
name: default
namespace: istio-system
spec:
memberSelectors: (1)
- matchLabels: (2)
mykey: myvalue (2)
- matchLabels: (3)
myotherkey: myothervalue (3)
1 | Contains the label selectors used to identify which project namespaces are included in the service mesh. If a project namespace has either label specified by the selectors, then the project namespace is included in the service mesh. The project namespace does not need both labels to be included. |
2 | Specifies all namespaces with the mykey=myvalue label. When the selector identifies a match, the project namespace is added to the service mesh. |
3 | Specifies all namespaces with the myotherkey=myothervalue label. When the selector identifies a match, the project namespace is added to the service mesh. |
The Bookinfo example application allows you to test your Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh 2.6.3 installation on OpenShift Dedicated.
The Bookinfo application displays information about a book, similar to a single catalog entry of an online book store. The application displays a page that describes the book, book details (ISBN, number of pages, and other information), and book reviews.
The Bookinfo application consists of these microservices:
The productpage
microservice calls the details
and reviews
microservices to populate the page.
The details
microservice contains book information.
The reviews
microservice contains book reviews. It also calls the ratings
microservice.
The ratings
microservice contains book ranking information that accompanies a book review.
There are three versions of the reviews microservice:
Version v1 does not call the ratings
Service.
Version v2 calls the ratings
Service and displays each rating as one to five black stars.
Version v3 calls the ratings
Service and displays each rating as one to five red stars.
This tutorial walks you through how to create a sample application by creating a project, deploying the Bookinfo application to that project, and viewing the running application in Service Mesh.
OpenShift Dedicated 4.1 or higher installed.
Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh 2.6.3 installed.
Access to the OpenShift CLI (oc
).
You are logged in to OpenShift Dedicated as a user with the dedicated-admin
role.
The Bookinfo sample application cannot be installed on IBM Z® and IBM Power®. |
The commands in this section assume the Service Mesh control plane project is |
Click Home → Projects.
Click Create Project.
Enter bookinfo
as the Project Name, enter a Display Name, and enter a Description, then click Create.
Alternatively, you can run this command from the CLI to create the bookinfo
project.
$ oc new-project bookinfo
Click Operators → Installed Operators.
Click the Project menu and use the Service Mesh control plane namespace. In this example, use istio-system
.
Click the Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh Operator.
Click the Istio Service Mesh Member Roll tab.
If you have already created a Istio Service Mesh Member Roll, click the name, then click the YAML tab to open the YAML editor.
If you have not created a ServiceMeshMemberRoll
, click Create ServiceMeshMemberRoll.
Click Members, then enter the name of your project in the Value field.
Click Create to save the updated Service Mesh Member Roll.
Or, save the following example to a YAML file.
apiVersion: maistra.io/v1
kind: ServiceMeshMemberRoll
metadata:
name: default
spec:
members:
- bookinfo
Run the following command to upload that file and create the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
resource in the istio-system
namespace. In this example, istio-system
is the name of the Service Mesh control plane project.
$ oc create -n istio-system -f servicemeshmemberroll-default.yaml
Run the following command to verify the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
was created successfully.
$ oc get smmr -n istio-system -o wide
The installation has finished successfully when the STATUS
column is Configured
.
NAME READY STATUS AGE MEMBERS
default 1/1 Configured 70s ["bookinfo"]
From the CLI, deploy the Bookinfo application in the `bookinfo` project by applying the bookinfo.yaml
file:
$ oc apply -n bookinfo -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Maistra/istio/maistra-2.6/samples/bookinfo/platform/kube/bookinfo.yaml
You should see output similar to the following:
service/details created
serviceaccount/bookinfo-details created
deployment.apps/details-v1 created
service/ratings created
serviceaccount/bookinfo-ratings created
deployment.apps/ratings-v1 created
service/reviews created
serviceaccount/bookinfo-reviews created
deployment.apps/reviews-v1 created
deployment.apps/reviews-v2 created
deployment.apps/reviews-v3 created
service/productpage created
serviceaccount/bookinfo-productpage created
deployment.apps/productpage-v1 created
Create the ingress gateway by applying the bookinfo-gateway.yaml
file:
$ oc apply -n bookinfo -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Maistra/istio/maistra-2.6/samples/bookinfo/networking/bookinfo-gateway.yaml
You should see output similar to the following:
gateway.networking.istio.io/bookinfo-gateway created
virtualservice.networking.istio.io/bookinfo created
Set the value for the GATEWAY_URL
parameter:
$ export GATEWAY_URL=$(oc -n istio-system get route istio-ingressgateway -o jsonpath='{.spec.host}')
Before you can use the Bookinfo application, you must first add default destination rules. There are two preconfigured YAML files, depending on whether or not you enabled mutual transport layer security (TLS) authentication.
To add destination rules, run one of the following commands:
If you did not enable mutual TLS:
$ oc apply -n bookinfo -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Maistra/istio/maistra-2.6/samples/bookinfo/networking/destination-rule-all.yaml
If you enabled mutual TLS:
$ oc apply -n bookinfo -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Maistra/istio/maistra-2.6/samples/bookinfo/networking/destination-rule-all-mtls.yaml
You should see output similar to the following:
destinationrule.networking.istio.io/productpage created
destinationrule.networking.istio.io/reviews created
destinationrule.networking.istio.io/ratings created
destinationrule.networking.istio.io/details created
To confirm that the sample Bookinfo application was successfully deployed, perform the following steps.
Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh installed.
Complete the steps for installing the Bookinfo sample app.
You are logged in to OpenShift Dedicated as a user with the dedicated-admin
role.
Verify that all pods are ready with this command:
$ oc get pods -n bookinfo
All pods should have a status of Running
. You should see output similar to the following:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
details-v1-55b869668-jh7hb 2/2 Running 0 12m
productpage-v1-6fc77ff794-nsl8r 2/2 Running 0 12m
ratings-v1-7d7d8d8b56-55scn 2/2 Running 0 12m
reviews-v1-868597db96-bdxgq 2/2 Running 0 12m
reviews-v2-5b64f47978-cvssp 2/2 Running 0 12m
reviews-v3-6dfd49b55b-vcwpf 2/2 Running 0 12m
Run the following command to retrieve the URL for the product page:
echo "http://$GATEWAY_URL/productpage"
Copy and paste the output in a web browser to verify the Bookinfo product page is deployed.
Obtain the address for the Kiali web console.
Log in to the OpenShift Dedicated web console.
Navigate to Networking → routes.
On the routes page, select the Service Mesh control plane project, for example istio-system
, from the Namespace menu.
The Location column displays the linked address for each route.
Click the link in the Location column for Kiali.
Click Log In With OpenShift. The Kiali Overview screen presents tiles for each project namespace.
In Kiali, click Graph.
Select bookinfo from the Namespace list, and App graph from the Graph Type list.
Click Display idle nodes from the Display menu.
This displays nodes that are defined but have not received or sent requests. It can confirm that an application is properly defined, but that no request traffic has been reported.
Use the Duration menu to increase the time period to help ensure older traffic is captured.
Use the Refresh Rate menu to refresh traffic more or less often, or not at all.
Click Services, Workloads or Istio Config to see list views of bookinfo components, and confirm that they are healthy.
Follow these steps to remove the Bookinfo application.
OpenShift Dedicated 4.1 or higher installed.
Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh 2.6.3 installed.
Access to the OpenShift CLI (oc
).
Log in to the OpenShift Dedicated web console.
Click to Home → Projects.
Click the bookinfo
menu , and then click Delete Project.
Type bookinfo
in the confirmation dialog box, and then click Delete.
Alternatively, you can run this command using the CLI to create the bookinfo
project.
$ oc delete project bookinfo
Log in to the OpenShift Dedicated web console.
Click Operators → Installed Operators.
Click the Project menu and choose istio-system
from the list.
Click the Istio Service Mesh Member Roll link under Provided APIS for the Red Hat OpenShift Service Mesh Operator.
Click the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
menu and select Edit Service Mesh Member Roll.
Edit the default Service Mesh Member Roll YAML and remove bookinfo
from the members list.
Alternatively, you can run this command using the CLI to remove the bookinfo
project from the ServiceMeshMemberRoll
. In this example, istio-system
is the name of the Service Mesh control plane project.
$ oc -n istio-system patch --type='json' smmr default -p '[{"op": "remove", "path": "/spec/members", "value":["'"bookinfo"'"]}]'
Click Save to update Service Mesh Member Roll.
To continue the installation process, you must enable sidecar injection.