About the Migration Toolkit for Containers
MTC provides a web console and an API, based on Kubernetes custom resources, to help you control the migration and minimize application downtime.
The MTC console is installed on the target cluster by default. You can configure the Migration Toolkit for Containers Operator to install the console on an OKD 3 source cluster or on a remote cluster.
MTC supports the file system and snapshot data copy methods for migrating data from the source cluster to the target cluster. You can select a method that is suited for your environment and is supported by your storage provider.
The service catalog is deprecated in OKD 4. You can migrate workload resources provisioned with the service catalog from OKD 3 to 4 but you cannot perform service catalog actions such as , deprovision
, or on these workloads after migration. The MTC console displays a message if the service catalog resources cannot be migrated.
Term | Definition |
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Source cluster | Cluster from which the applications are migrated. |
Destination cluster[1] | Cluster to which the applications are migrated. |
Replication repository | Object storage used for copying images, volumes, and Kubernetes objects during indirect migration or for Kubernetes objects during direct volume migration or direct image migration. The replication repository must be accessible to all clusters. |
Host cluster | Cluster on which the The host cluster does not require an exposed registry route for direct image migration. |
Remote cluster | A remote cluster is usually the source cluster but this is not required. A remote cluster requires a custom resource that contains the A remote cluster requires an exposed secure registry route for direct image migration. |
Indirect migration | Images, volumes, and Kubernetes objects are copied from the source cluster to the replication repository and then from the replication repository to the destination cluster. |
Direct volume migration | Persistent volumes are copied directly from the source cluster to the destination cluster. |
Direct image migration | Images are copied directly from the source cluster to the destination cluster. |
Stage migration | Data is copied to the destination cluster without stopping the application. Running a stage migration multiple times reduces the duration of the cutover migration. |
The application is stopped on the source cluster and its resources are migrated to the destination cluster. | |
State migration | Application state is migrated by copying specific persistent volume claims and Kubernetes objects to the destination cluster. |
Rollback migration | Rollback migration rolls back a completed migration. |
1 Called the target cluster in the MTC web console.
You can migrate Kubernetes resources, persistent volume data, and internal container images to OKD 4.8 by using the Migration Toolkit for Containers (MTC) web console or the Kubernetes API.
MTC migrates the following resources:
A namespace specified in a migration plan.
Namespace-scoped resources: When the MTC migrates a namespace, it migrates all the objects and resources associated with that namespace, such as services or pods. Additionally, if a resource that exists in the namespace but not at the cluster level depends on a resource that exists at the cluster level, the MTC migrates both resources.
For example, a security context constraint (SCC) is a resource that exists at the cluster level and a service account (SA) is a resource that exists at the namespace level. If an SA exists in a namespace that the MTC migrates, the MTC automatically locates any SCCs that are linked to the SA and also migrates those SCCs. Similarly, the MTC migrates persistent volume claims that are linked to the persistent volumes of the namespace.
Custom resources (CRs) and custom resource definitions (CRDs): MTC automatically migrates CRs and CRDs at the namespace level.
Migrating an application with the MTC web console involves the following steps:
Configure the replication repository, an intermediate object storage that MTC uses to migrate data.
The source and target clusters must have network access to the replication repository during migration. In a restricted environment, you can use Multi-Cloud Object Gateway (MCG). If you are using a proxy server, you must configure it to allow network traffic between the replication repository and the clusters.
Add the source cluster to the MTC web console.
Add the replication repository to the MTC web console.
Create a migration plan, with one of the following data migration options:
Copy: MTC copies the data from the source cluster to the replication repository, and from the replication repository to the target cluster.
If you are using direct image migration or direct volume migration, the images or volumes are copied directly from the source cluster to the target cluster.
Move: MTC unmounts a remote volume, for example, NFS, from the source cluster, creates a PV resource on the target cluster pointing to the remote volume, and then mounts the remote volume on the target cluster. Applications running on the target cluster use the same remote volume that the source cluster was using. The remote volume must be accessible to the source and target clusters.
Run the migration plan, with one of the following options:
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A stage migration can be run multiple times so that most of the data is copied to the target before migration. Running one or more stage migrations reduces the duration of the cutover migration.
Cutover stops the application on the source cluster and moves the resources to the target cluster.
Optional: You can clear the Halt transactions on the source cluster during migration checkbox.
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The Migration Toolkit for Containers (MTC) supports the file system and snapshot data copy methods for migrating data from the source cluster to the target cluster. You can select a method that is suited for your environment and is supported by your storage provider.
MTC copies data files from the source cluster to the replication repository, and from there to the target cluster.
Benefits | Limitations |
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Snapshot copy method
MTC copies a snapshot of the source cluster data to the replication repository of a cloud provider. The data is restored on the target cluster.
AWS, Google Cloud Provider, and Microsoft Azure support the snapshot copy method.
You can use direct image migration (DIM) and direct volume migration (DVM) to migrate images and data directly from the source cluster to the target cluster.
If you run DVM with nodes that are in different availability zones, the migration might fail because the migrated pods cannot access the persistent volume claim.
DIM and DVM have significant performance benefits because the intermediate steps of backing up files from the source cluster to the replication repository and restoring files from the replication repository to the target cluster are skipped. The data is transferred with Rsync.
DIM and DVM have additional prerequisites.
You can use Migration Toolkit for Containers (MTC) to migrate an application’s state.
State migration copies selected persistent volume claims (PVCs) and Kubernetes objects that constitute an application’s state.
If you have a CI/CD pipeline, you can migrate stateless components by deploying them on the target cluster. Then you can migrate the application’s state by using MTC.
Do not use state migration to migrate namespaces between clusters. Use stage or cutover migration instead. |