Thank you for your interest in Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform. Ansible Automation Platform is a commercial offering that helps teams manage complex multi-tier deployments by adding control, knowledge, and delegation to Ansible-powered environments.

This guide helps you to understand the installation, migration and upgrade requirements for deploying the Ansible Automation Platform Operator on OpenShift Container Platform.

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1. Planning your Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform operator installation on Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform

Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform is supported on both Red Hat Enterprise Linux and Red Hat Openshift.

OpenShift operators help install and automate day-2 operations of complex, distributed software on Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform. The Ansible Automation Platform Operator enables you to deploy and manage Ansible Automation Platform components on Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform.

You can use this section to help plan your Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform installation on your Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform environment. Before installing, review the supported installation scenarios to determine which meets your requirements.

1.1. About Ansible Automation Platform Operator

The Ansible Automation Platform Operator provides cloud-native, push-button deployment of new Ansible Automation Platform instances in your OpenShift environment. The Ansible Automation Platform Operator includes resource types to deploy and manage instances of automation controller and private automation hub. It also includes automation controller job resources for defining and launching jobs inside your automation controller deployments.

Deploying Ansible Automation Platform instances with a Kubernetes native operator offers several advantages over launching instances from a playbook deployed on Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform, including upgrades and full lifecycle support for your Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform deployments.

You can install the Ansible Automation Platform Operator from the Red Hat Operators catalog in OperatorHub.

1.2. OpenShift Container Platform version compatibility

The Ansible Automation Platform Operator to install Ansible Automation Platform 2.5 is available on OpenShift Container Platform 4.9 and later versions.

Additional resources

1.3. Supported installation scenarios for Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform

You can use the OperatorHub on the Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform web console to install Ansible Automation Platform Operator.

Alternatively, you can install Ansible Automation Platform Operator from the OpenShift Container Platform command-line interface (CLI), oc. See Installing Ansible Automation Platform Operator from the OpenShift Container Platform CLI for help with this.

After you have installed Ansible Automation Platform Operator you must create an Ansible Automation Platform custom resource (CR). This enables you to manage Ansible Automation Platform components from a single unified interface known as the platform gateway. As of version 2.5, you must create an Ansible Automation Platform CR, even if you have an existing automation controller, automation hub, or Event-Driven Ansible, components.

If existing components have already been deployed, you must specify these components on the Ansible Automation Platform CR. You must create the custom resource in the same namespace as the existing components.

Supported scenarios Supported scenarios with existing components
  • Ansible Automation Platform CR for blank slate install with automation controller, automation hub, and Event-Driven Ansible enabled

  • Ansible Automation Platform CR with just automation controller enabled

  • Ansible Automation Platform CR with just automation controller, automation hub enabled

  • Ansible Automation Platform CR with just automation controller, Event-Driven Ansible enabled

  • Ansible Automation Platform CR created in the same namespace as an existing automation controller CR with the automation controller name specified on the Ansible Automation Platform CR spec

  • Same with automation controller and automation hub

  • Same with automation controller, automation hub, and Event-Driven Ansible

  • Same with automation controller and Event-Driven Ansible

1.4. Custom resources

You can define custom resources for each primary installation workflows.

1.5. Additional resources

2. Installing the Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform operator on Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform

Prerequisites
Procedure
  1. Log in to Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform.

  2. Navigate to Operators  OperatorHub.

  3. Search for Ansible Automation Platform and click Install.

  4. Select an Update Channel:

    • stable-2.x: installs a namespace-scoped operator, which limits deployments of automation hub and automation controller instances to the namespace the operator is installed in. This is suitable for most cases. The stable-2.x channel does not require administrator privileges and utilizes fewer resources because it only monitors a single namespace.

    • stable-2.x-cluster-scoped: deploys automation hub and automation controller across multiple namespaces in the cluster and requires administrator privileges for all namespaces in the cluster.

  5. Select Installation Mode, Installed Namespace, and Approval Strategy.

  6. Click Install.

The installation process will begin. When installation is complete, a modal will appear notifying you that the Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform operator is installed in the specified namespace.

  • Click View Operator to view your newly installed Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform operator.

3. Installing Ansible Automation Platform Operator from the OpenShift Container Platform CLI

Use these instructions to install the Ansible Automation Platform Operator on Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform from the OpenShift Container Platform command-line interface (CLI) using the oc command.

3.1. Prerequisites

  • Access to Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform using an account with operator installation permissions.

  • The OpenShift Container Platform CLI oc command is installed on your local system. Refer to Installing the OpenShift CLI in the Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform product documentation for further information.

3.2. Subscribing a namespace to an operator using the OpenShift Container Platform CLI

Use this procedure to subscribe a namespace to an operator.

Procedure
  1. Create a project for the operator.

    oc new-project ansible-automation-platform
  2. Create a file called sub.yaml.

  3. Add the following YAML code to the sub.yaml file.

    ---
    apiVersion: v1
    kind: Namespace
    metadata:
      labels:
        openshift.io/cluster-monitoring: "true"
      name: ansible-automation-platform
    ---
    apiVersion: operators.coreos.com/v1
    kind: OperatorGroup
    metadata:
      name: ansible-automation-platform-operator
      namespace: ansible-automation-platform
    spec:
      targetNamespaces:
        - ansible-automation-platform
    ---
    apiVersion: operators.coreos.com/v1alpha1
    kind: Subscription
    metadata:
      name: ansible-automation-platform
      namespace: ansible-automation-platform
    spec:
      channel: 'stable-2.5'
      installPlanApproval: Automatic
      name: ansible-automation-platform-operator
      source: redhat-operators
      sourceNamespace: openshift-marketplace
    ---
    apiVersion: automationcontroller.ansible.com/v1beta1
    kind: AutomationController
    metadata:
      name: example
      namespace: ansible-automation-platform
    spec:
      replicas: 1

    This file creates a Subscription object called ansible-automation-platform that subscribes the ansible-automation-platform namespace to the ansible-automation-platform-operator operator.

    It then creates an AutomationController object called example in the ansible-automation-platform namespace.

    To change the automation controller name from example, edit the name field in the kind: AutomationController section of sub.yaml and replace <automation_controller_name> with the name you want to use:

    apiVersion: automationcontroller.ansible.com/v1beta1
    kind: AutomationController
    metadata:
      name: <automation_controller_name>
      namespace: ansible-automation-platform
  4. Run the oc apply command to create the objects specified in the sub.yaml file:

    oc apply -f sub.yaml

To verify that the namespace has been successfully subscribed to the ansible-automation-platform-operator operator, run the oc get subs command:

$ oc get subs -n ansible-automation-platform

For further information about subscribing namespaces to operators, see Installing from OperatorHub using the CLI in the Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform Operators guide.

You can use the OpenShift Container Platform CLI to fetch the web address and the password of the Automation controller that you created.

3.3. Fetching platform gateway login details from the OpenShift Container Platform CLI

To login to the platform gateway, you need the web address and the password.

3.3.1. Fetching the platform gateway web address

A Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform route exposes a service at a host name, so that external clients can reach it by name. When you created the platform gateway instance, a route was created for it. The route inherits the name that you assigned to the platform gateway object in the YAML file.

Use the following command to fetch the routes:

oc get routes -n <platform_namespace>

In the following example, the example platform gateway is running in the ansible-automation-platform namespace.

$ oc get routes -n ansible-automation-platform

NAME      HOST/PORT                                              PATH   SERVICES          PORT   TERMINATION     WILDCARD
example   example-ansible-automation-platform.apps-crc.testing          example-service   http   edge/Redirect   None

The address for the platform gateway instance is example-ansible-automation-platform.apps-crc.testing.

3.3.2. Fetching the platform gateway password

The YAML block for the platform gateway instance in sub.yaml assigns values to the name and admin_user keys. Use these values in the following command to fetch the password for the platform gateway instance.

oc get secret/<your instance name>-<admin_user>-password -o yaml

The default value for admin_user is admin. Modify the command if you changed the admin username in sub.yaml.

The following example retrieves the password for a platform gateway object called example:

oc get secret/example-admin-password -o yaml

The password for the platform gateway instance is listed in the metadata field in the output:

$ oc get secret/example-admin-password -o yaml

apiVersion: v1
data:
  password: ODzLODzLODzLODzLODzLODzLODzLODzLODzLODzLODzL
kind: Secret
metadata:
  labels:
    app.kubernetes.io/component: aap
    app.kubernetes.io/name: example
    app.kubernetes.io/operator-version: ""
    app.kubernetes.io/part-of: example
  name: example-admin-password
  namespace: ansible-automation-platform

3.4. Additional resources

4. Configuring the Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform Operator on Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform

The platform gateway for Ansible Automation Platform enables you to manage the following Ansible Automation Platform components to form a single user interface:

  • Automation controller

  • Automation hub

  • Event-Driven Ansible

  • Red Hat Ansible Lightspeed (This feature is disabled by default, you must opt in to use it.)

Before you can deploy the platform gateway you must have Ansible Automation Platform Operator installed in a namespace. If you have not installed Ansible Automation Platform Operator see Installing the Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform operator on Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform.

Note
Platform gateway is only available under Ansible Automation Platform Operator version 2.5. Every component deployed under Ansible Automation Platform Operator 2.5 will also default to version 2.5.

If you have the Ansible Automation Platform Operator and some or all of the Ansible Automation Platform components installed see Deploying the platform gateway with existing Ansible Automation Platform components for how to proceed.

After installing the Ansible Automation Platform Operator in your namespace you can set up your Ansible Automation Platform instance. Then link all the platform components to a single user interface.

Procedure
  1. Go to your Ansible Automation Platform Operator and click Details.

  2. On the Ansible Automation Platform tile click Create instance.

  3. From the Create Ansible Automation Platform page enter a name for your instance in the Name field.

  4. Click YAML view and paste the following:

    spec:
      controller:
        disabled: false
    
      eda:
        disabled: false
    
      hub:
        disabled: false
        storage_type: file
        file_storage_storage_class: nfs-local-rwx
        file_storage_size: 10Gi
  5. Click Create.

Verification

Go to your Ansible Automation Platform Operator deployment and click All instances to verify if all instances deployed correctly. You should see the Ansible Automation Platform instance and the deployed AutomationController, EDA, and AutomationHub instances here.

Alternatively you can check by the command line, run: oc get route

4.2. Accessing the platform gateway

You should use the Ansible Automation Platform instance as your default. This instance links the automation controller, automation hub, and Event-Driven Ansible deployments to a single interface.

Procedure

To access your Ansible Automation Platform instance:

  1. Navigate to Networking  Routes

  2. Click the link under Location for Ansible Automation Platform.

  3. This redirects you to the Ansible Automation Platform login page. Enter "admin" as your username in the Username field.

  4. For the password you need to:

    1. Go to to Workloads  Secrets.

    2. Click <your instance name>-admin-password and copy the password.

    3. Paste the password into the Password field.

  5. Click Login.

  6. Apply your subscription:

    1. Click Subscription manifest or Username/password.

    2. Upload your manifest or enter your username and password.

    3. Select your subscription from the Subscription list.

    4. Click Next.
      This redirects you to the Analytics page.

  7. Click Next.

  8. Select the I agree to the terms of the license agreement checkbox.

  9. Click Next.

You now have access to the platform gateway user interface. If you cannot access the Ansible Automation Platform see Frequently asked questions on platform gateway for help with troubleshooting and debugging.

4.3. Deploying the platform gateway with existing Ansible Automation Platform components

You can link any components of the Ansible Automation Platform, that you have already installed to a new Ansible Automation Platform instance.

The following procedure simulates a scenario where you have automation controller as an existing component and want to add automation hub and Event-Driven Ansible.

Procedure
  1. Log in to Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform.

  2. Go to to Operators  Installed Operators.

  3. Click Subscriptions and edit your Update channel to stable-2.5.

  4. Click Details and on the Ansible Automation Platform tile click Create instance.

  5. From the Create Ansible Automation Platform page enter a name for your instance in the Name field.

  6. Click YAML view and copy in the following:

        apiVersion: aap.ansible.com/v1alpha1
            kind: AnsibleAutomationPlatform
            metadata:
              name: example-aap
              namespace: aap
            spec:
              # Platform
              image_pull_policy: IfNotPresent
              # Components
              controller:
                disabled: false
                name: existing-controller-name
              eda:
                disabled: false
              hub:
                disabled: false
                ## uncomment if using file storage for Content pod
                storage_type: file
                file_storage_storage_class: your-rwx-storage-class
                file_storage_size: 10Gi
    
                ## uncomment if using S3 storage for Content pod
                # storage_type: S3
                # object_storage_s3_secret: example-galaxy-object-storage
    
                ## uncomment if using Azure storage for Content pod
                # storage_type: azure
                # object_storage_azure_secret: azure-secret-name
              lightspeed:
                disabled: true
    1. For new components, if you do not specify a name, a default name is generated.

  7. Click Create.

  8. To access your new instance, see Accessing the platform gateway.

Note
If you have an existing controller with a managed Postgres pod, after creating the Ansible Automation Platform resource your automation controller instance will continue to use that original Postgres pod. If you were to do a fresh install you would have a single Postgres managed pod for all instances.

4.4. Frequently asked questions on platform gateway

If I delete my Ansible Automation Platform deployment will I still have access to Automation Controller?

No, automation controller, automation hub, and Event-Driven Ansible are nested within the deployment and are also deleted.

Something went wrong with my deployment but I’m not sure what, how can I find out?

You can follow along in the command line while the operator is reconciling, this can be helpful for debugging. Alternatively you can click into the deployment instance to see the status conditions being updated as the deployment goes on.

Is it still possible to view individual component logs?

When troubleshooting you should examine the Ansible Automation Platform instance for the main logs and then each individual component (EDA, AutomationHub, AutomationController) for more specific information.

Where can I view the condition of an instance?

To display status conditions click into the instance, and look under the Details or Events tab. Alternatively, to display the status conditions you can run the get command: oc get automationcontroller <instance-name> -o jsonpath=Pipe "| jq"

Can I track my migration in real time?

To help track the status of the migration or to understand why migration might have failed you can look at the migration logs as they are running. Use the logs command: oc logs fresh-install-controller-migration-4.6.0-jwfm6 -f

5. Configuring automation controller on Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform web console

You can use these instructions to configure the automation controller operator on Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform, specify custom resources, and deploy Ansible Automation Platform with an external database.

Automation controller configuration can be done through the automation controller extra_settings or directly in the user interface after deployment. However, it is important to note that configurations made in extra_settings take precedence over settings made in the user interface.

Note

When an instance of automation controller is removed, the associated PVCs are not automatically deleted. This can cause issues during migration if the new deployment has the same name as the previous one. Therefore, it is recommended that you manually remove old PVCs before deploying a new automation controller instance in the same namespace. See Finding and deleting PVCs for more information.

5.1. Prerequisites

  • You have installed the Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform catalog in Operator Hub.

  • For automation controller, a default StorageClass must be configured on the cluster for the operator to dynamically create needed PVCs. This is not necessary if an external PostgreSQL database is configured.

  • For Hub a StorageClass that supports ReadWriteMany must be available on the cluster to dynamically created the PVC needed for the content, redis and api pods. If it is not the default StorageClass on the cluster, you can specify it when creating your AutomationHub object.

5.1.1. Configuring your controller image pull policy

Use this procedure to configure the image pull policy on your automation controller.

Procedure
  1. Go to Operators  Installed Operators.

  2. Locate the Automation Controller tab.

  3. For new instances, click Create AutomationController.

    1. For existing instances, you can edit the YAML view by clicking ⋮ and then Edit AutomationController.

  4. Click advanced Configuration. Under Image Pull Policy, click on the radio button to select

    • Always

    • Never

    • IfNotPresent

  5. To display the option under Image Pull Secrets, click the arrow.

    1. Click + beside Add Image Pull Secret and enter a value.

  6. To display fields under the Web container resource requirements drop-down list, click the arrow.

    1. Under Limits, and Requests, enter values for CPU cores, Memory, and Storage.

  7. To display fields under the Task container resource requirements drop-down list, click the arrow.

    1. Under Limits, and Requests, enter values for CPU cores, Memory, and Storage.

  8. To display fields under the EE Control Plane container resource requirements drop-down list, click the arrow.

    1. Under Limits, and Requests, enter values for CPU cores, Memory, and Storage.

  9. To display fields under the PostgreSQL init container resource requirements (when using a managed service) drop-down list, click the arrow.

    1. Under Limits, and Requests, enter values for CPU cores, Memory, and Storage.

  10. To display fields under the Redis container resource requirements drop-down list, click the arrow.

    1. Under Limits, and Requests, enter values for CPU cores, Memory, and Storage.

  11. To display fields under the PostgreSQL container resource requirements (when using a managed instance)* drop-down list, click the arrow.

    1. Under Limits, and Requests, enter values for CPU cores, Memory, and Storage.

  12. To display the PostgreSQL container storage requirements (when using a managed instance) drop-down list, click the arrow.

    1. Under Limits, and Requests, enter values for CPU cores, Memory, and Storage.

  13. Under Replicas, enter the number of instance replicas.

  14. Under Remove used secrets on instance removal, select true or false. The default is false.

  15. Under Preload instance with data upon creation, select true or false. The default is true.

5.1.2. Configuring your automation controller operator route options

The Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform operator installation form allows you to further configure your automation controller operator route options under Advanced configuration.

Procedure
  1. Go to Operators  Installed Operators.

  2. Locate the Automation Controller tab.

  3. For new instances, click Create AutomationController.

    1. For existing instances, you can edit the YAML view by clicking ⋮ and then Edit AutomationController.

  4. Click Advanced configuration.

  5. Under Ingress type, click the drop-down menu and select Route.

  6. Under Route DNS host, enter a common host name that the route answers to.

  7. Under Route TLS termination mechanism, click the drop-down menu and select Edge or Passthrough. For most instances Edge should be selected.

  8. Under Route TLS credential secret, click the drop-down menu and select a secret from the list.

  9. Under Enable persistence for /var/lib/projects directory select either true or false by moving the slider.

5.1.3. Configuring the ingress type for your automation controller operator

The Ansible Automation Platform Operator installation form allows you to further configure your automation controller operator ingress under Advanced configuration.

Procedure
  1. Go to Operators  Installed Operators.

  2. Locate the Automation Controller tab.

  3. For new instances, click Create AutomationController.

    1. For existing instances, you can edit the YAML view by clicking ⋮ and then Edit AutomationController.

  4. Click Advanced configuration.

  5. Under Ingress type, click the drop-down menu and select Ingress.

  6. Under Ingress annotations, enter any annotations to add to the ingress.

  7. Under Ingress TLS secret, click the drop-down menu and select a secret from the list.

After you have configured your automation controller operator, click Create at the bottom of the form view. Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform will now create the pods. This may take a few minutes.

You can view the progress by navigating to Workloads  Pods and locating the newly created instance.

Verification

Verify that the following operator pods provided by the Ansible Automation Platform Operator installation from automation controller are running:

Operator manager controllers automation controller automation hub

The operator manager controllers for each of the 3 operators, include the following:

  • automation-controller-operator-controller-manager

  • automation-hub-operator-controller-manager

  • resource-operator-controller-manager

After deploying automation controller, you will see the addition of these pods:

  • controller

  • controller-postgres

After deploying automation hub, you will see the addition of these pods:

  • hub-api

  • hub-content

  • hub-postgres

  • hub-redis

  • hub-worker

Note

A missing pod can indicate the need for a pull secret. Pull secrets are required for protected or private image registries. See Using image pull secrets for more information. You can diagnose this issue further by running oc describe pod <pod-name> to see if there is an ImagePullBackOff error on that pod.

5.2. Configuring an external database for automation controller on Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform operator

For users who prefer to deploy Ansible Automation Platform with an external database, they can do so by configuring a secret with instance credentials and connection information, then applying it to their cluster using the oc create command.

By default, the Ansible Automation Platform Operator automatically creates and configures a managed PostgreSQL pod in the same namespace as your Ansible Automation Platform deployment. You can deploy Ansible Automation Platform with an external database instead of the managed PostgreSQL pod that the Ansible Automation Platform Operator automatically creates.

Using an external database lets you share and reuse resources and manually manage backups, upgrades, and performance optimizations.

Note

The same external database (PostgreSQL instance) can be used for both automation hub and automation controller as long as the database names are different. In other words, you can have multiple databases with different names inside a single PostgreSQL instance.

The following section outlines the steps to configure an external database for your automation controller on a Ansible Automation Platform Operator.

Prerequisite

The external database must be a PostgreSQL database that is the version supported by the current release of Ansible Automation Platform.

Note

Ansible Automation Platform 2.5 supports PostgreSQL 15.

Procedure

The external postgres instance credentials and connection information must be stored in a secret, which is then set on the automation controller spec.

  1. Create a postgres_configuration_secret YAML file, following the template below:

    apiVersion: v1
    kind: Secret
    metadata:
      name: external-postgres-configuration
      namespace: <target_namespace> (1)
    stringData:
      host: "<external_ip_or_url_resolvable_by_the_cluster>" (2)
      port: "<external_port>" (3)
      database: "<desired_database_name>"
      username: "<username_to_connect_as>"
      password: "<password_to_connect_with>" (4)
      sslmode: "prefer" (5)
      type: "unmanaged"
    type: Opaque
    1. Namespace to create the secret in. This should be the same namespace you want to deploy to.

    2. The resolvable hostname for your database node.

    3. External port defaults to 5432.

    4. Value for variable password should not contain single or double quotes (', ") or backslashes (\) to avoid any issues during deployment, backup or restoration.

    5. The variable sslmode is valid for external databases only. The allowed values are: prefer, disable, allow, require, verify-ca, and verify-full.

  2. Apply external-postgres-configuration-secret.yml to your cluster using the oc create command.

    $ oc create -f external-postgres-configuration-secret.yml
  3. When creating your AutomationController custom resource object, specify the secret on your spec, following the example below:

    apiVersion: automationcontroller.ansible.com/v1beta1
    kind: AutomationController
    metadata:
      name: controller-dev
    spec:
      postgres_configuration_secret: external-postgres-configuration

5.3. Finding and deleting PVCs

A persistent volume claim (PVC) is a storage volume used to store data that automation hub and automation controller applications use. These PVCs are independent from the applications and remain even when the application is deleted. If you are confident that you no longer need a PVC, or have backed it up elsewhere, you can manually delete them.

Procedure
  1. List the existing PVCs in your deployment namespace:

    oc get pvc -n <namespace>
  2. Identify the PVC associated with your previous deployment by comparing the old deployment name and the PVC name.

  3. Delete the old PVC:

    oc delete pvc -n <namespace> <pvc-name>

5.4. Additional resources

6. Configuring automation hub on Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform web console

You can use these instructions to configure the automation hub operator on Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform, specify custom resources, and deploy Ansible Automation Platform with an external database.

Automation hub configuration can be done through the automation hub pulp_settings or directly in the user interface after deployment. However, it is important to note that configurations made in pulp_settings take precedence over settings made in the user interface. Hub settings should always be set as lowercase on the Hub custom resource specification.

Note

When an instance of automation hub is removed, the PVCs are not automatically deleted. This can cause issues during migration if the new deployment has the same name as the previous one. Therefore, it is recommended that you manually remove old PVCs before deploying a new automation hub instance in the same namespace. See Finding and deleting PVCs for more information.

6.1. Prerequisites

  • You have installed the Ansible Automation Platform Operator in Operator Hub.

6.1.1. Storage options for Ansible Automation Platform Operator installation on Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform

Automation hub requires ReadWriteMany file-based storage, Azure Blob storage, or Amazon S3-compliant storage for operation so that multiple pods can access shared content, such as collections.

The process for configuring object storage on the AutomationHub CR is similar for Amazon S3 and Azure Blob Storage.

If you are using file-based storage and your installation scenario includes automation hub, ensure that the storage option for Ansible Automation Platform Operator is set to ReadWriteMany. ReadWriteMany is the default storage option.

In addition, OpenShift Data Foundation provides a ReadWriteMany or S3-compliant implementation. Also, you can set up NFS storage configuration to support ReadWriteMany. This, however, introduces the NFS server as a potential, single point of failure.

Provisioning OCP storage with ReadWriteMany access mode

To ensure successful installation of Ansible Automation Platform Operator, you must provision your storage type for automation hub initially to ReadWriteMany access mode.

Procedure
  1. Go to Storage  PersistentVolume.

  2. Click btn: Create PersistentVolume.

  3. In the first step, update the accessModes from the default ReadWriteOnce to ReadWriteMany.

    1. See Provisioning to update the access mode. for a detailed overview.

  4. Complete the additional steps in this section to create the persistent volume claim (PVC).

Configuring object storage on Amazon S3

Red Hat supports Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3) for automation hub. You can configure it when deploying the AutomationHub custom resource (CR), or you can configure it for an existing instance.

Prerequisites
  • Create an Amazon S3 bucket to store the objects.

  • Note the name of the S3 bucket.

Procedure
  1. Create a Kubernetes secret containing the AWS credentials and connection details, and the name of your Amazon S3 bucket. The following example creates a secret called test-s3:

    $ oc -n $HUB_NAMESPACE apply -f- <<EOF
    apiVersion: v1
    kind: Secret
    metadata:
      name: 'test-s3'
    stringData:
      s3-access-key-id: $S3_ACCESS_KEY_ID
      s3-secret-access-key: $S3_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
      s3-bucket-name: $S3_BUCKET_NAME
      s3-region: $S3_REGION
    EOF
  2. Add the secret to the automation hub custom resource (CR) spec:

    spec:
      object_storage_s3_secret: test-s3
  3. If you are applying this secret to an existing instance, restart the API pods for the change to take effect. <hub-name> is the name of your hub instance.

$ oc -n $HUB_NAMESPACE delete pod -l app.kubernetes.io/name=<hub-name>-api
Configuring object storage on Azure Blob

Red Hat supports Azure Blob Storage for automation hub. You can configure it when deploying the AutomationHub custom resource (CR), or you can configure it for an existing instance.

Prerequisites
  • Create an Azure Storage blob container to store the objects.

  • Note the name of the blob container.

Procedure
  1. Create a Kubernetes secret containing the credentials and connection details for your Azure account, and the name of your Azure Storage blob container. The following example creates a secret called test-azure:

    $ oc -n $HUB_NAMESPACE apply -f- <<EOF
    apiVersion: v1
    kind: Secret
    metadata:
      name: 'test-azure'
    stringData:
      azure-account-name: $AZURE_ACCOUNT_NAME
      azure-account-key: $AZURE_ACCOUNT_KEY
      azure-container: $AZURE_CONTAINER
      azure-container-path: $AZURE_CONTAINER_PATH
      azure-connection-string: $AZURE_CONNECTION_STRING
    EOF
  2. Add the secret to the automation hub custom resource (CR) spec:

    spec:
      object_storage_azure_secret: test-azure
  3. If you are applying this secret to an existing instance, restart the API pods for the change to take effect. <hub-name> is the name of your hub instance.

$ oc -n $HUB_NAMESPACE delete pod -l app.kubernetes.io/name=<hub-name>-api

6.1.2. Configure your automation hub operator route options

The Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform operator installation form allows you to further configure your automation hub operator route options under Advanced configuration.

Procedure
  1. Go to Operators  Installed Operators.

  2. Locate the Automation Hub tab.

  3. For new instances, click Create AutomationHub.

    1. For existing instances, you can edit the YAML view by clicking ⋮ and then Edit AutomationHub.

  4. Click Advanced configuration.

  5. Under Ingress type, click the drop-down menu and select Route.

  6. Under Route DNS host, enter a common host name that the route answers to.

  7. Under Route TLS termination mechanism, click the drop-down menu and select Edge or Passthrough.

  8. Under Route TLS credential secret, click the drop-down menu and select a secret from the list.

6.1.3. Configuring the ingress type for your automation hub operator

The Ansible Automation Platform Operator installation form allows you to further configure your automation hub operator ingress under Advanced configuration.

Procedure
  1. Go to Operators  Installed Operators.

  2. Locate the Automation Hub tab.

  3. For new instances, click Create AutomationHub.

    1. For existing instances, you can edit the YAML view by clicking ⋮ and then Edit AutomationHub.

  4. Click Advanced Configuration.

  5. Under Ingress type, click the drop-down menu and select Ingress.

  6. Under Ingress annotations, enter any annotations to add to the ingress.

  7. Under Ingress TLS secret, click the drop-down menu and select a secret from the list.

After you have configured your automation hub operator, click Create at the bottom of the form view. Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform will now create the pods. This may take a few minutes.

You can view the progress by navigating to Workloads  Pods and locating the newly created instance.

Verification

Verify that the following operator pods provided by the Ansible Automation Platform Operator installation from automation hub are running:

Operator manager controllers automation controller automation hub

The operator manager controllers for each of the 3 operators, include the following:

  • automation-controller-operator-controller-manager

  • automation-hub-operator-controller-manager

  • resource-operator-controller-manager

After deploying automation controller, you will see the addition of these pods:

  • controller

  • controller-postgres

After deploying automation hub, you will see the addition of these pods:

  • hub-api

  • hub-content

  • hub-postgres

  • hub-redis

  • hub-worker

Note

A missing pod can indicate the need for a pull secret. Pull secrets are required for protected or private image registries. See Using image pull secrets for more information. You can diagnose this issue further by running oc describe pod <pod-name> to see if there is an ImagePullBackOff error on that pod.

6.2. Configuring LDAP authentication for Ansible automation hub on OpenShift Container Platform

Configure LDAP authentication settings for Ansible Automation Platform on OpenShift Container Platform in the spec section of your Hub instance configuration file.

Procedure
  • Use the following example to configure LDAP in your automation hub instance. For any blank fields, enter ``.

    spec:
        pulp_settings:
          auth_ldap_user_attr_map:
            email: "mail"
            first_name: "givenName"
            last_name: "sn"
          auth_ldap_group_search_base_dn: 'cn=groups,cn=accounts,dc=example,dc=com'
          auth_ldap_bind_dn: ' '
          auth_ldap_bind_password: ' '
          auth_ldap_group_search_filter: (objectClass=posixGroup)
          auth_ldap_user_search_scope: SUBTREE
          auth_ldap_server_uri: 'ldap://ldapserver:389'
          authentication_backend_preset: ldap
          auth_ldap_mirror_groups: 'True'
          auth_ldap_user_search_base_dn: 'cn=users,cn=accounts,dc=example,dc=com'
          auth_ldap_bind_password: 'ldappassword'
          auth_ldap_user_search_filter: (uid=%(user)s)
          auth_ldap_group_search_scope: SUBTREE
          auth_ldap_user_flags_by_group: '@json {"is_superuser": "cn=tower-admin,cn=groups,cn=accounts,dc=example,dc=com"}'
Note

Do not leave any fields empty. For fields with no variable, enter `` to indicate a default value.

6.3. Finding the automation hub route

You can access the automation hub through the platform gateway or through the following procedure.

Procedure
  1. Navigate to Networking  Routes.

  2. Under Location, click on the URL for your automation hub instance.

The automation hub user interface launches where you can sign in with the administrator credentials specified during the operator configuration process.

Note

If you did not specify an administrator password during configuration, one was automatically created for you. To locate this password, go to your project, select Workloads  Secrets and open controller-admin-password. From there you can copy the password and paste it into the Automation hub password field.

6.4. Configuring an external database for automation hub on Ansible Automation Platform Operator

For users who prefer to deploy Ansible Automation Platform with an external database, they can do so by configuring a secret with instance credentials and connection information, then applying it to their cluster using the oc create command.

By default, the Ansible Automation Platform Operator automatically creates and configures a managed PostgreSQL pod in the same namespace as your Ansible Automation Platform deployment.

You can choose to use an external database instead if you prefer to use a dedicated node to ensure dedicated resources or to manually manage backups, upgrades, or performance tweaks.

Note

The same external database (PostgreSQL instance) can be used for both automation hub and automation controller as long as the database names are different. In other words, you can have multiple databases with different names inside a single PostgreSQL instance.

The following section outlines the steps to configure an external database for your automation hub on a Ansible Automation Platform Operator.

Prerequisite

The external database must be a PostgreSQL database that is the version supported by the current release of Ansible Automation Platform.

Note

Ansible Automation Platform 2.5 supports PostgreSQL 15.

Procedure

The external postgres instance credentials and connection information will need to be stored in a secret, which will then be set on the automation hub spec.

  1. Create a postgres_configuration_secret YAML file, following the template below:

    apiVersion: v1
    kind: Secret
    metadata:
      name: external-postgres-configuration
      namespace: <target_namespace> (1)
    stringData:
      host: "<external_ip_or_url_resolvable_by_the_cluster>" (2)
      port: "<external_port>" (3)
      database: "<desired_database_name>"
      username: "<username_to_connect_as>"
      password: "<password_to_connect_with>" (4)
      sslmode: "prefer" (5)
      type: "unmanaged"
    type: Opaque
    1. Namespace to create the secret in. This should be the same namespace you want to deploy to.

    2. The resolvable hostname for your database node.

    3. External port defaults to 5432.

    4. Value for variable password should not contain single or double quotes (', ") or backslashes (\) to avoid any issues during deployment, backup or restoration.

    5. The variable sslmode is valid for external databases only. The allowed values are: prefer, disable, allow, require, verify-ca, and verify-full.

  2. Apply external-postgres-configuration-secret.yml to your cluster using the oc create command.

    $ oc create -f external-postgres-configuration-secret.yml
  3. When creating your AutomationHub custom resource object, specify the secret on your spec, following the example below:

    apiVersion: automationhub.ansible.com/v1beta1
    kind: AutomationHub
    metadata:
      name: hub-dev
    spec:
      postgres_configuration_secret: external-postgres-configuration

6.4.1. Enabling the hstore extension for the automation hub PostgreSQL database

Added in Ansible Automation Platform 2.5, the database migration script uses hstore fields to store information, therefore the hstore extension to the automation hub PostgreSQL database must be enabled.

This process is automatic when using the Ansible Automation Platform installer and a managed PostgreSQL server.

If the PostgreSQL database is external, you must enable the hstore extension to the automation hub PostreSQL database manually before automation hub installation.

If the hstore extension is not enabled before automation hub installation, a failure is raised during database migration.

Procedure
  1. Check if the extension is available on the PostgreSQL server (automation hub database).

    $ psql -d <automation hub database> -c "SELECT * FROM pg_available_extensions WHERE name='hstore'"

    Where the default value for <automation hub database> is automationhub.

    Example output with hstore available:

    name  | default_version | installed_version |comment
    ------+-----------------+-------------------+---------------------------------------------------
     hstore | 1.7           |                   | data type for storing sets of (key, value) pairs
    (1 row)

    Example output with hstore not available:

     name | default_version | installed_version | comment
    ------+-----------------+-------------------+---------
    (0 rows)
  2. On a RHEL based server, the hstore extension is included in the postgresql-contrib RPM package, which is not installed automatically when installing the PostgreSQL server RPM package.

    To install the RPM package, use the following command:

    dnf install postgresql-contrib
  3. Create the hstore PostgreSQL extension on the automation hub database with the following command:

    $ psql -d <automation hub database> -c "CREATE EXTENSION hstore;"

    The output of which is:

    CREATE EXTENSION
  4. In the following output, the installed_version field contains the hstore extension used, indicating that hstore is enabled.

    name | default_version | installed_version | comment
    -----+-----------------+-------------------+------------------------------------------------------
    hstore  |     1.7      |       1.7         | data type for storing sets of (key, value) pairs
    (1 row)

6.5. Finding and deleting PVCs

A persistent volume claim (PVC) is a storage volume used to store data that automation hub and automation controller applications use. These PVCs are independent from the applications and remain even when the application is deleted. If you are confident that you no longer need a PVC, or have backed it up elsewhere, you can manually delete them.

Procedure
  1. List the existing PVCs in your deployment namespace:

    oc get pvc -n <namespace>
  2. Identify the PVC associated with your previous deployment by comparing the old deployment name and the PVC name.

  3. Delete the old PVC:

    oc delete pvc -n <namespace> <pvc-name>

6.6. Additional configurations

A collection download count can help you understand collection usage. To add a collection download count to automation hub, set the following configuration:

spec:
  pulp_settings:
    ansible_collect_download_count: true

When ansible_collect_download_count is enabled, automation hub will display a download count by the collection.

6.7. Additional resources

7. Using Red Hat Single Sign-On Operator with automation hub

Private automation hub uses Red Hat Single Sign-On for authentication.

The Red Hat Single Sign-On Operator creates and manages resources. Use this operator to create custom resources to automate Red Hat Single Sign-On administration in OpenShift.

  • When installing Ansible Automation Platform on Virtual Machines (VMs) the installer can automatically install and configure Red Hat Single Sign-On for use with private automation hub.

  • When installing Ansible Automation Platform on Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform you must install Single Sign-On separately.

This chapter describes the process to configure Red Hat Single Sign-On and integrate it with private automation hub when Ansible Automation Platform is installed on OpenShift Container Platform.

Prerequisites
  • You have access to Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform using an account with operator installation permissions.

  • You have installed the catalog containing the Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform operators.

  • You have installed the Red Hat Single Sign-On Operator. To install the Red Hat Single Sign-On Operator, follow the procedure in Installing Red Hat Single Sign-On using a custom resource in the Red Hat Single Sign-On documentation.

7.1. Creating a Keycloak instance

After you install the Red Hat Single Sign-On Operator, you can create a Keycloak instance for use with Ansible Automation Platform.

From here you provide an external Postgres or one will be created for you.

Procedure
  1. Navigate to Operator  Installed Operators.

  2. Select the rh-sso project.

  3. Select the Red Hat Single Sign-On Operator.

  4. On the Red Hat Single Sign-On Operator details page select Keycloak.

  5. Click Create instance.

  6. Click YAML view.

    The default Keycloak custom resource is as follows:

    apiVersion: keycloak.org/v1alpha1
    kind: Keycloak
    metadata:
      name: example-keycloak
      labels:
    	app: sso
      namespace: aap
    spec:
      externalAccess:
    	enabled: true
      instances: 1
  7. Click Create.

  8. When deployment is complete, you can use this credential to login to the administrative console.

  9. You can find the credentials for the administrator in the credential-<custom-resource> (example keycloak) secret in the namespace.

7.2. Creating a Keycloak realm for Ansible Automation Platform

Create a realm to manage a set of users, credentials, roles, and groups. A user belongs to and logs into a realm. Realms are isolated from one another and can only manage and authenticate the users that they control.

Procedure
  1. Navigate to Operator  Installed Operators.

  2. Select the Red Hat Single Sign-On Operator project.

  3. Select the Keycloak Realm tab and click Create Keycloak Realm.

  4. On the Keycloak Realm form, select YAML view. Edit the YAML file as follows:

    kind: KeycloakRealm
    apiVersion: keycloak.org/v1alpha1
    metadata:
      name: ansible-automation-platform-keycloakrealm
      namespace: rh-sso
      labels:
        app: sso
        realm: ansible-automation-platform
    spec:
      realm:
        id: ansible-automation-platform
        realm: ansible-automation-platform
        enabled: true
        displayName: Ansible Automation Platform
      instanceSelector:
        matchLabels:
          app: sso

    Field

    Description

    metadata.name

    Set a unique value in metadata for the name of the configuration resource (CR).

    metadata.namespace

    Set a unique value in metadata for the name of the configuration resource (CR).

    metadata.labels.app

    Set labels to a unique value. This is used when creating the client CR.

    metadata.labels.realm

    Set labels to a unique value. This is used when creating the client CR.

    spec.realm.id

    Set the realm name and id. These must be the same.

    spec.realm.realm

    Set the realm name and id. These must be the same.

    spec.realm.displayname

    Set the name to display.

  5. Click Create and wait for the process to complete.

7.3. Creating a Keycloak client

Keycloak clients authenticate hub users with Red Hat Single Sign-On. When a user authenticates the request goes through the Keycloak client. When Single Sign-On validates or issues the OAuth token, the client provides the response to automation hub and the user can log in.

Procedure
  1. Navigate to Operator  Installed Operators.

  2. Select the Red Hat Single Sign-On Operator project.

  3. Select the Keycloak Client tab and click Create Keycloak Client.

  4. On the Keycloak Realm form, select YAML view.

  5. Replace the default YAML file with the following:

    kind: KeycloakClient
    apiVersion: keycloak.org/v1alpha1
    metadata:
      name: automation-hub-client-secret
      labels:
        app: sso
        realm: ansible-automation-platform
      namespace: rh-sso
    spec:
      realmSelector:
        matchLabels:
          app: sso
          realm: ansible-automation-platform
      client:
        name: Automation Hub
        clientId: automation-hub
        secret: <client-secret>                        (1)
        clientAuthenticatorType: client-secret
        description: Client for automation hub
        attributes:
          user.info.response.signature.alg: RS256
          request.object.signature.alg: RS256
        directAccessGrantsEnabled: true
        publicClient: true
        protocol: openid-connect
        standardFlowEnabled: true
        protocolMappers:
          - config:
              access.token.claim: "true"
              claim.name: "family_name"
              id.token.claim: "true"
              jsonType.label: String
              user.attribute: lastName
              userinfo.token.claim: "true"
            consentRequired: false
            name: family name
            protocol: openid-connect
            protocolMapper: oidc-usermodel-property-mapper
          - config:
              userinfo.token.claim: "true"
              user.attribute: email
              id.token.claim: "true"
              access.token.claim: "true"
              claim.name: email
              jsonType.label: String
            name: email
            protocol: openid-connect
            protocolMapper: oidc-usermodel-property-mapper
            consentRequired: false
          - config:
              multivalued: "true"
              access.token.claim: "true"
              claim.name: "resource_access.${client_id}.roles"
              jsonType.label: String
            name: client roles
            protocol: openid-connect
            protocolMapper: oidc-usermodel-client-role-mapper
            consentRequired: false
          - config:
              userinfo.token.claim: "true"
              user.attribute: firstName
              id.token.claim: "true"
              access.token.claim: "true"
              claim.name: given_name
              jsonType.label: String
            name: given name
            protocol: openid-connect
            protocolMapper: oidc-usermodel-property-mapper
            consentRequired: false
          - config:
              id.token.claim: "true"
              access.token.claim: "true"
              userinfo.token.claim: "true"
            name: full name
            protocol: openid-connect
            protocolMapper: oidc-full-name-mapper
            consentRequired: false
          - config:
              userinfo.token.claim: "true"
              user.attribute: username
              id.token.claim: "true"
              access.token.claim: "true"
              claim.name: preferred_username
              jsonType.label: String
            name: <username>
            protocol: openid-connect
            protocolMapper: oidc-usermodel-property-mapper
            consentRequired: false
          - config:
              access.token.claim: "true"
              claim.name: "group"
              full.path: "true"
              id.token.claim: "true"
              userinfo.token.claim: "true"
            consentRequired: false
            name: group
            protocol: openid-connect
            protocolMapper: oidc-group-membership-mapper
          - config:
              multivalued: 'true'
              id.token.claim: 'true'
              access.token.claim: 'true'
              userinfo.token.claim: 'true'
              usermodel.clientRoleMapping.clientId:  'automation-hub'
              claim.name: client_roles
              jsonType.label: String
            name: client_roles
            protocolMapper: oidc-usermodel-client-role-mapper
            protocol: openid-connect
          - config:
              id.token.claim: "true"
              access.token.claim: "true"
              included.client.audience: 'automation-hub'
            protocol: openid-connect
            name: audience mapper
            protocolMapper: oidc-audience-mapper
      roles:
        - name: "hubadmin"
          description: "An administrator role for automation hub"
    1. Replace this with a unique value.

  6. Click Create and wait for the process to complete.

After you deploy automation hub, you must update the client with the “Valid Redirect URIs” and “Web Origins” as described in Updating the Red Hat Single Sign-On client Additionally, the client comes pre-configured with token mappers, however, if your authentication provider does not provide group data to Red Hat SSO, then the group mapping must be updated to reflect how that information is passed. This is commonly by user attribute.

7.4. Creating a Keycloak user

This procedure creates a Keycloak user, with the hubadmin role, that can log in to automation hub with Super Administration privileges.

Procedure
  1. Navigate to Operator  Installed Operators.

  2. Select the Red Hat Single Sign-On Operator project.

  3. Select the Keycloak Realm tab and click Create Keycloak User.

  4. On the Keycloak User form, select YAML view.

  5. Replace the default YAML file with the following:

    apiVersion: keycloak.org/v1alpha1
    kind: KeycloakUser
    metadata:
      name: hubadmin-user
      labels:
        app: sso
        realm: ansible-automation-platform
      namespace: rh-sso
    spec:
      realmSelector:
        matchLabels:
          app: sso
          realm: ansible-automation-platform
      user:
        username: hub_admin
        firstName: Hub
        lastName: Admin
        email: hub_admin@example.com
        enabled: true
        emailVerified: false
        credentials:
          - type: password
            value: <ch8ngeme>
        clientRoles:
          automation-hub:
            - hubadmin
  6. Click Create and wait for the process to complete.

When a user is created, the Operator creates a Secret containing both the username and password using the following naming pattern: credential-<realm name>-<username>-<namespace>. In this example the credential is called credential-ansible-automation-platform-hub-admin-rh-sso. When a user is created the Operator does not update the user’s password. Password changes are not reflected in the Secret.

7.5. Installing the Ansible Automation Platform Operator

Procedure
  1. Navigate to Operator  Operator Hub and search for the Ansible Automation Platform Operator.

  2. Select the Ansible Automation Platform Operator project.

  3. Click on the Operator tile.

  4. Click Install.

  5. Select a Project to install the Operator into. Red Hat recommends using the Operator recommended Namespace name.

    1. If you want to install the Operator into a project other than the recommended one, select Create Project from the drop down menu.

    2. Enter the Project name.

    3. Click Create.

  6. Click Install.

  7. When the Operator has been installed, click View Operator.

7.6. Creating a Red Hat Single Sign-On connection secret

Use this procedure to create a connection secret for Red Hat Single Sign-On.

Procedure
  1. Navigate to https://<sso_host>/auth/realms/ansible-automation-platform.

  2. Copy the public_key value.

  3. In the OpenShift Web UI, navigate to Workloads  Secrets.

  4. Select the ansible-automation-platform project.

  5. Click Create, and select From YAML.

  6. Edit the following YAML to create the secret

    apiVersion: v1
    kind: Secret
    metadata:
      name: automation-hub-sso                       (1)
      namespace: ansible-automation-platform
    type: Opaque
    stringData:
      keycloak_host: "keycloak-rh-sso.apps-crc.testing"
      keycloak_port: "443"
      keycloak_protocol: "https"
      keycloak_realm: "ansible-automation-platform"
      keycloak_admin_role: "hubadmin"
      social_auth_keycloak_key: "automation-hub"
      social_auth_keycloak_secret: "client-secret"   (2)
      social_auth_keycloak_public_key: >-            (3)
    1. This name is used in the next step when creating the automation hub instance.

    2. If the secret was changed when creating the Keycloak client for automation hub be sure to change this value to match.

    3. Enter the value of the public_key copied in Installing the Ansible Automation Platform Operator.

  7. Click Create and wait for the process to complete.

7.7. Installing automation hub using the Ansible Automation Platform Operator

Use the following procedure to install automation hub using the Ansible Automation Platform Operator.

Procedure
  1. Navigate to Operator  Installed Operators.

  2. Select the Ansible Automation Platform.

  3. Select the Automation hub tab and click Create Automation hub.

  4. Select YAML view. The YAML should be similar to:

    apiVersion: automationhub.ansible.com/v1beta1
    kind: AutomationHub
    metadata:
      name: private-ah                              (1)
      namespace: aap
    spec:
      sso_secret: automation-hub-sso                (2)
      pulp_settings:
        verify_ssl: false
      route_tls_termination_mechanism: Edge
      ingress_type: Route
      loadbalancer_port: 80
      file_storage_size: 100Gi
      image_pull_policy: IfNotPresent
      replicas: 1                                   (3)
      web_replicas: N
      task_replicas: N
      file_storage_access_mode: ReadWriteMany
      content:
        log_level: INFO
        replicas: 2
      postgres_storage_requirements:
        limits:
          storage: 50Gi
        requests:
          storage: 8Gi
      api:
        log_level: INFO
        replicas: 1
      postgres_resource_requirements:
        limits:
          cpu: 1000m
          memory: 8Gi
        requests:
          cpu: 500m
          memory: 2Gi
      loadbalancer_protocol: http
      resource_manager:
        replicas: 1
      worker:
        replicas: 2
    1. Set metadata.name to the name to use for the instance.

    2. Set spec.sso_secret to the name of the secret created in Creating a Secret to hold the Red Hat Single Sign On connection details.

    3. Scale replicas up or down for each deployment by using the web_replicas or task_replicas respectively, where N represents the number of replicas you want to create. Alternatively, you can scale all pods across both deployments by using replicas. See Scaling the Web and Task Pods independently for details.

    Note

    This YAML turns off SSL verification (ssl_verify: false). If you are not using self-signed certificates for OpenShift this setting can be removed.

  5. Click Create and wait for the process to complete.

7.8. Determining the automation hub Route

Use the following procedure to determine the hub route.

Procedure
  1. Navigate to Networking  Routes.

  2. Select the project you used for the install.

  3. Copy the location of the private-ah-web-svc service. The name of the service is different if you used a different name when creating the automation hub instance. This is used later to update the Red Hat Single Sign-On client.

7.9. Updating the Red Hat Single Sign-On client

After you install automation hub and you know the URL of the instance, you must update the Red Hat Single Sign-On to set the Valid Redirect URIs and Web Origins settings.

Procedure
  1. Navigate to Operator  Installed Operators.

  2. Select the RH-SSO project.

  3. Click Red Hat Single Sign-On Operator.

  4. Select Keycloak Client.

  5. Click on the automation-hub-client-secret client.

  6. Select YAML.

  7. Update the Client YAML to add the Valid Redirect URIs and Web Origins settings.

    redirectUris:
      - 'https://private-ah-ansible-automation-platform.apps-crc.testing/*'
    webOrigins:
      - 'https://private-ah-ansible-automation-platform.apps-crc.testing'

    Field

    Description

    redirectURIs

    This is the location determined in Determine Automation Hub Route. Be sure to add the /* to the end of the redirectUris setting.

    webOrigins

    This is the location determined in Determine Automation Hub Route.

    Note

    Ensure the indentation is correct when entering these settings.

  8. Click Save.

To verify connectivity
  1. Navigate to the automation hub route.

  2. Enter the hub_admin user credentials and sign in.

  3. Red Hat Single Sign-On processes the authentication and redirects back to automation hub.

7.10. Additional resources

8. Adding execution nodes to Ansible Automation Platform Operator

You can enable the Ansible Automation Platform Operator with execution nodes by downloading and installing the install bundle.

Prerequisites
  • An automation controller instance.

  • The receptor collection package is installed.

  • The ansible-runner package is installed.

Procedure
  1. Log in to Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform.

  2. In the navigation panel, select Automation Execution  Infrastructure  Instances.

  3. Click Add.

  4. Input the VM name in the Host Name field.

  5. Optional: Input the port number in the Listener Port field.

  6. Click Save.

  7. Click the download icon downloadnext to Install Bundle. This starts a download, take note of where you save the file

  8. Untar the gz file.

    Note

    To run the install_receptor.yml playbook you need to install the receptor collection from Ansible Galaxy: Ansible-galaxy collection install -r requirements.txt

  9. Update the playbook with your user name and SSH private key file. Note that ansible_host pre-populates with the hostname you input earlier.

    all:
       hosts:
          remote-execution:
    	        ansible_host: example_host_name
    	        ansible_user: <username> #user provided
    	        Ansible_ssh_private_key_file: ~/.ssh/id_example
  10. Open your terminal, and navigate to the directory where you saved the playbook.

  11. To install the bundle run:

    ansible-playbook install_receptor.yml -i inventory
  12. When installed you can now upgrade your execution node by downloading and re-running the playbook for the instance you created.

Verification

To verify if your playbook runs correctly on your new node run the following command:

watch podman ps
Additional resources
  • For more information about managing instance groups see the Managing Instance Groups section of the Automation Controller User Guide.

9. Ansible Automation Platform Resource Operator

9.1. Resource Operator overview

Resource Operator is a custom resource (CR) that you can deploy after you have created your platform gateway deployment. With Resource Operator you can define projects, job templates, and inventories through the use of YAML files. These YAML files are then used by automation controller to create these resources. You can create the YAML through the Form view that prompts you for keys and values for your YAML code. Alternatively, to work with YAML directly, you can select YAML view.

There are currently two custom resources provided by the Resource Operator:

  • AnsibleJob: launches a job in the automation controller instance specified in the Kubernetes secret (automation controller host URL, token).

  • JobTemplate: creates a job template in the automation controller instance specified.

9.2. Using Resource Operator

The Resource Operator itself does not do anything until the user creates an object. As soon as the user creates an AutomationControllerProject or AnsibleJob resource, the Resource Operator will start processing that object.

Prerequisites
  • Install the Kubernetes-based cluster of your choice.

  • Deploy automation controller using the automation-controller-operator.

After installing the automation-controller-resource-operator in your cluster, you must create a Kubernetes (k8s) secret with the connection information for your automation controller instance. Then you can use Resource Operator to create a k8s resource to manage your automation controller instance.

9.3. Connecting Resource Operator to platform gateway

To connect Resource Operator with platform gateway you need to create a k8s secret with the connection information for your automation controller instance.

Note
You can only create OAuth 2 Tokens for your own user through the API or UI, which means you can only configure or view tokens from your own user profile.
Procedure

To create an OAuth2 token for your user in the platform gateway UI:

  1. In the navigation panel, select Access Management  Users.

  2. Select the username you want to create a token for.

  3. Select Tokens  Automation Execution

  4. Click Create Token.

  5. You can leave Applications empty. Add a description and select Read or Write for the Scope.

Note

Make sure you provide a valid user when creating tokens. Otherwise, you will get an error message that you tried to issue the command without specifying a user, or supplying a username that does not exist.

9.4. Creating a automation controller connection secret for Resource Operator

To make your connection information available to the Resource Operator, create a k8s secret with the token and host value.

Procedure
  1. The following is an example of the YAML for the connection secret. Save the following example to a file, for example, automation-controller-connection-secret.yml.

    apiVersion: v1
    kind: Secret
    metadata:
      name: controller-access
      type: Opaque
    stringData:
      token: <generated-token>
      host: https://my-controller-host.example.com/
  2. Edit the file with your host and token value.

  3. Apply it to your cluster by running the kubectl create command:

kubectl create -f controller-connection-secret.yml

9.5. Creating an AnsibleJob

Launch an automation job on automation controller by creating an AnsibleJob resource.

Procedure
  1. Specify the connection secret and job template you want to launch.

    apiVersion: tower.ansible.com/v1alpha1
    kind: AnsibleJob
    metadata:
      generateName: demo-job-1 # generate a unique suffix per 'kubectl create'
    spec:
      connection_secret: controller-access
      job_template_name: Demo Job Template
  2. Configure features such as, inventory, extra variables, and time to live for the job.

    spec:
      connection_secret: controller-access
      job_template_name: Demo Job Template
      inventory: Demo Inventory                    # Inventory prompt on launch needs to be enabled
      runner_image: quay.io/ansible/controller-resource-runner
      runner_version: latest
      job_ttl: 100
      extra_vars:                                  # Extra variables prompt on launch needs to be enabled
         test_var: test
      job_tags: "provision,install,configuration"  # Specify tags to run
      skip_tags: "configuration,restart"           # Skip tasks with a given tag
    Note

    You must enable prompt on launch for inventories and extra variables if you are configuring those. To enable Prompt on launch, within the automation controller UI: From the Resources  Templates page, select your template and select the Prompt on launch checkbox next to Inventory and Variables sections.

  3. Launch a workflow job template with an AnsibleJob object by specifying the workflow_template_name instead of job_template_name:

    apiVersion: tower.ansible.com/v1alpha1
    kind: AnsibleJob
    metadata:
      generateName: demo-job-1 # generate a unique suffix per 'kubectl create'
    spec:
      connection_secret: controller-access
      workflow_template_name: Demo Workflow Template

9.6. Creating a JobTemplate

  • Create a job template on automation controller by creating a JobTemplate resource:

    apiVersion: tower.ansible.com/v1alpha1
    kind: JobTemplate
    metadata:
      name: jobtemplate-4
    spec:
      connection_secret: controller-access
      job_template_name: ExampleJobTemplate4
      job_template_project: Demo Project
      job_template_playbook: hello_world.yml
      job_template_inventory: Demo Inventory