$ oc -n openshift-logging delete subscription <subscription>
There are two types of logging updates: minor release updates (5.y.z) and major release updates (5.y).
If you installed the logging Operators using the Automatic update approval option, your Operators receive minor version updates automatically. You do not need to complete any manual update steps.
If you installed the logging Operators using the Manual update approval option, you must manually approve minor version updates. For more information, see Manually approving a pending Operator update.
For major version updates you must complete some manual steps.
For major release version compatibility and support information, see OpenShift Operator Life Cycles.
In logging 5.7 and older versions, the Red Hat OpenShift Logging Operator only watches the openshift-logging
namespace.
If you want the Red Hat OpenShift Logging Operator to watch all namespaces on your cluster, you must redeploy the Operator. You can complete the following procedure to redeploy the Operator without deleting your logging components.
You have installed the OpenShift CLI (oc
).
You have administrator permissions.
Delete the subscription by running the following command:
$ oc -n openshift-logging delete subscription <subscription>
Delete the Operator group by running the following command:
$ oc -n openshift-logging delete operatorgroup <operator_group_name>
Delete the cluster service version (CSV) by running the following command:
$ oc delete clusterserviceversion cluster-logging.<version>
Redeploy the Red Hat OpenShift Logging Operator by following the "Installing Logging" documentation.
Check that the targetNamespaces
field in the OperatorGroup
resource is not present or is set to an empty string.
To do this, run the following command and inspect the output:
$ oc get operatorgroup <operator_group_name> -o yaml
apiVersion: operators.coreos.com/v1
kind: OperatorGroup
metadata:
name: openshift-logging-f52cn
namespace: openshift-logging
spec:
upgradeStrategy: Default
status:
namespaces:
- ""
# ...
To update the Red Hat OpenShift Logging Operator to a new major release version, you must modify the update channel for the Operator subscription.
You have installed the Red Hat OpenShift Logging Operator.
You have administrator permissions.
You have access to the Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS web console and are viewing the Administrator perspective.
Navigate to Operators → Installed Operators.
Select the openshift-logging project.
Click the Red Hat OpenShift Logging Operator.
Click Subscription. In the Subscription details section, click the Update channel link. This link text might be stable or stable-5.y, depending on your current update channel.
In the Change Subscription Update Channel window, select the latest major version update channel, stable-5.y, and click Save. Note the cluster-logging.v5.y.z
version.
Wait for a few seconds, then click Operators → Installed Operators. Verify that the Red Hat OpenShift Logging Operator version matches the latest cluster-logging.v5.y.z
version.
On the Operators → Installed Operators page, wait for the Status field to report Succeeded.
To update the Loki Operator to a new major release version, you must modify the update channel for the Operator subscription.
You have installed the Loki Operator.
You have administrator permissions.
You have access to the Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS web console and are viewing the Administrator perspective.
Navigate to Operators → Installed Operators.
Select the openshift-operators-redhat project.
Click the Loki Operator.
Click Subscription. In the Subscription details section, click the Update channel link. This link text might be stable or stable-5.y, depending on your current update channel.
In the Change Subscription Update Channel window, select the latest major version update channel, stable-5.y, and click Save. Note the loki-operator.v5.y.z
version.
Wait for a few seconds, then click Operators → Installed Operators. Verify that the Loki Operator version matches the latest loki-operator.v5.y.z
version.
On the Operators → Installed Operators page, wait for the Status field to report Succeeded.
To update the OpenShift Elasticsearch Operator to the current version, you must modify the subscription.
The Logging 5.9 release does not contain an updated version of the OpenShift Elasticsearch Operator. If you currently use the OpenShift Elasticsearch Operator released with Logging 5.8, it will continue to work with Logging until the EOL of Logging 5.8. As an alternative to using the OpenShift Elasticsearch Operator to manage the default log storage, you can use the Loki Operator. For more information on the Logging lifecycle dates, see Platform Agnostic Operators. |
If you are using Elasticsearch as the default log store, and Kibana as the UI, update the OpenShift Elasticsearch Operator before you update the Red Hat OpenShift Logging Operator.
If you update the Operators in the wrong order, Kibana does not update and the Kibana custom resource (CR) is not created. To fix this issue, delete the Red Hat OpenShift Logging Operator pod. When the Red Hat OpenShift Logging Operator pod redeploys, it creates the Kibana CR and Kibana becomes available again. |
The Logging status is healthy:
All pods have a ready
status.
The Elasticsearch cluster is healthy.
You have administrator permissions.
You have installed the OpenShift CLI (oc
) for the verification steps.
In the Red Hat Hybrid Cloud Console, click Operators → Installed Operators.
Select the openshift-operators-redhat project.
Click OpenShift Elasticsearch Operator.
Click Subscription → Channel.
In the Change Subscription Update Channel window, select stable-5.y and click Save. Note the elasticsearch-operator.v5.y.z
version.
Wait for a few seconds, then click Operators → Installed Operators. Verify that the OpenShift Elasticsearch Operator version matches the latest elasticsearch-operator.v5.y.z
version.
On the Operators → Installed Operators page, wait for the Status field to report Succeeded.
Verify that all Elasticsearch pods have a Ready status by entering the following command and observing the output:
$ oc get pod -n openshift-logging --selector component=elasticsearch
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
elasticsearch-cdm-1pbrl44l-1-55b7546f4c-mshhk 2/2 Running 0 31m
elasticsearch-cdm-1pbrl44l-2-5c6d87589f-gx5hk 2/2 Running 0 30m
elasticsearch-cdm-1pbrl44l-3-88df5d47-m45jc 2/2 Running 0 29m
Verify that the Elasticsearch cluster status is green
by entering the following command and observing the output:
$ oc exec -n openshift-logging -c elasticsearch elasticsearch-cdm-1pbrl44l-1-55b7546f4c-mshhk -- health
{
"cluster_name" : "elasticsearch",
"status" : "green",
}
Verify that the Elasticsearch cron jobs are created by entering the following commands and observing the output:
$ oc project openshift-logging
$ oc get cronjob
NAME SCHEDULE SUSPEND ACTIVE LAST SCHEDULE AGE
elasticsearch-im-app */15 * * * * False 0 <none> 56s
elasticsearch-im-audit */15 * * * * False 0 <none> 56s
elasticsearch-im-infra */15 * * * * False 0 <none> 56s
Verify that the log store is updated to the correct version and the indices are green
by entering the following command and observing the output:
$ oc exec -c elasticsearch <any_es_pod_in_the_cluster> -- indices
Verify that the output includes the app-00000x
, infra-00000x
, audit-00000x
, .security
indices:
Tue Jun 30 14:30:54 UTC 2020
health status index uuid pri rep docs.count docs.deleted store.size pri.store.size
green open infra-000008 bnBvUFEXTWi92z3zWAzieQ 3 1 222195 0 289 144
green open infra-000004 rtDSzoqsSl6saisSK7Au1Q 3 1 226717 0 297 148
green open infra-000012 RSf_kUwDSR2xEuKRZMPqZQ 3 1 227623 0 295 147
green open .kibana_7 1SJdCqlZTPWlIAaOUd78yg 1 1 4 0 0 0
green open infra-000010 iXwL3bnqTuGEABbUDa6OVw 3 1 248368 0 317 158
green open infra-000009 YN9EsULWSNaxWeeNvOs0RA 3 1 258799 0 337 168
green open infra-000014 YP0U6R7FQ_GVQVQZ6Yh9Ig 3 1 223788 0 292 146
green open infra-000015 JRBbAbEmSMqK5X40df9HbQ 3 1 224371 0 291 145
green open .orphaned.2020.06.30 n_xQC2dWQzConkvQqei3YA 3 1 9 0 0 0
green open infra-000007 llkkAVSzSOmosWTSAJM_hg 3 1 228584 0 296 148
green open infra-000005 d9BoGQdiQASsS3BBFm2iRA 3 1 227987 0 297 148
green open infra-000003 1-goREK1QUKlQPAIVkWVaQ 3 1 226719 0 295 147
green open .security zeT65uOuRTKZMjg_bbUc1g 1 1 5 0 0 0
green open .kibana-377444158_kubeadmin wvMhDwJkR-mRZQO84K0gUQ 3 1 1 0 0 0
green open infra-000006 5H-KBSXGQKiO7hdapDE23g 3 1 226676 0 295 147
green open infra-000001 eH53BQ-bSxSWR5xYZB6lVg 3 1 341800 0 443 220
green open .kibana-6 RVp7TemSSemGJcsSUmuf3A 1 1 4 0 0 0
green open infra-000011 J7XWBauWSTe0jnzX02fU6A 3 1 226100 0 293 146
green open app-000001 axSAFfONQDmKwatkjPXdtw 3 1 103186 0 126 57
green open infra-000016 m9c1iRLtStWSF1GopaRyCg 3 1 13685 0 19 9
green open infra-000002 Hz6WvINtTvKcQzw-ewmbYg 3 1 228994 0 296 148
green open infra-000013 KR9mMFUpQl-jraYtanyIGw 3 1 228166 0 298 148
green open audit-000001 eERqLdLmQOiQDFES1LBATQ 3 1 0 0 0 0
Verify that the log visualizer is updated to the correct version by entering the following command and observing the output:
$ oc get kibana kibana -o json
Verify that the output includes a Kibana pod with the ready
status:
[
{
"clusterCondition": {
"kibana-5fdd766ffd-nb2jj": [
{
"lastTransitionTime": "2020-06-30T14:11:07Z",
"reason": "ContainerCreating",
"status": "True",
"type": ""
},
{
"lastTransitionTime": "2020-06-30T14:11:07Z",
"reason": "ContainerCreating",
"status": "True",
"type": ""
}
]
},
"deployment": "kibana",
"pods": {
"failed": [],
"notReady": []
"ready": []
},
"replicaSets": [
"kibana-5fdd766ffd"
],
"replicas": 1
}
]