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CodeFlare Operator Installation
Taken from: https://github.com/opendatahub-io/distributed-workloads/blob/main/Quick-Start.md
0.1 Assumes you have an OpenShift Cluster
0.2 It assumes you're logged into the OpenShift Console of your OpenShift Cluster, to be able to install the ODH and CodeFlare operators. (Applying a subscription from the terminal is available if you don't have the OpenShift UI)
0.3 It assumes you've already used oc login
to log into your OpenShift cluster from a terminal.
0.4 It also assumes you have a default storage class already set up. For the IBM Fyre clusters, I'm using "PortWorx" storage and have defined a default storageclass:
oc get sc |grep default
portworx-watson-assistant-sc (default) kubernetes.io/portworx-volume Retain Immediate true 3h50m
1.1 Using your Console, navigate to Operators --> OperatorHub and filter for Open Data Hub Operator
1.2 Press Install
, accept all the defaults and then press Install
again.
Optionally, you could have issued the subscription from the terminal with this:
cat << EOF | kubectl apply -f -
apiVersion: operators.coreos.com/v1alpha1
kind: Subscription
metadata:
name: opendatahub-operator
namespace: openshift-operators
spec:
channel: rolling
name: opendatahub-operator
source: community-operators
sourceNamespace: openshift-marketplace
installPlanApproval: Automatic
startingCSV: opendatahub-operator.v1.6.0
EOF
1.3 Using your terminal, you can see that the ODH operator is running by:
oc get pods -n openshift-operators
and you'll see that it has:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
opendatahub-operator-controller-manager-84858b8998-7nd6q 2/2 Running 0 87s
2. Install the CodeFlare Operator into openshift-operators namespace using the OpenShift UI console:
2.1 Using your Console, navigate to Operators --> OperatorHub and filter for CodeFlare Operator
2.2 Press Install
, accept all the defaults and then press Install
again.
Optionally, you could have issued the subscription from the terminal with this:
cat << EOF | kubectl apply -f -
apiVersion: operators.coreos.com/v1alpha1
kind: Subscription
metadata:
name: codeflare-operator
namespace: openshift-operators
spec:
channel: alpha
name: codeflare-operator
source: community-operators
sourceNamespace: openshift-marketplace
installPlanApproval: Automatic
startingCSV: codeflare-operator.v0.0.3
EOF
2.3 Using your terminal, you can see that the CodeFlare operator is running by:
oc get pods -n openshift-operators
and you'll see that it has:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
codeflare-operator-controller-manager-8594c586f4-rlbbv 2/2 Running 0 100s
opendatahub-operator-controller-manager-84858b8998-7nd6q 2/2 Running 0 2m24s
3. Now with the Codeflare and ODH operators installed, you can deploy the kfdefs which will install the underlying stack to the opendatahub namespace:
3.1 Create the opendatahub namespace with the following command:
oc create ns opendatahub
3.2 Apply the odh-core kfdef with this command:
oc apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/opendatahub-io/odh-manifests/master/kfdef/odh-core.yaml -n opendatahub
3.3 Create the CodeFlare-Stack kfdef with this command:
oc apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/opendatahub-io/distributed-workloads/main/codeflare-stack-kfdef.yaml -n opendatahub
3.4 Check that everything is running in opendatahub with this command:
oc get pods -n opendatahub
It should look like this:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
data-science-pipelines-operator-controller-manager-5fbfdc8x5wnx 1/1 Running 0 3m39s
etcd-85c59bc4d6-wn777 1/1 Running 0 3m41s
grafana-deployment-6cf577dbb6-ptcjp 1/1 Running 0 3m35s
grafana-operator-controller-manager-54fbd5b876-zfbvz 2/2 Running 0 4m4s
instascale-instascale-66587c96f5-28chv 1/1 Running 0 4m34s
kuberay-operator-67d58795bf-h8hwt 1/1 Running 0 4m31s
mcad-controller-mcad-5f5cb64ddb-mhf5p 1/1 Running 0 4m34s
modelmesh-controller-5588b58d79-c46g5 1/1 Running 0 3m41s
modelmesh-controller-5588b58d79-tn4rt 1/1 Running 0 3m41s
modelmesh-controller-5588b58d79-wz82x 1/1 Running 0 3m41s
notebook-controller-deployment-5c565c4c75-2pbzg 1/1 Running 0 3m50s
odh-dashboard-7f46945556-kd7l5 2/2 Running 0 4m37s
odh-dashboard-7f46945556-vsg4m 2/2 Running 0 4m37s
odh-model-controller-79c67bc689-5559f 1/1 Running 0 3m41s
odh-model-controller-79c67bc689-9q9ss 1/1 Running 0 3m41s
odh-model-controller-79c67bc689-vnfbh 1/1 Running 0 3m41s
odh-notebook-controller-manager-5cf77fdc56-s4cm6 1/1 Running 0 3m50s
prometheus-odh-model-monitoring-0 3/3 Running 0 3m39s
prometheus-odh-model-monitoring-1 3/3 Running 0 3m39s
prometheus-odh-model-monitoring-2 3/3 Running 0 3m39s
prometheus-odh-monitoring-0 2/2 Running 0 3m58s
prometheus-odh-monitoring-1 2/2 Running 0 3m58s
prometheus-operator-779f765944-p2nbf 1/1 Running 0 4m9s
https://odh-dashboard-$ODH_NAMESPACE.apps.<your cluster's uri>
4.1 You can find it with this command:
oc get route -n opendatahub |grep dash
For example:
odh-dashboard odh-dashboard-opendatahub.apps.jimbig412.cp.fyre.ibm.com odh-dashboard 8443 reencrypt/Redirect None
4.2 Put that in your browser. For example: https://odh-dashboard-opendatahub.apps.jimbig412.cp.fyre.ibm.com
- If prompted, give it your kubeadmin user and password
- If prompted, grant it access as well
4.3 Choose CodeFlare Notebook, and click "Start server"
5.1 Click on the "+" to open up a new window, select terminal Inside this terminal, do this:
git clone https://github.com/project-codeflare/codeflare-sdk.git
Then you can close the terminal
5.2 On the far left, navigate to: codeflare-sdk --> demo-notebooks --> batch-job --> batch_mnist.ipynb