[Global] Zone = us-east-1c (1)
1 | This is the Availability Zone of your AWS Instance and where your EBS Volume resides; this information is obtained from the AWS Managment Console. |
OpenShift Container Platform can be configured to access an AWS EC2 infrastructure, including using AWS volumes as persistent storage for application data. After AWS is configured properly, some additional configurations will need to be completed on the OpenShift Container Platform hosts.
To set the required AWS variables, create a /etc/aws/aws.conf file with the following contents on all of your OpenShift Container Platform hosts, both masters and nodes:
[Global] Zone = us-east-1c (1)
1 | This is the Availability Zone of your AWS Instance and where your EBS Volume resides; this information is obtained from the AWS Managment Console. |
You can set the AWS configuration on your OpenShift Container Platform master hosts in two ways:
During
advanced installations,
AWS can be configured using
the openshift_cloudprovider_aws_access_key
, openshift_cloudprovider_aws_secret_key
, and openshift_cloudprovider_kind
parameters, which are configurable in the inventory file.
# Cloud Provider Configuration # # Note: You may make use of environment variables rather than store # sensitive configuration within the ansible inventory. # For example: #openshift_cloudprovider_aws_access_key="{{ lookup('env','AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID') }}" #openshift_cloudprovider_aws_secret_key="{{ lookup('env','AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY') }}" # # AWS #openshift_cloudprovider_kind=aws # Note: IAM profiles may be used instead of storing API credentials on disk. #openshift_cloudprovider_aws_access_key=aws_access_key_id #openshift_cloudprovider_aws_secret_key=aws_secret_access_key
When Ansible configures AWS, the following files are created for you:
|
Edit or
create
the master configuration file on all masters
(/etc/origin/master/master-config.yaml by default) and update the contents
of the apiServerArguments
and controllerArguments
sections:
kubernetesMasterConfig:
...
apiServerArguments:
cloud-provider:
- "aws"
cloud-config:
- "/etc/aws/aws.conf"
controllerArguments:
cloud-provider:
- "aws"
cloud-config:
- "/etc/aws/aws.conf"
When triggering a containerized installation, only the directories of /etc/origin and /var/lib/origin are mounted to the master and node container. Therefore, aws.conf should be in /etc/origin/ instead of /etc/. |
Edit or
create
the node configuration file on all nodes (/etc/origin/node/node-config.yaml
by default) and update the contents of the kubeletArguments
section:
kubeletArguments:
cloud-provider:
- "aws"
cloud-config:
- "/etc/aws/aws.conf"
When triggering a containerized installation, only the directories of /etc/origin and /var/lib/origin are mounted to the master and node container. Therefore, aws.conf should be in /etc/origin/ instead of /etc/. |
Make sure the following environment variables are set in the /etc/sysconfig/atomic-openshift-master file on masters and the /etc/sysconfig/atomic-openshift-node file on nodes:
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=<key_ID> AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=<secret_key>
Access keys are obtained when setting up your AWS IAM user. |
Start or restart OpenShift Container Platform services on all master and node hosts to apply your configuration changes:
# systemctl restart atomic-openshift-master # systemctl restart atomic-openshift-node
Switching from not using a cloud provider to using a cloud provider produces an
error message. Adding the cloud provider tries to delete the node because the
node switches from using the hostname as the externalID
(which would have
been the case when no cloud provider was being used) to using the AWS
instance-id
(which is what the AWS cloud provider specifies). To resolve
this issue:
Log in to the CLI as a cluster administrator.
Delete the nodes:
$ oc delete node <node_name>
On each node host, restart the atomic-openshift-node service.
Add back any labels on each node that you previously had.