$ gsutil init
You install the OpenShift API for Data Protection (OADP) with Google Cloud Platform (GCP) by installing the OADP Operator, configuring GCP for Velero, and then installing the Data Protection Application.
The For more information about the support scope of Red Hat Technology Preview features, see https://access.redhat.com/support/offerings/techpreview/. |
To install the OADP Operator in a restricted network environment, you must first disable the default OperatorHub sources and mirror the Operator catalog. See Using Operator Lifecycle Manager on restricted networks for details.
You install the OpenShift API for Data Protection (OADP) Operator on OKD 4.6 by using Operator Lifecycle Manager (OLM).
The OADP Operator installs Velero 1.7.
You must be logged in as a user with cluster-admin
privileges.
In the OKD web console, click Operators → OperatorHub.
Use the Filter by keyword field to find the OADP Operator.
Select the OADP Operator and click Install.
Click Install to install the Operator in the openshift-adp
project.
Click Operators → Installed Operators to verify the installation.
You can configure a Google Cloud Platform (GCP) storage bucket as a replication repository for the Migration Toolkit for Containers (MTC).
The GCP storage bucket must be accessible to the source and target clusters.
You must have gsutil
installed.
If you are using the snapshot copy method:
The source and target clusters must be in the same region.
The source and target clusters must have the same storage class.
The storage class must be compatible with snapshots.
Log in to gsutil
:
$ gsutil init
Welcome! This command will take you through the configuration of gcloud.
Your current configuration has been set to: [default]
To continue, you must login. Would you like to login (Y/n)?
Set the BUCKET
variable:
$ BUCKET=<bucket> (1)
1 | Specify your bucket name. |
Create a storage bucket:
$ gsutil mb gs://$BUCKET/
Set the PROJECT_ID
variable to your active project:
$ PROJECT_ID=`gcloud config get-value project`
Create a velero
IAM service account:
$ gcloud iam service-accounts create velero \
--display-name "Velero Storage"
Create the SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL
variable:
$ SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL=`gcloud iam service-accounts list \
--filter="displayName:Velero Storage" \
--format 'value(email)'`
Create the ROLE_PERMISSIONS
variable:
$ ROLE_PERMISSIONS=(
compute.disks.get
compute.disks.create
compute.disks.createSnapshot
compute.snapshots.get
compute.snapshots.create
compute.snapshots.useReadOnly
compute.snapshots.delete
compute.zones.get
)
Create the velero.server
custom role:
$ gcloud iam roles create velero.server \
--project $PROJECT_ID \
--title "Velero Server" \
--permissions "$(IFS=","; echo "${ROLE_PERMISSIONS[*]}")"
Add IAM policy binding to the project:
$ gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding $PROJECT_ID \
--member serviceAccount:$SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL \
--role projects/$PROJECT_ID/roles/velero.server
Update the IAM service account:
$ gsutil iam ch serviceAccount:$SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL:objectAdmin gs://${BUCKET}
Save the IAM service account keys to the credentials-velero
file in the current directory:
$ gcloud iam service-accounts keys create credentials-velero \
--iam-account $SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL
You use the credentials-velero
file to create a Secret
object for GCP before you install the Data Protection Application.
You create a Secret
object for the backup and snapshot locations if they use the same credentials.
The default name of the Secret
is cloud-credentials-gcp
.
Your object storage and cloud storage must use the same credentials.
You must configure object storage for Velero.
You must create a credentials-velero
file for the object storage in the appropriate format.
Create a Secret
with the default name:
$ oc create secret generic cloud-credentials-gcp -n openshift-adp --from-file cloud=credentials-velero
The Secret
is referenced in the spec.backupLocations.credential
block of the DataProtectionApplication
CR when you install the Data Protection Application.
If your backup and snapshot locations use different credentials, you create two Secret
objects:
Backup location Secret
with a custom name. The custom name is specified in the spec.backupLocations
block of the DataProtectionApplication
custom resource (CR).
Snapshot location Secret
with the default name, cloud-credentials-gcp
. This Secret
is not specified in the DataProtectionApplication
CR.
Create a credentials-velero
file for the snapshot location in the appropriate format for your cloud provider.
Create a Secret
for the snapshot location with the default name:
$ oc create secret generic cloud-credentials-gcp -n openshift-adp --from-file cloud=credentials-velero
Create a credentials-velero
file for the backup location in the appropriate format for your object storage.
Create a Secret
for the backup location with a custom name:
$ oc create secret generic <custom_secret> -n openshift-adp --from-file cloud=credentials-velero
Add the Secret
with the custom name to the DataProtectionApplication
CR, as in the following example:
apiVersion: oadp.openshift.io/v1alpha1
kind: DataProtectionApplication
metadata:
name: <dpa_sample>
namespace: openshift-adp
spec:
...
backupLocations:
- velero:
provider: gcp
default: true
credential:
key: cloud
name: <custom_secret> (1)
objectStorage:
bucket: <bucket_name>
prefix: <prefix>
snapshotLocations:
- velero:
provider: gcp
default: true
config:
project: <project>
snapshotLocation: us-west1
1 | Backup location Secret with custom name. |
You can configure Velero resource allocations and enable self-signed CA certificates.
You set the CPU and memory resource allocations for the Velero
pod by editing the DataProtectionApplication
custom resource (CR) manifest.
You must have the OpenShift API for Data Protection (OADP) Operator installed.
Edit the values in the spec.configuration.velero.podConfig.ResourceAllocations
block of the DataProtectionApplication
CR manifest, as in the following example:
apiVersion: oadp.openshift.io/v1alpha1
kind: DataProtectionApplication
metadata:
name: <dpa_sample>
spec:
...
configuration:
velero:
podConfig:
resourceAllocations:
limits:
cpu: "1" (1)
memory: 512Mi (2)
requests:
cpu: 500m (3)
memory: 256Mi (4)
1 | Specify the value in millicpus or CPU units. Default value is 500m or 1 CPU unit. |
2 | Default value is 512Mi . |
3 | Default value is 500m or 1 CPU unit. |
4 | Default value is 256Mi . |
You must enable a self-signed CA certificate for object storage by editing the DataProtectionApplication
custom resource (CR) manifest to prevent a certificate signed by unknown authority
error.
You must have the OpenShift API for Data Protection (OADP) Operator installed.
Edit the spec.backupLocations.velero.objectStorage.caCert
parameter and spec.backupLocations.velero.config
parameters of the DataProtectionApplication
CR manifest:
apiVersion: oadp.openshift.io/v1alpha1
kind: DataProtectionApplication
metadata:
name: <dpa_sample>
spec:
...
backupLocations:
- name: default
velero:
provider: aws
default: true
objectStorage:
bucket: <bucket>
prefix: <prefix>
caCert: <base64_encoded_cert_string> (1)
config:
insecureSkipTLSVerify: "false" (2)
...
1 | Specify the Base46-encoded CA certificate string. |
2 | Must be false to disable SSL/TLS security. |
You install the Data Protection Application (DPA) by creating an instance of the DataProtectionApplication
API.
You must install the OADP Operator.
You must configure object storage as a backup location.
If you use snapshots to back up PVs, your cloud provider must support either a native snapshot API or Container Storage Interface (CSI) snapshots.
If the backup and snapshot locations use the same credentials, you must create a Secret
with the default name, cloud-credentials-gcp
.
If the backup and snapshot locations use different credentials, you must create two Secrets
:
Secret
with a custom name for the backup location. You add this Secret
to the DataProtectionApplication
CR.
Secret
with the default name, cloud-credentials-gcp
, for the snapshot location. This Secret
is not referenced in the DataProtectionApplication
CR.
If you do not want to specify backup or snapshot locations during the installation, you can create a default |
Click Operators → Installed Operators and select the OADP Operator.
Under Provided APIs, click Create instance in the DataProtectionApplication box.
Click YAML View and update the parameters of the DataProtectionApplication
manifest:
apiVersion: oadp.openshift.io/v1alpha1
kind: DataProtectionApplication
metadata:
name: <dpa_sample>
namespace: openshift-adp
spec:
configuration:
velero:
defaultPlugins:
- gcp
- openshift (1)
restic:
enable: true (2)
backupLocations:
- velero:
provider: gcp
default: true
credential:
key: cloud
name: cloud-credentials-gcp (3)
objectStorage:
bucket: <bucket_name> (4)
prefix: <prefix> (5)
snapshotLocations: (6)
- velero:
provider: gcp
default: true
config:
project: <project>
snapshotLocation: us-west1 (7)
1 | The openshift plug-in is mandatory in order to back up and restore namespaces on an OKD cluster. |
2 | Set to false if you want to disable the Restic installation. Restic deploys a daemon set, which means that each worker node has Restic pods running. You configure Restic for backups by adding spec.defaultVolumesToRestic: true to the Backup CR. |
3 | If you do not specify this value, the default name, cloud-credentials-gcp , is used. If you specify a custom name, the custom name is used for the backup location. |
4 | Specify a bucket as the backup storage location. If the bucket is not a dedicated bucket for Velero backups, you must specify a prefix. |
5 | Specify a prefix for Velero backups, for example, velero , if the bucket is used for multiple purposes. |
6 | You do not need to specify a snapshot location if you use CSI snapshots or Restic to back up PVs. |
7 | The snapshot location must be in the same region as the PVs. |
Click Create.
Verify the installation by viewing the OADP resources:
$ oc get all -n openshift-adp
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE pod/oadp-operator-controller-manager-67d9494d47-6l8z8 2/2 Running 0 2m8s pod/oadp-velero-sample-1-aws-registry-5d6968cbdd-d5w9k 1/1 Running 0 95s pod/restic-9cq4q 1/1 Running 0 94s pod/restic-m4lts 1/1 Running 0 94s pod/restic-pv4kr 1/1 Running 0 95s pod/velero-588db7f655-n842v 1/1 Running 0 95s NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE service/oadp-operator-controller-manager-metrics-service ClusterIP 172.30.70.140 <none> 8443/TCP 2m8s service/oadp-velero-sample-1-aws-registry-svc ClusterIP 172.30.130.230 <none> 5000/TCP 95s NAME DESIRED CURRENT READY UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE NODE SELECTOR AGE daemonset.apps/restic 3 3 3 3 3 <none> 96s NAME READY UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE deployment.apps/oadp-operator-controller-manager 1/1 1 1 2m9s deployment.apps/oadp-velero-sample-1-aws-registry 1/1 1 1 96s deployment.apps/velero 1/1 1 1 96s NAME DESIRED CURRENT READY AGE replicaset.apps/oadp-operator-controller-manager-67d9494d47 1 1 1 2m9s replicaset.apps/oadp-velero-sample-1-aws-registry-5d6968cbdd 1 1 1 96s replicaset.apps/velero-588db7f655 1 1 1 96s
You enable the Container Storage Interface (CSI) in the DataProtectionApplication
custom resource (CR) in order to back up persistent volumes with CSI snapshots.
The cloud provider must support CSI snapshots.
Edit the DataProtectionApplication
CR, as in the following example:
apiVersion: oadp.openshift.io/v1alpha1
kind: DataProtectionApplication
...
spec:
configuration:
velero:
defaultPlugins:
- openshift
- csi (1)
featureFlags:
- EnableCSI (2)
1 | Add the csi default plug-in. |
2 | Add the EnableCSI feature flag. |