$ oc create configmap console-custom-logo --from-file /path/to/console-custom-logo.png -n openshift-config
You can customize the OpenShift Container Platform web console to set a custom logo, product name, links, notifications, and command line downloads. This is especially helpful if you need to tailor the web console to meet specific corporate or government requirements.
You can create custom branding by adding a custom logo or custom product name. You can set both or one without the other, as these settings are independent of each other.
You must have administrator privileges.
Create a file of the logo that you want to use. The logo can be a file in any common image format, including GIF, JPG, PNG, or SVG, and is constrained to a max-height
of 60px
.
Import your logo file into a config map in the openshift-config
namespace:
$ oc create configmap console-custom-logo --from-file /path/to/console-custom-logo.png -n openshift-config
Edit the web console’s Operator configuration to include customLogoFile
and customProductName
:
$ oc edit console.operator.openshift.io cluster
apiVersion: operator.openshift.io/v1 kind: Console metadata: name: cluster spec: customization: customLogoFile: key: console-custom-logo.png name: console-custom-logo customProductName: My Console
Once the Operator configuration is updated, it will sync the custom logo config map into the console namespace, mount it to the console pod, and redeploy.
Check for success. If there are any issues, the console cluster Operator will report a Degraded
status, and the console Operator configuration will also report a CustomLogoDegraded
status, but with reasons like KeyOrFilenameInvalid
or NoImageProvided
.
To check the clusteroperator
, run:
$ oc get clusteroperator console -o yaml
To check the console Operator configuration, run:
$ oc get console.operator.openshift.io -o yaml
You must have administrator privileges.
From Administration → Custom Resource Definitions, click on ConsoleLink.
Select Instances tab
Click Create Console Link and edit the file:
apiVersion: console.openshift.io/v1 kind: ConsoleLink metadata: name: example spec: href: 'https://www.example.com' location: HelpMenu (1) text: Link 1
1 | Valid location settings are HelpMenu , UserMenu , ApplicationMenu , and
NamespaceDashboard . |
To make the custom link appear in all namespaces, follow this example:
apiVersion: console.openshift.io/v1 kind: ConsoleLink metadata: name: namespaced-dashboard-link-for-all-namespaces spec: href: 'https://www.example.com' location: NamespaceDashboard text: This appears in all namespaces
To make the custom link appear in only some namespaces, follow this example:
apiVersion: console.openshift.io/v1 kind: ConsoleLink metadata: name: namespaced-dashboard-for-some-namespaces spec: href: 'https://www.example.com' location: NamespaceDashboard # This text will appear in a box called "Launcher" under "namespace" or "project" in the web console text: Custom Link Text namespaceDashboard: namespaces: # for these specific namespaces - my-namespace - your-namespace - other-namespace
To make the custom link appear in the application menu, follow this example:
apiVersion: console.openshift.io/v1 kind: ConsoleLink metadata: name: application-menu-link-1 spec: href: 'https://www.example.com' location: ApplicationMenu text: Link 1 applicationMenu: section: My New Section # image that is 24x24 in size imageURL: https://via.placeholder.com/24
Click the Save button to apply your changes.
Create Terms of Service information with custom login pages. Custom login pages can also be helpful if you use a third-party login provider, such as GitHub or Google, to show users a branded page that they trust and expect before being redirected to the authentication provider. You can also render custom error pages during the authentication process.
You must have administrator privileges.
Run the following commands to create templates you can modify:
$ oc adm create-login-template > login.html
$ oc adm create-provider-selection-template > providers.html
$ oc adm create-error-template > errors.html
Create the secrets:
$ oc create secret generic login-template --from-file=login.html -n openshift-config
$ oc create secret generic providers-template --from-file=providers.html -n openshift-config
$ oc create secret generic error-template --from-file=errors.html -n openshift-config
Run:
$ oc edit oauths cluster
Update the specification:
spec: templates: error: name: error-template login: name: login-template providerSelection: name: providers-template
Run oc explain oauths.spec.templates
to understand the options.
If you are connected to a service that helps you browse your logs, but you need to generate URLs in a particular way, then you can define a template for your link.
You must have administrator privileges.
From Administration → Custom Resource Definitions, click on ConsoleExternalLogLink.
Select Instances tab
Click Create Console External Log Link and edit the file:
apiVersion: console.openshift.io/v1 kind: ConsoleExternalLogLink metadata: name: example spec: hrefTemplate: >- https://example.com/logs?resourceName=${resourceName}&containerName=${containerName}&resourceNamespace=${resourceNamespace}&podLabels=${podLabels} text: Example Logs
You must have administrator privileges.
From Administration → Custom Resource Definitions, click on ConsoleNotification.
Select Instances tab
Click Create Console Notification and edit the file:
apiVersion: console.openshift.io/v1 kind: ConsoleNotification metadata: name: example spec: text: This is an example notification message with an optional link. location: BannerTop (1) link: href: 'https://www.example.com' text: Optional link text color: '#fff' backgroundColor: '#0088ce'
1 | Valid location settings are BannerTop , BannerBottom , and BannerTopBottom . |
Click the Create button to apply your changes.
You can configure links for downloading the CLI with custom link text and URLs, which can point directly to file packages or to an external page that provides the packages.
You must have administrator privileges.
Navigate to Administration → Custom Resource Definitions.
Select ConsoleCLIDownload from the list of Custom Resource Definitions (CRDs).
Click the YAML tab, and then make your edits:
apiVersion: console.openshift.io/v1 kind: ConsoleCLIDownload metadata: name: example-cli-download-links-for-foo spec: description: | This is an example of download links for foo displayName: example-foo links: - href: 'https://www.example.com/public/foo.tar' text: foo for linux - href: 'https://www.example.com/public/foo.mac.zip' text: foo for mac - href: 'https://www.example.com/public/foo.win.zip' text: foo for windows
Click the Save button.
You can dynamically add YAML examples to any Kubernetes resources at any time.
You must have cluster administrator privileges.
From Administration → Custom Resource Definitions, click on ConsoleYAMLSample.
Click YAML and edit the file:
apiVersion: console.openshift.io/v1 kind: ConsoleYAMLSample metadata: name: example spec: targetResource: apiVersion: batch/v1 kind: Job title: Example Job description: An example Job YAML sample yaml: | apiVersion: batch/v1 kind: Job metadata: name: countdown spec: template: metadata: name: countdown spec: containers: - name: counter image: centos:7 command: - "bin/bash" - "-c" - "for i in 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 ; do echo $i ; done" restartPolicy: Never
Use spec.snippet
to indicate that the YAML sample is not the full YAML resource
definition, but a fragment that can be inserted into the existing YAML document
at the user’s cursor.
Click Save.