OpenShift¶
OpenShift adds a number of security and other enhancements to Kubernetes. In particular, security context constraints allow the cluster admin to define exactly which permissions are allowed to pods running in the cluster. You will need to define those permissions that allow the Rook pods to run.
The settings for Rook in OpenShift are described below, and are also included in the example yaml files:
operator-openshift.yaml
: Creates the security context constraints and starts the operator deploymentobject-openshift.yaml
: Creates an object store with rgw listening on a valid port number for OpenShift
TL;DR¶
To create an OpenShift cluster, the commands basically include:
Helm Installation¶
Configuration required for Openshift is automatically created by the Helm charts, such as the SecurityContextConstraints. See the Rook Helm Charts.
Rook Privileges¶
To orchestrate the storage platform, Rook requires the following access in the cluster:
- Create
hostPath
volumes, for persistence by the Ceph mon and osd pods - Run pods in
privileged
mode, for access to/dev
andhostPath
volumes - Host networking for the Rook agent and clusters that require host networking
- Ceph OSDs require host PIDs for communication on the same node
Security Context Constraints¶
Before starting the Rook operator or cluster, create the security context constraints needed by the Rook pods. The following yaml is found in operator-openshift.yaml
under /deploy/examples
.
Hint
Older versions of OpenShift may require apiVersion: v1
.
Important to note is that if you plan on running Rook in namespaces other than the default rook-ceph
, the example scc will need to be modified to accommodate for your namespaces where the Rook pods are running.
To create the scc you will need a privileged account:
We will create the security context constraints with the operator in the next section.
Rook Settings¶
There are some Rook settings that also need to be adjusted to work in OpenShift.
Operator Settings¶
There is an environment variable that needs to be set in the operator spec that will allow Rook to run in OpenShift clusters.
ROOK_HOSTPATH_REQUIRES_PRIVILEGED
: Must be set totrue
. Writing to the hostPath is required for the Ceph mon, osd pods and csi provisioners(if logrotation is on). Given the restricted permissions in OpenShift with SELinux, the pod must be running privileged in order to write to the hostPath volume.
Now create the security context constraints and the operator:
Cluster Settings¶
The cluster settings in cluster.yaml
are largely isolated from the differences in OpenShift. There is perhaps just one to take note of:
dataDirHostPath
: Ensure that it points to a valid, writable path on the host systems.
Object Store Settings¶
In OpenShift, ports less than 1024 cannot be bound. In the object store CRD, ensure the port is modified to meet this requirement.
You can expose a different port such as 80
by creating a service.
A sample object store can be created with these settings: