diff --git a/Containers/Kubernetes/Rancher RKE2/AWX Operator/Ansible Operator.md b/Containers/Kubernetes/Rancher RKE2/AWX Operator/Ansible Operator.md index c2d1437..5d727cd 100644 --- a/Containers/Kubernetes/Rancher RKE2/AWX Operator/Ansible Operator.md +++ b/Containers/Kubernetes/Rancher RKE2/AWX Operator/Ansible Operator.md @@ -97,24 +97,23 @@ The RKE2 Cluster will translate `awx.bunny-lab.io` to the AWX web-service contai - AWX WebUI: https://awx.bunny-lab.io ![Ansible AWX WebUI](awx.png) -### Retrieving the Auto-Generated Admin Password -AWX will generate its own secure password the first time you set up AWX. This password is stored as a *secret* in Kubernetes. You can navigate to the WebUI of Rancher in the RKE2 Cluster as long as you have a DNS record matching the hostname you assigned to Rancher the first time you signed in. -- Rancher WebUI: https://awx-cluster.cyberstrawberry.net -- Alternatively, you can try running the following command to pull the admin password / secret automatically -``` -kubectl get secret awx-admin-password -o jsonpath="{.data.password}" | base64 --decode ; echo -``` + AWX will generate its own secure password the first time you set up AWX. You can run the following command to retrieve it. + ``` + kubectl get secret awx-admin-password -o jsonpath="{.data.password}" | base64 --decode ; echo + ``` + ## Troubleshooting You may wish to want to track the deployment process to verify that it is actually doing something. There are a few Kubernetes commands that can assist with this listed below. + ### Show the container deployment progress for AWX ``` kubectl get pods -n awx ``` + ### AWX-Manager Deployment Logs You may want to track the internal logs of the `awx-manager` container which is responsible for the majority of the automated deployment of AWX. You can do so by running the command below. ``` kubectl logs -n awx awx-operator-controller-manager-6c58d59d97-qj2n2 -c awx-manager ``` -:::note -The `-6c58d59d97-qj2n2` noted at the end of the Kubernetes "Pod" mentioned in the command above is randomized. You will need to change it based on the name shown when running the `kubectl get pods -n awx` command. -::: \ No newline at end of file +!!! note + The `-6c58d59d97-qj2n2` noted at the end of the Kubernetes "Pod" mentioned in the command above is randomized. You will need to change it based on the name shown when running the `kubectl get pods -n awx` command. \ No newline at end of file