This change addresses a long-standing issue in rST documentation imported from XML. That import process added backslash escapes in front of various characters. The three most common being '(', ')', and '_'. These instances are removed. Signed-off-by: Ron Stone <ronald.stone@windriver.com> Change-Id: Id43a9337ffcd505ccbdf072d7b29afdb5d2c997e
4.7 KiB
Configure Local CLI Access
You can access the system via a local CLI from the active controller node's local console or by SSH-ing to the OAM floating IP Address.
It is highly recommended that only 'sysadmin' and a small number of admin level user accounts be allowed to SSH to the system. This procedure will assume that only such an admin user is using the local CLI.
Using the sysadmin account and the Local CLI, you can perform all required system maintenance, administration and troubleshooting tasks.
Log in to controller-0 via the console or using SSH.
Use the user name sysadmin and your <sysadmin-password>.
Acquire Keystone Admin and Kubernetes Admin credentials.
$ source /etc/platform/openrc [sysadmin@controller-0 ~(keystone_admin)]$
If you plan on customizing the sysadmin's kubectl configuration on the Controller, (for example,
kubectl config set-...
oror oidc-auth
), you should use a private KUBECONFIG file and NOT the system-managed KUBECONFIG file /etc/kubernetes/admin.conf, which can be changed and overwritten by the system.Copy /etc/kubernetes/admin.conf to a private file under /home/sysadmin such as /home/sysadmin/.kube/config, and update /home/sysadmin/.profile to have the <KUBECONFIG> environment variable point to the private file.
For example, the following commands set up a private KUBECONFIG file.
# ssh sysadmin@<oamFloatingIpAddress> Password: % mkdir .kube % cp /etc/kubernetes/admin.conf .kube/config % echo "export KUBECONFIG=~/.kube/config" >> ~/.profile % exit
Confirm that the <KUBECONFIG> environment variable is set correctly and that
kubectl
commands are functioning properly.# ssh sysadmin@<oamFloatingIpAddress> Password: % env | fgrep KUBE KUBECONFIG=/home/sysadmin/.kube/config % kubectl get pods
You can now access all commands.
system commands
StarlingX system and host management commands are executed with the
system
command.
For example:
~(keystone_admin)]$ system host-list
+----+--------------+-------------+----------------+-------------+--------------+
| id | hostname | personality | administrative | operational | availability |
+----+--------------+-------------+----------------+-------------+--------------+
| 1 | controller-0 | controller | unlocked | enabled | available |
+----+--------------+-------------+----------------+-------------+--------------+
Use system help
for a full list of system
subcommands.
fm commands
StarlingX fault management commands are executed with the fm
command.
For example:
~(keystone_admin)]$ fm alarm-list
+-------+---------------+---------------------+----------+---------------+
| Alarm | Reason Text | Entity ID | Severity | Time Stamp |
| ID | | | | |
+-------+---------------+---------------------+----------+---------------+
| 750. | Application | k8s_application= | major | 2019-08-08T20 |
| 002 | Apply Failure | platform-integ-apps | | :17:58.223926 |
| | | | | |
+-------+---------------+---------------------+----------+---------------+
Use fm help
for
a full list of fm
subcommands.
kubectl commands
Kubernetes commands are executed with the kubectl
command
For example:
~(keystone_admin)]$ kubectl get nodes
NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION
controller-0 Ready master 5d19h v1.13.5
~(keystone_admin)]$ kubectl get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
dashboard-kubernetes-dashboard-7749d97f95-bzp5w 1/1 Running 0 3d18h
Helm commands
Helm commands are executed with the helm
command
For example:
% helm repo add bitnami https://charts.bitnami.com/bitnami
% helm repo update
% helm repo list
% helm search repo
% helm install wordpress bitnami/wordpress