Upgrading Longhorn Manager
We only support upgrading to v1.5.6 from v1.5.x or v1.4.x. For other versions, please upgrade to v1.5.x or v1.4.x first.
Engine live upgrade is supported from v1.5.x or v1.4.x to v1.5.6.
For airgap upgrades when Longhorn is installed as a Rancher app, you will need to modify the image names and remove the registry URL part.
For example, the image registry.example.com/longhorn/longhorn-manager:v1.5.6
is changed to longhorn/longhorn-manager:v1.5.6
in Longhorn images section. For more information, see the air gap installation steps here.
If Longhorn was installed using a Helm Chart, or if it was installed as Rancher catalog app, check to make sure the parameters in the default StorageClass weren’t changed. Changing the default StorageClass’s parameter might result in a chart upgrade failure. if you want to reconfigure the parameters in the StorageClass, you can copy the default StorageClass’s configuration to create another StorageClass.
The current default StorageClass has the following parameters:
parameters:
numberOfReplicas: <user specified replica count, 3 by default>
staleReplicaTimeout: "30"
fromBackup: ""
baseImage: ""
Prerequisite: Always back up volumes before upgrading. If anything goes wrong, you can restore the volume using the backup.
To upgrade the Longhorn App, make sure which Rancher UI the existing Longhorn App was installed with. There are two Rancher UIs, one is the Cluster Manager (old UI), and the other one is the Cluster Explorer (new UI). The Longhorn App in different UIs considered as two different applications by Rancher. They cannot upgrade to each other. If you installed Longhorn in the Cluster Manager, you need to use the Cluster Manager to upgrade Longhorn to a newer version, and vice versa for the Cluster Explorer.
Note: Because the Cluster Manager (old UI) is being deprecated, we provided the instruction to migrate the existing Longhorn installation to the Longhorn chart in the Cluster Explorer (new UI) here
Different Rancher UIs screenshots.
To upgrade with kubectl, run this command:
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/longhorn/longhorn/v1.5.6/deploy/longhorn.yaml
To upgrade with Helm, run this command:
helm upgrade longhorn longhorn/longhorn --namespace longhorn-system --version 1.5.6
On Kubernetes clusters managed by Rancher 2.1 or newer, the steps to upgrade the catalog app longhorn-system
are the similar to the installation steps.
Then wait for all the pods to become running and Longhorn UI working. e.g.:
$ kubectl -n longhorn-system get pod
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
engine-image-ei-4dbdb778-nw88l 1/1 Running 0 4m29s
longhorn-ui-b7c844b49-jn5g6 1/1 Running 0 75s
longhorn-manager-z2p8h 1/1 Running 0 71s
instance-manager-b34d5db1fe1e2d52bcfb308be3166cfc 1/1 Running 0 65s
longhorn-driver-deployer-6bd59c9f76-jp6pg 1/1 Running 0 75s
engine-image-ei-df38d2e5-zccq5 1/1 Running 0 65s
csi-snapshotter-588457fcdf-h2lgc 1/1 Running 0 30s
csi-resizer-6d8cf5f99f-8v4sp 1/1 Running 1 (30s ago) 37s
csi-snapshotter-588457fcdf-6pgf4 1/1 Running 0 30s
csi-provisioner-869bdc4b79-7ddwd 1/1 Running 1 (30s ago) 44s
csi-snapshotter-588457fcdf-p4kkn 1/1 Running 0 30s
csi-attacher-7bf4b7f996-mfbdn 1/1 Running 1 (30s ago) 50s
csi-provisioner-869bdc4b79-4dc7n 1/1 Running 1 (30s ago) 43s
csi-resizer-6d8cf5f99f-vnspd 1/1 Running 1 (30s ago) 37s
csi-attacher-7bf4b7f996-hrs7w 1/1 Running 1 (30s ago) 50s
csi-attacher-7bf4b7f996-rt2s9 1/1 Running 1 (30s ago) 50s
csi-resizer-6d8cf5f99f-7vv89 1/1 Running 1 (30s ago) 37s
csi-provisioner-869bdc4b79-sn6zr 1/1 Running 1 (30s ago) 43s
longhorn-csi-plugin-b2zzj 2/2 Running 0 24s
Next, upgrade Longhorn engine.
We only support upgrading to v1.5.6 from v1.4.x. For other versions, please upgrade to v1.4.x first.
If you attempt to upgrade from an unsupported version, the upgrade will fail. When encountering an upgrade failure, please consider the following scenarios to recover the state based on different upgrade methods.
When you upgrade with kubectl by running this command:
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/longhorn/longhorn/v1.5.6/deploy/longhorn.yaml
Longhorn will block the upgrade process and provide the failure reason in the logs of the longhorn-manager
pod.
During the upgrade failure, the user’s Longhorn system should remain intact without any impacts except longhorn-manager
daemon set.
To recover, you need to apply the manifest of the previously installed version using the following command:
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/longhorn/longhorn/[previous installed version]/deploy/longhorn.yaml
Besides, users might need to delete new components introduced by the new version manually.
To prevent any impact caused by failed upgrades from unsupported versions, Longhorn will automatically initiate a new job (pre-upgrade
) to verify if the upgrade path is supported before upgrading when upgrading through Helm
or Rancher App Marketplace
.
The pre-upgrade
job will block the upgrade process and provide the failure reason in the logs of the pod.
During the upgrade failure, the user’s Longhorn system should remain intact without any impacts.
To recover, you need to run the below commands to rollback to the previously installed revision:
# get previous installed Longhorn REVISION
helm history longhorn
helm rollback longhorn [REVISION]
# or
helm upgrade longhorn longhorn/longhorn --namespace longhorn-system --version [previous installed version]
To recover, you need to upgrade to the previously installed revision at Rancher App Marketplace
again.
"longhorn" is invalid: provisioner: Forbidden: updates to provisioner are forbidden.
This means there are some modifications applied to the default storageClass and you need to clean up the old one before upgrade.
To clean up the deprecated StorageClass, run this command:
kubectl delete -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/longhorn/longhorn/v1.5.6/examples/storageclass.yaml
© 2019-2024 Longhorn Authors | Documentation Distributed under CC-BY-4.0
© 2024 The Linux Foundation. All rights reserved. The Linux Foundation has registered trademarks and uses trademarks. For a list of trademarks of The Linux Foundation, please see our Trademark Usage page.