GitOps Based Installation

ISD v4.0.1

The document is primarily intended to be used for standard ISD GitOps based installation.

Infrastructure and Laptop requirements

Before you start, it might be helpful to go through these documents:

  • The infrastructure required for a non-prod installation can be found here

  • The infrastructure required for a production Setup can be found here

  • Basic requirements of a laptop and Kubernetes cluster can be found here.

If you need a different infrastructure, please contact OpsMx.

Create your git-repo

ISD stores all the configuration in a repo, typically a git repo, though bitbucket, S3, and others are supported.

  1. Create an empty-repo (called the "gitops-repo" in the document), "main" branch should be the default, and clone it locally.

  2. Clone https://github.com/OpsMx/standard-isd-gitops, selecting the appropriate branch: git clone https://github.com/OpsMx/standard-isd-gitops -b 4.0.1

  3. Copy contents of the standard-isd-repo to the gitops-repo created above using: cp -r standard-isd-gitops/* gitops-repo # Replace "gitops-repo" with your repo-name and cd to the gitops-repo e.g. cd gitops-repo. Specify inputs Specify the inputs based on your environment and git-repo. The installation process requires inputs such as the application version, git-repo details, etc.

  4. In the gitops-repo cloned to disk and edit install/inputcm.yaml. This should be updated, at a minimum, with gitrepo and username.

  5. Update Values.yaml as required, specifically: At minimum the ISD URL and gitops-repo details in the spinnaker.gitopsHalyard section must be updated. Full values.yaml is available at the following link : https://github.com/OpsMx/enterprise-spinnaker/tree/v4.0.1/charts/oes.

    NOTE: We recommend that we start with the defaults, updating just the URL and gitopsHalyard details and gradually adding SSO, external DBs, etc. while updating the installed instance.

  6. Edit namespace in the install/services.yaml file, if changed from default (i.e. "opsmx-isd")

  7. Push all changes in the gitops-repo to git (E.g git add -A; git commit -m"my changes";git push).

  8. Create namespace, a configmap for inputs, and a service account as follows [Edit namespace (that is, opsmx-isd) as appropriate]:

    kubectl create ns opsmx-isd
    kubectl -n opsmx-isd apply -f install/inputcm.yaml
    kubectl -n opsmx-isd apply -f install/serviceaccount.yaml

    Create secrets

    ISD supports multiple secret managers for storing secrets such as DB passwords, SSO authentication details, and so on. Using Kubernetes secrets is the default.

  9. Create the following secrets. The default values are handled by the installer, except for gittoken. If you are using External SSO, DBs, etc. you might want to change them. Else, best to leave them at the defaults:

    kubectl -n opsmx-isd create secret generic gittoken --from-literal=gittoken=PUT_YOUR_GITTOKEN_HERE

    Optional

    In case we want to change these, please enter the correct values and create the secrets

    kubectl -n opsmx-isd create secret generic ldapconfigpassword --from-literal ldapconfigpassword=PUT_YOUR_SECRET_HERE
    kubectl -n opsmx-isd create secret generic ldappassword --from-literal ldappassword=PUT_YOUR_SECRET_HERE
    kubectl -n opsmx-isd create secret generic miniopassword --from-literal miniopassword=PUT_YOUR_SECRET_HERE
    kubectl -n opsmx-isd create secret generic redispassword --from-literal redispassword=PUT_YOUR_SECRET_HERE
    kubectl -n opsmx-isd create secret generic saporpassword --from-literal saporpassword=PUT_YOUR_SECRET_HERE
    kubectl -n opsmx-isd create secret generic rabbitmqpassword --from-literal rabbitmqpassword=PUT_YOUR_SECRET_HERE
    kubectl -n opsmx-isd create secret generic keystorepassword --from-literal keystorepassword=PUT_YOUR_SECRET_HERE

    Start the installation

    The installation is done by a Kubernetes job that processes the secrets, generates YAMLs, stores them into the git-repo and creates the objects in Kubernetes.

  10. Installation ISD by executing this command: kubectl -n opsmx-isd apply -f install/ISD-Install-Job.yaml

    Monitor the installation process

  11. Wait for all pods to stabilize (about 10-20 min, depending on your cluster load). The "oes-config" in Completed status indicates completion of the installation process. Check the status using the following comment: kubectl -n opsmx-isd get po -w

    Note: If the pod starting with isd-install-* errors out, please check the logs as follows, and replace the pod-name correctly:

    kubectl -n opsmx-isd logs isd-install-tjzlx -c get-secrets
    kubectl -n opsmx-isd logs isd-install-tjzlx -c git-clone
    kubectl -n opsmx-isd logs isd-install-tjzlx -c apply-yamls

    Note: It is normal for some pods, specifically the oes-ui pod to crash a few times before running. However, if the isd-spinnaker-halyard-0 pod crashes or errors out, please check the logs of the "create-halyard-local" init container using this command:

    kubectl -n opsmx-isd logs isd-spinnaker-halyard-0 -c create-halyard-local

    Check the installation

  12. Access ISD using the URL specified in the values.yaml in step 5 in a browser such as Chrome.

  13. Login to the ISD instance by using the credentials listed below:

    • User Name: admin

    • Password: Execute the following command to retrieve the password

      kubectl get secret isd-openldap -o jsonpath='{.data.LDAP_ADMIN_PASSWORD}'| base64 -d

Note: If you are facing any Issues during installation, refer to the Troubleshooting page.

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