$ roxctl -e "$ROX_CENTRAL_ADDRESS" central backup
You can upgrade to the latest version of Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes from a supported older version.
To upgrade Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes to the latest version, you must perform the following:
Backup the Central database
Upgrade Central
Upgrade the roxctl
CLI
Upgrade Scanner
Verify that all secured clusters are upgraded
You can back up the Central database and use that backup for rolling back from a failed upgrade or data restoration in the case of an infrastructure disaster.
You must have an API token with read
permission for all resources of Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes. The Analyst system role has read
permissions for all resources.
You have installed the roxctl
CLI.
You have configured the ROX_API_TOKEN
and the ROX_CENTRAL_ADDRESS
environment variables.
Run the backup command:
For Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes 3.0.55 and newer:
$ roxctl -e "$ROX_CENTRAL_ADDRESS" central backup
For Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes 3.0.54 and older:
$ roxctl -e "$ROX_CENTRAL_ADDRESS" central db backup
After you have backed up the Central database, the next step is to upgrade the Central cluster. This step includes upgrading Central, the roxctl
CLI, and the Scanner.
You can update Central to the latest version by downloading and deploying the updated images.
If you deploy images from a private image registry, first push the new image into your private registry, and then replace your image registry for the commands in this section.
Run the following commands to upgrade Central:
$ oc -n stackrox patch deploy/central -p '{"spec":{"template":{"spec":{"containers":[{"name":"central","env":[{"name":"ROX_NAMESPACE","valueFrom":{"fieldRef":{"fieldPath":"metadata.namespace"}}}]}]}}}}' (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
$ oc -n stackrox patch deployment/scanner -p '{"spec":{"template":{"spec":{"containers":[{"name":"scanner","securityContext":{"runAsUser":65534}}]}}}}' (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
$ oc -n stackrox set image deploy/central central=registry.redhat.io/advanced-cluster-security/rhacs-main-rhel8:3.69.2 (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
|
Check that the new pods have deployed:
$ oc get deploy -n stackrox -o wide (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
$ oc get pod -n stackrox --watch (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
To upgrade the roxctl
CLI to the latest version you must uninstall the existing version of roxctl
CLI and then install the latest version of the roxctl
CLI.
You can uninstall the roxctl
CLI binary on Linux by using the following procedure.
Find and delete the roxctl
binary:
$ ROXPATH=$(which roxctl) && rm -f $ROXPATH (1)
1 | Depending on your environment, you might need administrator rights to delete the roxctl binary. |
You can install the roxctl
CLI binary on Linux by using the following procedure.
Download the latest version of the roxctl
CLI:
$ curl -O https://mirror.openshift.com/pub/rhacs/assets/3.69.2/bin/Linux/roxctl
Make the roxctl
binary executable:
$ chmod +x roxctl
Place the roxctl
binary in a directory that is on your PATH
:
To check your PATH
, execute the following command:
$ echo $PATH
Verify the roxctl
version you have installed:
$ roxctl version
You can install the roxctl
CLI binary on macOS by using the following procedure.
Download the latest version of the roxctl
CLI:
$ curl -O https://mirror.openshift.com/pub/rhacs/assets/3.69.2/bin/Darwin/roxctl
Remove all extended attributes from the binary:
$ xattr -c roxctl
Make the roxctl
binary executable:
$ chmod +x roxctl
Place the roxctl
binary in a directory that is on your PATH
:
To check your PATH
, execute the following command:
$ echo $PATH
Verify the roxctl
version you have installed:
$ roxctl version
You can install the roxctl
CLI binary on Windows by using the following procedure.
Download the latest version of the roxctl
CLI:
$ curl -O https://mirror.openshift.com/pub/rhacs/assets/3.69.2/bin/Windows/roxctl.exe
Verify the roxctl
version you have installed:
$ roxctl version
After you upgrade the roxctl
CLI you can upgrade Scanner.
You can update Scanner to the latest version by using the roxctl
CLI.
If you deploy images from a private image registry, first push the new image into your private registry, and then replace your image registry for the commands in this section.
If you used Red Hat UBI-based images when you installed Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes, replace the image names for the commands in this section with the following UBI-based image names:
If you have created custom scanner configurations, you must apply those changes before updating the scanner configuration file:
$ roxctl -e "$ROX_CENTRAL_ADDRESS" scanner generate
$ oc apply -f scanner-bundle/scanner/02-scanner-03-tls-secret.yaml (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
$ oc apply -f scanner-bundle/scanner/02-scanner-04-scanner-config.yaml (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
Update the Scanner image:
$ oc -n stackrox set image deploy/scanner scanner=registry.redhat.io/advanced-cluster-security/rhacs-scanner-rhel8:3.69.2 (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
Update the Scanner database image:
$ oc -n stackrox set image deploy/scanner-db db=registry.redhat.io/advanced-cluster-security/rhacs-scanner-db-rhel8:3.69.2 (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
$ oc -n stackrox set image deploy/scanner-db init-db=registry.redhat.io/advanced-cluster-security/rhacs-scanner-db-rhel8:3.69.2 (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
Check that the new pods have deployed successfully:
$ oc get pod -n stackrox --watch (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
After you have upgraded both Central and Scanner, verify that the Central cluster upgrade is complete.
Check the Central logs:
$ oc logs -n stackrox deploy/central -c central (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
If the upgrade is successful, you will see output similar to the following:
No database restore directory found (this is not an error).
Migrator: 2019/10/25 17:58:54: starting DB compaction
Migrator: 2019/10/25 17:58:54: Free fraction of 0.0391 (40960/1048576) is < 0.7500. Will not compact
badger 2019/10/25 17:58:54 INFO: All 1 tables opened in 2ms
badger 2019/10/25 17:58:55 INFO: Replaying file id: 0 at offset: 846357
badger 2019/10/25 17:58:55 INFO: Replay took: 50.324µs
badger 2019/10/25 17:58:55 DEBUG: Value log discard stats empty
Migrator: 2019/10/25 17:58:55: DB is up to date. Nothing to do here.
badger 2019/10/25 17:58:55 INFO: Got compaction priority: {level:0 score:1.73 dropPrefix:[]}
version: 2019/10/25 17:58:55.189866 ensure.go:49: Info: Version found in the DB was current. We’re good to go!
After upgrading Central services, you must upgrade all secured clusters.
|
To complete manual upgrades of each secured cluster running Sensor, Collector, and Admission Controller, follow the instructions in this section.
If you are upgrading from a version below Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes 3.65.0, you must run the following additional command to update the readiness probe path. If you are running a higher version than 3.65, skip this step.
Update the readiness probe path:
$ oc -n stackrox patch deploy/sensor -p '{"spec":{"template":{"spec":{"containers":[{"name":"sensor","readinessProbe":{"httpGet":{"path":"/ready"}}}]}}}}' (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
Depending on the version of Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes you are upgrading to, you must update certain OpenShift Container Platform security context constraints (SCCs).
Run the commands in this section only if you are using Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes with OpenShift Container Platform. Otherwise, skip the instructions in this section. |
Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes 3.64.0 renames the SCCs. If you are upgrading from a version below Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes 3.64.0, you must delete and reapply the SCCs, otherwise, skip this step:
Run the following commands to update Central:
$ oc apply -f - <<EOF
kind: SecurityContextConstraints
apiVersion: security.openshift.io/v1
metadata:
name: stackrox-central
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: stackrox
annotations:
kubernetes.io/description: stackrox-central is the security constraint for the central server
email: support@stackrox.com
owner: stackrox
allowHostDirVolumePlugin: false
allowedCapabilities: []
allowHostIPC: false
allowHostNetwork: false
allowHostPID: false
allowHostPorts: false
allowPrivilegeEscalation: false
allowPrivilegedContainer: false
defaultAddCapabilities: []
fsGroup:
type: MustRunAs
ranges:
- max: 4000
min: 4000
priority: 0
readOnlyRootFilesystem: true
requiredDropCapabilities: []
runAsUser:
type: MustRunAs
uid: 4000
seLinuxContext:
type: MustRunAs
seccompProfiles:
- '*'
users:
- system:serviceaccount:stackrox:central
volumes:
- '*'
EOF
$ oc delete scc central
Run the following commands to update Scanner:
$ oc apply -f - <<EOF
kind: SecurityContextConstraints
apiVersion: security.openshift.io/v1
metadata:
name: stackrox-scanner
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: stackrox
annotations:
email: support@stackrox.com
owner: stackrox
kubernetes.io/description: stackrox-scanner is the security constraint for the Scanner container
priority: 0
runAsUser:
type: RunAsAny
seLinuxContext:
type: RunAsAny
seccompProfiles:
- '*'
users:
- system:serviceaccount:stackrox:scanner
volumes:
- '*'
allowHostDirVolumePlugin: false
allowedCapabilities: []
allowHostIPC: false
allowHostNetwork: false
allowHostPID: false
allowHostPorts: false
allowPrivilegeEscalation: false
allowPrivilegedContainer: false
defaultAddCapabilities: []
fsGroup:
type: RunAsAny
readOnlyRootFilesystem: false
requiredDropCapabilities: []
EOF
$ oc delete scc scanner
Run the following commands on each OpenShift Secured Cluster:
$ oc apply -f - <<EOF
apiVersion: security.openshift.io/v1
kind: SecurityContextConstraints
metadata:
name: stackrox-admission-control
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: stackrox
auto-upgrade.stackrox.io/component: "sensor"
annotations:
email: support@stackrox.com
owner: stackrox
kubernetes.io/description: stackrox-admission-control is the security constraint for the admission controller
users:
- system:serviceaccount:stackrox:admission-control
priority: 0
runAsUser:
type: RunAsAny
seLinuxContext:
type: RunAsAny
seccompProfiles:
- '*'
supplementalGroups:
type: RunAsAny
fsGroup:
type: RunAsAny
groups: []
readOnlyRootFilesystem: true
allowHostDirVolumePlugin: false
allowHostIPC: false
allowHostNetwork: false
allowHostPID: false
allowHostPorts: false
allowPrivilegeEscalation: false
allowPrivilegedContainer: false
allowedCapabilities: []
defaultAddCapabilities: []
requiredDropCapabilities: []
volumes:
- configMap
- downwardAPI
- emptyDir
- secret
---
apiVersion: security.openshift.io/v1
kind: SecurityContextConstraints
metadata:
name: stackrox-collector
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: stackrox
auto-upgrade.stackrox.io/component: "sensor"
annotations:
email: support@stackrox.com
owner: stackrox
kubernetes.io/description: This SCC is based on privileged, hostaccess, and hostmount-anyuid
users:
- system:serviceaccount:stackrox:collector
allowHostDirVolumePlugin: true
allowPrivilegedContainer: true
fsGroup:
type: RunAsAny
groups: []
priority: 0
readOnlyRootFilesystem: true
runAsUser:
type: RunAsAny
seLinuxContext:
type: RunAsAny
seccompProfiles:
- '*'
supplementalGroups:
type: RunAsAny
allowHostIPC: false
allowHostNetwork: false
allowHostPID: false
allowHostPorts: false
allowPrivilegeEscalation: true
allowedCapabilities: []
defaultAddCapabilities: []
requiredDropCapabilities: []
volumes:
- configMap
- downwardAPI
- emptyDir
- hostPath
- secret
---
apiVersion: security.openshift.io/v1
kind: SecurityContextConstraints
metadata:
name: stackrox-sensor
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: stackrox
auto-upgrade.stackrox.io/component: "sensor"
annotations:
email: support@stackrox.com
owner: stackrox
kubernetes.io/description: stackrox-sensor is the security constraint for the sensor
users:
- system:serviceaccount:stackrox:sensor
- system:serviceaccount:stackrox:sensor-upgrader
priority: 0
runAsUser:
type: RunAsAny
seLinuxContext:
type: RunAsAny
seccompProfiles:
- '*'
supplementalGroups:
type: RunAsAny
fsGroup:
type: RunAsAny
groups: []
readOnlyRootFilesystem: true
allowHostDirVolumePlugin: false
allowHostIPC: false
allowHostNetwork: false
allowHostPID: false
allowHostPorts: false
allowPrivilegeEscalation: true
allowPrivilegedContainer: false
allowedCapabilities: []
defaultAddCapabilities: []
requiredDropCapabilities: []
volumes:
- configMap
- downwardAPI
- emptyDir
- secret
EOF
$ oc delete scc admission-control collector sensor
You must update the sensor, collector and compliance images on each secured cluster when not using automatic upgrades.
If you are using Kubernetes, use |
Update the Sensor image:
$ oc -n stackrox set image deploy/sensor sensor=registry.redhat.io/advanced-cluster-security/rhacs-main-rhel8:3.69.2 (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
Update the Compliance image:
$ oc -n stackrox set image ds/collector compliance=registry.redhat.io/advanced-cluster-security/rhacs-main-rhel8:3.69.2 (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
Update the Collector image:
$ oc -n stackrox set image ds/collector collector=registry.redhat.io/advanced-cluster-security/rhacs-collector-rhel8:3.69.2 (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
If you are using the collector slim image, run the following command instead:
|
Update the admission control image:
$ oc -n stackrox set image deploy/admission-control admission-control=registry.redhat.io/advanced-cluster-security/rhacs-main-rhel8:3.69.2
After you have upgraded secured clusters, verify that the updated pods are working.
Check that the new pods have deployed:
$ oc get deploy,ds -n stackrox -o wide (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
$ oc get pod -n stackrox --watch (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
You can roll back to a previous version of Central if the upgrade to a new version is unsuccessful.
You can roll back to a previous version of Central if upgrading Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes fails.
You must be using Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes 3.0.57.0 or higher.
Before you can perform a rollback, you must have free disk space available on your persistent storage. Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes uses disk space to keep a copy of databases during the upgrade. If the disk space is not enough to store a copy and the upgrade fails, you will not be able to roll back to an earlier version.
Run the following command to roll back to a previous version when an upgrade fails (before the Central service starts):
$ oc -n stackrox rollout undo deploy/central (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
You can use forced rollback to roll back to an earlier version of Central (after the Central service starts).
Using forced rollback to switch back to a previous version might result in loss of data and functionality. |
You must be using Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes 3.0.58.0 or higher.
Before you can perform a rollback, you must have free disk space available on your persistent storage. Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes uses disk space to keep a copy of databases during the upgrade. If the disk space is not enough to store a copy and the upgrade fails, you will not be able to roll back to an earlier version.
Run the following commands to perform a forced rollback:
To forcefully rollback to the previously installed version:
$ oc -n stackrox rollout undo deploy/central (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
To forcefully rollback to a specific version:
Edit Central’s ConfigMap
:
$ oc -n stackrox edit configmap/central-config (1)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
Update the value of the maintenance.forceRollbackVersion
key:
data:
central-config.yaml: |
maintenance:
safeMode: false
compaction:
enabled: true
bucketFillFraction: .5
freeFractionThreshold: 0.75
forceRollbackVersion: <x.x.x.x> (1)
...
1 | Specify the version that you want to roll back to. |
Update the Central image version:
$ oc -n stackrox \ (1)
set image deploy/central central=registry.redhat.io/advanced-cluster-security/rhacs-main-rhel8:<x.x.x.x> (2)
1 | If you use Kubernetes, enter kubectl instead of oc . |
2 | Specify the version that you want to roll back to. It must be the same version that you specified for the maintenance.forceRollbackVersion key in the central-config config map. |
The updated Sensors and Collectors continue to report the latest data from each secured cluster.
The last time Sensor contacted Central is visible in the RHACS portal.
On the RHACS portal, navigate to Platform Configuration → System Health.
Check to ensure that Sensor Upgrade shows clusters up to date with Central.
For security reasons, Red Hat recommends that you revoke the API token that you have used to complete Central database backup.
After the upgrade, you must reload the RHACS portal page and re-accept the certificate to continue using the RHACS portal.
On the RHACS portal, navigate to Platform Configuration → Integrations.
Scroll down to the Authentication Tokens category, and click API Token.
Select the checkbox in front of the token name that you want to revoke.
Click Revoke.
On the confirmation dialog box, click Confirm.