OpenShift Cheatsheet: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
Show Uptime: |
Show Uptime: |
||
$ oc get machines -A |
$ oc get machines -A |
||
Patch resource: |
|||
$ oc patch installplan install-defgh -n openshift-operators-redhat --type merge --patch '{"spec":{"approved":true}}' |
|||
Revision as of 07:28, 18 August 2023
Here some helpful OpenShift commands which work (at least) since version >= 4.11
How to get a token: https://oauth-openshift.apps.ocp.example.com/oauth/token/display
You might need it for login or automatization.
Switch namespace:
$ oc project <namespace>
quit namespace:
$ oc project -n default
Get all resources:
$ oc get all
Get status of all nodes:
$ oc get nodes
Show Uptime:
$ oc get machines -A
Patch resource:
$ oc patch installplan install-defgh -n openshift-operators-redhat --type merge --patch '{"spec":{"approved":true}}'
Useful terms:
IPI Installer-provisioned infrastructure cluster
Cluster installed by install command; user must only provide some information (which platform, cluster name, network, storage, ...)
UPI User provisioned infrastructure cluster
- DNS and Loadbalancing must already be there
- Installation manually, download ova file (in case of vSphere)
- master created manually
- workers recommended
- *no* keepalived
Advantages:
IPI: installation more simple, using preconfigured features
UPI: more flexibility, no loadbalancer outage during update
Change from IPI -> UPI not possible