$ oadm create-bootstrap-project-template -o yaml > template.yaml
In OpenShift Enterprise, projects are used to group and isolate related objects. As an administrator, you can give developers access to certain projects, allow them to create their own, and give them administrative rights within individual projects.
You can allow developers to create their own projects. There is an endpoint
that will provision a project according to a
template. The web console and oc new-project
command use this endpoint when a developer creates a new project.
The API server automatically provisions projects based on the template that is
identified by the projectRequestTemplate
parameter of the master-config.yaml
file. If the parameter is not defined, the API server creates a default template
that creates a project with the requested name, and assigns the requesting user
to the "admin" role for that project.
To create your own custom project template:
Start with the current default project template:
$ oadm create-bootstrap-project-template -o yaml > template.yaml
Use a text editor to modify the template.yaml file by adding objects or modifying existing objects.
Load the template:
$ oc create -f template.yaml -n default
Modify the master-config.yaml file to reference the loaded template:
... projectConfig: projectRequestTemplate: "default/project-request" ...
When a project request is submitted, the API substitutes the following parameters into the template:
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
PROJECT_NAME |
The name of the project. Required. |
PROJECT_DISPLAYNAME |
The display name of the project. May be empty. |
PROJECT_DESCRIPTION |
The description of the project. May be empty. |
PROJECT_ADMIN_USER |
The username of the administrating user. |
PROJECT_REQUESTING_USER |
The username of the requesting user. |
Access to the API is granted to developers with the
self-provisioner
role and the self-provisioners
cluster role binding. This role is available
to all authenticated developers by default.
You can prevent an authenticated user group from self-provisioning new projects.
Log in as a user with cluster-admin privileges.
Remove the self-provisioners
cluster role
from the group.
$ oadm policy remove-cluster-role-from-group self-provisioner system:authenticated system:authenticated:oauth
Set the projectRequestMessage
parameter value in the
master-config.yaml file to instruct developers how to request a new
project. This parameter value is a string that will be presented to a user in
the web console and command line when the user attempts to self-provision a project.
You might use one of the following messages:
To request a project, contact your system administrator at projectname@example.com.
To request a new project, fill out the project request form located at https://internal.example.com/openshift-project-request.
...
projectConfig:
ProjectRequestMessage: "message"
...
Edit the self-provisioners
cluster role to prevent
automatic updates
to the role. Automatic updates reset the cluster roles to the default state.
To update the role from the command line:
Run the following command:
$ oc edit clusterrole self-provisioner
In the displayed role, set the openshift.io/reconcile-protect
parameter
value to true
, as shown in the following example:
apiVersion: authorization.openshift.io/v1
kind: ClusterRole
metadata:
annotations:
authorization.openshift.io/system-only: "true"
openshift.io/description: A user that can request project.
openshift.io/reconcile-protect: "true"
...
To update the role by using automation, use the following command:
$ oc patch clusterrole self-provisioner -p '{ "metadata": { "annotations": { "openshift.io/reconcile-protect": "true" } } }'
Node selectors are used in conjunction with labeled nodes to control pod placement.
Labels can be assigned during an advanced installation, or added to a node after installation. |
As a cluster administrator, you can set the cluster-wide default node selector to restrict pod placement to specific nodes.
Edit the master configuration file at /etc/origin/master/master-config.yaml
and add a value for a default node selector. This is applied to the pods created
in all projects without a specified nodeSelector
value:
... projectConfig: defaultNodeSelector: "type=user-node,region=east" ...
Restart the OpenShift service for the changes to take effect:
# systemctl restart atomic-openshift-master
To create an individual project with a node selector, use the --node-selector
option when creating a project. For example, if you have an OpenShift Enterprise
topology with multiple regions, you can use a node selector to restrict specific
OpenShift Enterprise projects to only deploy pods onto nodes in a specific region.
The following creates a new project named myproject
and dictates that pods be
deployed onto nodes labeled user-node
and east
:
$ oadm new-project myproject \ --node-selector='type=user-node,region=east'
Once this command is run, this becomes the adminstrator-set node selector for all pods contained in the specified project.
While the |
Using the oadm new-project
command adds an annotation
section to the
project. You can edit a project, and change the openshift.io/node-selector
value to override the default:
... metadata: annotations: openshift.io/node-selector: type=user-node,region=east ...
If openshift.io/node-selector
is set to an empty string (oadm new-project
--node-selector=""
), the project will not have an adminstrator-set node
selector, even if the cluster-wide default has been set. This means that, as a
cluster administrator, you can set a default to restrict developer projects to a
subset of nodes and still enable infrastructure or other projects to schedule
the entire cluster.
OpenShift Enterprise developers can set a node selector on their pod configuration if they wish to restrict nodes even further. This will be in addition to the project node selector, meaning that you can still dictate node selector values for all projects that have a node selector value.
For example, if a project has been created with the above annotation
(openshift.io/node-selector: type=user-node,region=east
) and a developer sets
another node selector on a pod in that project, for example
clearance=classified
, the pod will only ever be scheduled on nodes that have
all three labels (type=user-node
, region=east
, and clearance=classified
).
If they set region=west
on a pod, their pods would be demanding nodes with
labels region=east
and region=west
, which cannot work. The pods will never
be scheduled, because labels can only be set to one value.
The number of self-provisioned projects requested by a given user can be limited
with the ProjectRequestLimit
admission
control plug-in.
If your project request template was created in OpenShift Enterprise 3.1 or earlier
using the process described in
Modifying the Template for New
Projects, then the generated template does not include the annotation
|
In order to specify limits for users, a configuration must be specified for the plug-in within the master configuration file (/etc/origin/master/master-config.yaml). The plug-in configuration takes a list of user label selectors and the associated maximum project requests.
Selectors are evaluated in order. The first one matching the current user will be used to determine the maximum number of projects. If a selector is not specified, a limit applies to all users. If a maximum number of projects is not specified, then an unlimited number of projects are allowed for a specific selector.
The following configuration sets a global limit of 2 projects per user while allowing 10
projects for users with a label of level=advanced
and unlimited projects for
users with a label of level=admin
.
admissionConfig:
pluginConfig:
ProjectRequestLimit:
configuration:
apiVersion: v1
kind: ProjectRequestLimitConfig
limits:
- selector:
level: admin (1)
- selector:
level: advanced (2)
maxProjects: 10
- maxProjects: 2 (3)
1 | For selector level=admin , no maxProjects is specified. This means that users
with this label will not have a maximum of project requests. |
2 | For selector level=advanced , a maximum number of 10 projects will be allowed. |
3 | For the third entry, no selector is specified. This means that it will be applied to any user that doesn’t satisfy the previous two rules. Because rules are evaluated in order, this rule should be specified last. |
Managing User and Group Labels provides further guidance on how to add, remove, or show labels for users and groups. |
Once your changes are made, restart OpenShift Enterprise for the changes to take effect.
# systemctl restart atomic-openshift-master