NODEIP_HINT=192.0.2.1
For installations on bare metal or with virtual machines that have more than one network interface controller (NIC), the NIC that OKD uses for communication with the Kubernetes API server is determined by the nodeip-configuration.service
service unit that is run by systemd when the node boots. The nodeip-configuration.service
selects the IP from the interface associated with the default route.
After the nodeip-configuration.service
service determines the correct NIC, the service creates the /etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d/20-nodenet.conf
file. The 20-nodenet.conf
file sets the KUBELET_NODE_IP
environment variable to the IP address that the service selected.
When the kubelet service starts, it reads the value of the environment variable from the 20-nodenet.conf
file and sets the IP address as the value of the --node-ip
kubelet command-line argument. As a result, the kubelet service uses the selected IP address as the node IP address.
If hardware or networking is reconfigured after installation, or if there is a networking layout where the node IP should not come from the default route interface, it is possible for the nodeip-configuration.service
service to select a different NIC after a reboot. In some cases, you might be able to detect that a different NIC is selected by reviewing the INTERNAL-IP
column in the output from the oc get nodes -o wide
command.
If network communication is disrupted or misconfigured because a different NIC is selected, you might receive the following error: EtcdCertSignerControllerDegraded
. You can create a hint file that includes the NODEIP_HINT
variable to override the default IP selection logic. For more information, see Optional: Overriding the default node IP selection logic.
To override the default IP selection logic, you can create a hint file that includes the NODEIP_HINT
variable to override the default IP selection logic. Creating a hint file allows you to select a specific node IP address from the interface in the subnet of the IP address specified in the NODEIP_HINT
variable.
For example, if a node has two interfaces, eth0
with an address of 10.0.0.10/24
, and eth1
with an address of 192.0.2.5/24
, and the default route points to eth0
(10.0.0.10
),the node IP address would normally use the 10.0.0.10
IP address.
Users can configure the NODEIP_HINT
variable to point at a known IP in the subnet, for example, a subnet gateway such as 192.0.2.1
so that the other subnet, 192.0.2.0/24
, is selected. As a result, the 192.0.2.5
IP address on eth1
is used for the node.
The following procedure shows how to override the default node IP selection logic.
Add a hint file to your /etc/default/nodeip-configuration
file, for example:
NODEIP_HINT=192.0.2.1
|
Generate the base-64
encoded content by running the following command:
$ echo -n 'NODEIP_HINT=192.0.2.1' | base64 -w0
Tk9ERUlQX0hJTlQ9MTkyLjAuMCxxxx==
Activate the hint by creating a machine config manifest for both master
and worker
roles before deploying the cluster:
apiVersion: machineconfiguration.openshift.io/v1
kind: MachineConfig
metadata:
labels:
machineconfiguration.openshift.io/role: master
name: 99-nodeip-hint-master
spec:
config:
ignition:
version: 3.2.0
storage:
files:
- contents:
source: data:text/plain;charset=utf-8;base64,<encoded_content> (1)
mode: 0644
overwrite: true
path: /etc/default/nodeip-configuration
1 | Replace <encoded_contents> with the base64-encoded content of the /etc/default/nodeip-configuration file, for example, Tk9ERUlQX0hJTlQ9MTkyLjAuMCxxxx== . Note that a space is not acceptable after the comma and before the encoded content. |
apiVersion: machineconfiguration.openshift.io/v1
kind: MachineConfig
metadata:
labels:
machineconfiguration.openshift.io/role: worker
name: 99-nodeip-hint-worker
spec:
config:
ignition:
version: 3.2.0
storage:
files:
- contents:
source: data:text/plain;charset=utf-8;base64,<encoded_content> (1)
mode: 0644
overwrite: true
path: /etc/default/nodeip-configuration
1 | Replace <encoded_contents> with the base64-encoded content of the /etc/default/nodeip-configuration file, for example, Tk9ERUlQX0hJTlQ9MTkyLjAuMCxxxx== . Note that a space is not acceptable after the comma and before the encoded content. |
Save the manifest to the directory where you store your cluster configuration, for example, ~/clusterconfigs
.
Deploy the cluster.
You can create an additional or secondary Open vSwitch (OVS) bridge, br-ex1
, that OVN-Kubernetes manages and the Multiple External Gateways (MEG) implementation uses for defining external gateways for an OKD node. You can define a MEG in an AdminPolicyBasedExternalRoute
custom resource (CR). The MEG implementation provides a pod with access to multiple gateways, equal-cost multipath (ECMP) routes, and the Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD) implementation.
Consider a use case for pods impacted by the Multiple External Gateways (MEG) feature and you want to egress traffic to a different interface, for example br-ex1
, on a node. Egress traffic for pods not impacted by MEG get routed to the default OVS br-ex
bridge.
Currently, MEG is unsupported for use with other egress features, such as egress IP, egress firewalls, or egress routers. Attempting to use MEG with egress features like egress IP can result in routing and traffic flow conflicts. This occurs because of how OVN-Kubernetes handles routing and source network address translation (SNAT). This results in inconsistent routing and might break connections in some environments where the return path must patch the incoming path. |
You must define the additional bridge in an interface definition of a machine configuration manifest file. The Machine Config Operator uses the manifest to create a new file at /etc/ovnk/extra_bridge
on the host. The new file includes the name of the network interface that the additional OVS bridge configures for a node.
After you create and edit the manifest file, the Machine Config Operator completes tasks in the following order:
Drains nodes in singular order based on the selected machine configuration pool.
Injects Ignition configuration files into each node, so that each node receives the additional br-ex1
bridge network configuration.
Verify that the br-ex
MAC address matches the MAC address for the interface that br-ex
uses for the network connection.
Executes the configure-ovs.sh
shell script that references the new interface definition.
Adds br-ex
and br-ex1
to the host node.
Uncordons the nodes.
After all the nodes return to the |
For more information about useful situations for the additional br-ex1
bridge and a situation that always requires the default br-ex
bridge, see "Configuration for a localnet topology".
Optional: Create an interface connection that your additional bridge, br-ex1
, can use by completing the following steps. The example steps show the creation of a new bond and its dependent interfaces that are all defined in a machine configuration manifest file. The additional bridge uses the MachineConfig
object to form a additional bond interface.
Do not use the Kubernetes NMState Operator to define or a Also ensure that the additional interface or sub-interfaces when defining a |
Create the following interface definition files. These files get added to a machine configuration manifest file so that host nodes can access the definition files.
eno1.config
[connection]
id=eno1
type=ethernet
interface-name=eno1
master=bond1
slave-type=bond
autoconnect=true
autoconnect-priority=20
eno2.config
[connection]
id=eno2
type=ethernet
interface-name=eno2
master=bond1
slave-type=bond
autoconnect=true
autoconnect-priority=20
bond1.config
[connection]
id=bond1
type=bond
interface-name=bond1
autoconnect=true
connection.autoconnect-slaves=1
autoconnect-priority=20
[bond]
mode=802.3ad
miimon=100
xmit_hash_policy="layer3+4"
[ipv4]
method=auto
Convert the definition files to Base64 encoded strings by running the following command:
$ base64 <directory_path>/en01.config
$ base64 <directory_path>/eno2.config
$ base64 <directory_path>/bond1.config
Prepare the environment variables. Replace <machine_role>
with the node role, such as worker
, and replace <interface_name>
with the name of your additional br-ex
bridge name.
$ export ROLE=<machine_role>
Define each interface definition in a machine configuration manifest file:
bond1
, eno1
, and en02
apiVersion: machineconfiguration.openshift.io/v1
kind: MachineConfig
metadata:
labels:
machineconfiguration.openshift.io/role: ${worker}
name: 12-${ROLE}-sec-bridge-cni
spec:
config:
ignition:
version: 3.2.0
storage:
files:
- contents:
source: data:;base64,<base-64-encoded-contents-for-bond1.conf>
path: /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/bond1.nmconnection
filesystem: root
mode: 0600
- contents:
source: data:;base64,<base-64-encoded-contents-for-eno1.conf>
path: /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/eno1.nmconnection
filesystem: root
mode: 0600
- contents:
source: data:;base64,<base-64-encoded-contents-for-eno2.conf>
path: /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/eno2.nmconnection
filesystem: root
mode: 0600
# ...
Create a machine configuration manifest file for configuring the network plugin by entering the following command in your terminal:
$ oc create -f <machine_config_file_name>
Create an Open vSwitch (OVS) bridge, br-ex1
, on nodes by using the OVN-Kubernetes network plugin to create an extra_bridge
file`. Ensure that you save the file in the /etc/ovnk/extra_bridge
path of the host. The file must state the interface name that supports the additional bridge and not the default interface that supports br-ex
, which holds the primary IP address of the node.
extra_bridge
file, /etc/ovnk/extra_bridge
, that references a additional interfacebond1
Create a machine configuration manifest file that defines the existing static interface that hosts br-ex1
on any nodes restarted on your cluster:
bond1
as the interface for hosting br-ex1
apiVersion: machineconfiguration.openshift.io/v1
kind: MachineConfig
metadata:
labels:
machineconfiguration.openshift.io/role: ${worker}
name: 12-worker-extra-bridge
spec:
config:
ignition:
version: 3.2.0
storage:
files:
- path: /etc/ovnk/extra_bridge
mode: 0420
overwrite: true
contents:
source: data:text/plain;charset=utf-8,bond1
filesystem: root
Apply the machine-configuration to your selected nodes:
$ oc create -f <machine_config_file_name>
Optional: You can override the br-ex
selection logic for nodes by creating a machine configuration file that in turn creates a /var/lib/ovnk/iface_default_hint
resource.
The resource lists the name of the interface that |
Create a machine configuration file on the host node to override the default interface.
Only create this machine configuration file for the purposes of changing the |
apiVersion: machineconfiguration.openshift.io/v1
kind: MachineConfig
metadata:
labels:
machineconfiguration.openshift.io/role: ${worker}
name: 12-worker-br-ex-override
spec:
config:
ignition:
version: 3.2.0
storage:
files:
- path: /var/lib/ovnk/iface_default_hint
mode: 0420
overwrite: true
contents:
source: data:text/plain;charset=utf-8,bond0 (1)
filesystem: root
1 | Ensure bond0 exists on the node before you apply the machine configuration file to the node. |
Before you apply the configuration to all new nodes in your cluster, reboot the host node to verify that br-ex
selects the intended interface and does not conflict with the new interfaces that you defined on br-ex1
.
Apply the machine configuration file to all new nodes in your cluster:
$ oc create -f <machine_config_file_name>
Identify the IP addresses of nodes with the exgw-ip-addresses
label in your cluster to verify that the nodes use the additional bridge instead of the default bridge:
$ oc get nodes -o json | grep --color exgw-ip-addresses
"k8s.ovn.org/l3-gateway-config":
\"exgw-ip-address\":\"172.xx.xx.yy/24\",\"next-hops\":[\"xx.xx.xx.xx\"],
Observe that the additional bridge exists on target nodes by reviewing the network interface names on the host node:
$ oc debug node/<node_name> -- chroot /host sh -c "ip a | grep mtu | grep br-ex"
Starting pod/worker-1-debug ...
To use host binaries, run `chroot /host`
# ...
5: br-ex: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc noqueue state UNKNOWN group default qlen 1000
6: br-ex1: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc noqueue state UNKNOWN group default qlen 1000
Optional: If you use /var/lib/ovnk/iface_default_hint
, check that the MAC address of br-ex
matches the MAC address of the primary selected interface:
$ oc debug node/<node_name> -- chroot /host sh -c "ip a | grep -A1 -E 'br-ex|bond0'
br-ex
as bond0
Starting pod/worker-1-debug ...
To use host binaries, run `chroot /host`
# ...
sh-5.1# ip a | grep -A1 -E 'br-ex|bond0'
2: bond0: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc fq_codel master ovs-system state UP group default qlen 1000
link/ether fa:16:3e:47:99:98 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
--
5: br-ex: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc noqueue state UNKNOWN group default qlen 1000
link/ether fa:16:3e:47:99:98 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
inet 10.xx.xx.xx/21 brd 10.xx.xx.255 scope global dynamic noprefixroute br-ex
To troubleshoot some Open vSwitch (OVS) issues, you might need to configure the log level to include more information.
If you modify the log level on a node temporarily, be aware that you can receive log messages from the machine config daemon on the node like the following example:
E0514 12:47:17.998892 2281 daemon.go:1350] content mismatch for file /etc/systemd/system/ovs-vswitchd.service: [Unit]
To avoid the log messages related to the mismatch, revert the log level change after you complete your troubleshooting.
For short-term troubleshooting, you can configure the Open vSwitch (OVS) log level temporarily. The following procedure does not require rebooting the node. In addition, the configuration change does not persist whenever you reboot the node.
After you perform this procedure to change the log level, you can receive log messages from the machine config daemon that indicate a content mismatch for the ovs-vswitchd.service
.
To avoid the log messages, repeat this procedure and set the log level to the original value.
You have access to the cluster as a user with the cluster-admin
role.
You have installed the OpenShift CLI (oc
).
Start a debug pod for a node:
$ oc debug node/<node_name>
Set /host
as the root directory within the debug shell. The debug pod mounts the root file system from the host in /host
within the pod. By changing the root directory to /host
, you can run binaries from the host file system:
# chroot /host
View the current syslog level for OVS modules:
# ovs-appctl vlog/list
The following example output shows the log level for syslog set to info
.
console syslog file
------- ------ ------
backtrace OFF INFO INFO
bfd OFF INFO INFO
bond OFF INFO INFO
bridge OFF INFO INFO
bundle OFF INFO INFO
bundles OFF INFO INFO
cfm OFF INFO INFO
collectors OFF INFO INFO
command_line OFF INFO INFO
connmgr OFF INFO INFO
conntrack OFF INFO INFO
conntrack_tp OFF INFO INFO
coverage OFF INFO INFO
ct_dpif OFF INFO INFO
daemon OFF INFO INFO
daemon_unix OFF INFO INFO
dns_resolve OFF INFO INFO
dpdk OFF INFO INFO
...
Specify the log level in the /etc/systemd/system/ovs-vswitchd.service.d/10-ovs-vswitchd-restart.conf
file:
Restart=always
ExecStartPre=-/bin/sh -c '/usr/bin/chown -R :$${OVS_USER_ID##*:} /var/lib/openvswitch'
ExecStartPre=-/bin/sh -c '/usr/bin/chown -R :$${OVS_USER_ID##*:} /etc/openvswitch'
ExecStartPre=-/bin/sh -c '/usr/bin/chown -R :$${OVS_USER_ID##*:} /run/openvswitch'
ExecStartPost=-/usr/bin/ovs-appctl vlog/set syslog:dbg
ExecReload=-/usr/bin/ovs-appctl vlog/set syslog:dbg
In the preceding example, the log level is set to dbg
.
Change the last two lines by setting syslog:<log_level>
to off
, emer
, err
, warn
, info
, or dbg
. The off
log level filters out all log messages.
Restart the service:
# systemctl daemon-reload
# systemctl restart ovs-vswitchd
For long-term changes to the Open vSwitch (OVS) log level, you can change the log level permanently.
You have access to the cluster as a user with the cluster-admin
role.
You have installed the OpenShift CLI (oc
).
Create a file, such as 99-change-ovs-loglevel.yaml
, with a MachineConfig
object like the following example:
apiVersion: machineconfiguration.openshift.io/v1
kind: MachineConfig
metadata:
labels:
machineconfiguration.openshift.io/role: master (1)
name: 99-change-ovs-loglevel
spec:
config:
ignition:
version: 3.2.0
systemd:
units:
- dropins:
- contents: |
[Service]
ExecStartPost=-/usr/bin/ovs-appctl vlog/set syslog:dbg (2)
ExecReload=-/usr/bin/ovs-appctl vlog/set syslog:dbg
name: 20-ovs-vswitchd-restart.conf
name: ovs-vswitchd.service
1 | After you perform this procedure to configure control plane nodes, repeat the procedure and set the role to worker to configure worker nodes. |
2 | Set the syslog:<log_level> value. Log levels are off , emer , err , warn , info , or dbg . Setting the value to off filters out all log messages. |
Apply the machine config:
$ oc apply -f 99-change-ovs-loglevel.yaml
Use the following procedure to display Open vSwitch (OVS) logs.
You have access to the cluster as a user with the cluster-admin
role.
You have installed the OpenShift CLI (oc
).
Run one of the following commands:
Display the logs by using the oc
command from outside the cluster:
$ oc adm node-logs <node_name> -u ovs-vswitchd
Display the logs after logging on to a node in the cluster:
# journalctl -b -f -u ovs-vswitchd.service
One way to log on to a node is by using the oc debug node/<node_name>
command.