$ oc get -n openshift-dns-operator deployment/dns-operator
The DNS Operator deploys and manages CoreDNS to provide a name resolution service to pods, enabling DNS-based Kubernetes Service discovery in OpenShift Container Platform.
The DNS Operator implements the dns
API from the operator.openshift.io
API
group. The Operator deploys CoreDNS using a daemon set, creates a service for
the daemon set, and configures the kubelet to instruct pods to use the CoreDNS
service IP address for name resolution.
The DNS Operator is deployed during installation with a Deployment
object.
Use the oc get
command to view the deployment status:
$ oc get -n openshift-dns-operator deployment/dns-operator
NAME READY UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE
dns-operator 1/1 1 1 23h
Use the oc get
command to view the state of the DNS Operator:
$ oc get clusteroperator/dns
NAME VERSION AVAILABLE PROGRESSING DEGRADED SINCE
dns 4.1.0-0.11 True False False 92m
AVAILABLE
, PROGRESSING
and DEGRADED
provide information about the status of the operator. AVAILABLE
is True
when at least 1 pod from the CoreDNS daemon set reports an Available
status condition.
DNS manages the CoreDNS component to provide a name resolution service for pods and services in the cluster. The managementState
of the DNS Operator is set to Managed
by default, which means that the DNS Operator is actively managing its resources. You can change it to Unmanaged
, which means the DNS Operator is not managing its resources.
The following are use cases for changing the DNS Operator managementState
:
You are a developer and want to test a configuration change to see if it fixes an issue in CoreDNS. You can stop the DNS Operator from overwriting the fix by setting the managementState
to Unmanaged
.
You are a cluster administrator and have reported an issue with CoreDNS, but need to apply a workaround until the issue is fixed. You can set the managementState
field of the DNS Operator to Unmanaged
to apply the workaround.
Change managementState
DNS Operator:
oc patch dns.operator.openshift.io default --type merge --patch '{"spec":{"managementState":"Unmanaged"}}'
The DNS Operator has two daemon sets: one for CoreDNS and one for managing the /etc/hosts
file. The daemon set for /etc/hosts
must run on every node host to add an entry for the cluster image registry to support pulling images. Security policies can prohibit communication between pairs of nodes, which prevents the daemon set for CoreDNS from running on every node.
As a cluster administrator, you can use a custom node selector to configure the daemon set for CoreDNS to run or not run on certain nodes.
You installed the oc
CLI.
You are logged in to the cluster with a user with cluster-admin
privileges.
To prevent communication between certain nodes, configure the spec.nodePlacement.nodeSelector
API field:
Modify the DNS Operator object named default
:
$ oc edit dns.operator/default
Specify a node selector that includes only control plane nodes in the spec.nodePlacement.nodeSelector
API field:
spec:
nodePlacement:
nodeSelector:
node-role.kubernetes.io/worker: ""
To allow the daemon set for CoreDNS to run on nodes, configure a taint and toleration:
Modify the DNS Operator object named default
:
$ oc edit dns.operator/default
Specify a taint key and a toleration for the taint:
spec:
nodePlacement:
tolerations:
- effect: NoExecute
key: "dns-only"
operators: Equal
value: abc
tolerationSeconds: 3600 (1)
1 | If the taint is dns-only , it can be tolerated indefinitely. You can omit tolerationSeconds . |
Every new OpenShift Container Platform installation has a dns.operator
named default
.
Use the oc describe
command to view the default dns
:
$ oc describe dns.operator/default
Name: default
Namespace:
Labels: <none>
Annotations: <none>
API Version: operator.openshift.io/v1
Kind: DNS
...
Status:
Cluster Domain: cluster.local (1)
Cluster IP: 172.30.0.10 (2)
...
1 | The Cluster Domain field is the base DNS domain used to construct fully qualified pod and service domain names. |
2 | The Cluster IP is the address pods query for name resolution. The IP is defined as the 10th address in the service CIDR range. |
To find the service CIDR of your cluster,
use the oc get
command:
$ oc get networks.config/cluster -o jsonpath='{$.status.serviceNetwork}'
[172.30.0.0/16]
You can use DNS forwarding to override the default forwarding configuration in the /etc/resolv.conf
file in the following ways:
Specify name servers for every zone. If the forwarded zone is the Ingress domain managed by OpenShift Container Platform, then the upstream name server must be authorized for the domain.
Provide a list of upstream DNS servers.
Change the default forwarding policy.
A DNS forwarding configuration for the default domain can have both the default servers specified in the |
Modify the DNS Operator object named default
:
$ oc edit dns.operator/default
This allows the Operator to create and update the ConfigMap named dns-default
with additional server configuration blocks based on Server
. If none of the servers has a zone that matches the query, then name resolution falls back to the upstream DNS servers.
apiVersion: operator.openshift.io/v1
kind: DNS
metadata:
name: default
spec:
servers:
- name: foo-server (1)
zones: (2)
- example.com
forwardPlugin:
policy: Random (3)
upstreams: (4)
- 1.1.1.1
- 2.2.2.2:5353
- name: bar-server
zones:
- bar.com
- example.com
forwardPlugin:
policy: Random
upstreams:
- 3.3.3.3
- 4.4.4.4:5454
upstreamResolvers: (5)
policy: Random (6)
upstreams: (7)
- type: SystemResolvConf (8)
- type: Network
address: 1.2.3.4 (9)
port: 53 (10)
1 | Must comply with the rfc6335 service name syntax. |
2 | Must conform to the definition of a subdomain in rfc1123 . The cluster domain, cluster.local , is an invalid subdomain for zones . |
3 | Defines the policy to select upstream resolvers. Default value is Random . You can also use RoundRobin , and Sequential . |
4 | A maximum of 15 upstreams is allowed per forwardPlugin . |
5 | Optional. You can use it to override the default policy and forward DNS resolution to the specified DNS resolvers (upstream resolvers) for the default domain. If you do not provide any upstream resolvers, the DNS name queries go to the servers in /etc/resolv.conf . |
6 | Determines the order in which upstream servers are selected for querying. You can specify one of these values: Random , RoundRobin , or Sequential . The default value is Sequential . |
7 | Optional. You can use it to provide upstream resolvers. |
8 | You can specify two types of upstreams - SystemResolvConf and Network . SystemResolvConf configures the upstream to use `/etc/resolv.conf and Network defines a Networkresolver . You can specify one or both. |
9 | If the specified type is Network , you must provide an IP address. address must be a valid IPv4 or IPv6 address. |
10 | If the specified type is Network , you can optionally provide a port. port must be between 1 and 65535. |
If |
View the ConfigMap:
$ oc get configmap/dns-default -n openshift-dns -o yaml
apiVersion: v1
data:
Corefile: |
example.com:5353 {
forward . 1.1.1.1 2.2.2.2:5353
}
bar.com:5353 example.com:5353 {
forward . 3.3.3.3 4.4.4.4:5454 (1)
}
.:5353 {
errors
health
kubernetes cluster.local in-addr.arpa ip6.arpa {
pods insecure
upstream
fallthrough in-addr.arpa ip6.arpa
}
prometheus :9153
forward . /etc/resolv.conf 1.2.3.4:53 {
policy Random
}
cache 30
reload
}
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
labels:
dns.operator.openshift.io/owning-dns: default
name: dns-default
namespace: openshift-dns
1 | Changes to the forwardPlugin triggers a rolling update of the CoreDNS daemon set. |
For more information on DNS forwarding, see the CoreDNS forward documentation.
You can inspect the status and view the details of the DNS Operator
using the oc describe
command.
View the status of the DNS Operator:
$ oc describe clusteroperators/dns
You can view DNS Operator logs by using the oc logs
command.
View the logs of the DNS Operator:
$ oc logs -n openshift-dns-operator deployment/dns-operator -c dns-operator
You can configure the CoreDNS log level to determine the amount of detail in logged error messages. The valid values for CoreDNS log level are Normal
, Debug
, and Trace
. The default logLevel
is Normal
.
The errors plugin is always enabled. The following
|
To set logLevel
to Debug
, enter the following command:
$ oc patch dnses.operator.openshift.io/default -p '{"spec":{"logLevel":"Debug"}}' --type=merge
To set logLevel
to Trace
, enter the following command:
$ oc patch dnses.operator.openshift.io/default -p '{"spec":{"logLevel":"Trace"}}' --type=merge
To ensure the desired log level was set, check the config map:
$ oc get configmap/dns-default -n openshift-dns -o yaml
Cluster administrators can configure the Operator log level to more quickly track down OpenShift DNS issues. The valid values for operatorLogLevel
are Normal
, Debug
, and Trace
. Trace
has the most detailed information. The default operatorlogLevel
is Normal
. There are seven logging levels for issues: Trace, Debug, Info, Warning, Error, Fatal and Panic. After the logging level is set, log entries with that severity or anything above it will be logged.
operatorLogLevel: "Normal"
sets logrus.SetLogLevel("Info")
.
operatorLogLevel: "Debug"
sets logrus.SetLogLevel("Debug")
.
operatorLogLevel: "Trace"
sets logrus.SetLogLevel("Trace")
.
To set operatorLogLevel
to Debug
, enter the following command:
$ oc patch dnses.operator.openshift.io/default -p '{"spec":{"operatorLogLevel":"Debug"}}' --type=merge
To set operatorLogLevel
to Trace
, enter the following command:
$ oc patch dnses.operator.openshift.io/default -p '{"spec":{"operatorLogLevel":"Trace"}}' --type=merge