well, sorta...ssh, which is useless considering I don't get an IP. I can't see any reason why it wouldn't get DHCP. it seems to have at least one adapter active.
I probably just need to use one of our images instead of CoreOS, but I'm not sure the reast of the yaml will work in that case. Seems like a house of cards.
definitely no IP address, but it does say that the ssh key was written. I think I couldn't ssh because wrong user, but I didn't see a place to put the user...and the script should know the user...
20h is when I start getting the cats ready for bed, which means: * moist food both
* teeth brush both (sometimes nail clipping for both since we've already got them wrangled). Brushing Odie's teeth is a two-person job. The vet is impressed with his strength, determination, and agility. I have to wear essentially falconer gloves to deal with him, but he's gotten to the point where he doesn't really fight the teeth brushing. Clipping his nails though is like trying to cage a wolverine. Not that I've ever tried to cage a wolverine, but idk what to compare it to. He screams like we are trying to kill him. He does this thing where he acts like he is going to bite, but never does...at least not us. The vet always takes him back to the rumble zone to clip his nails. I would not be surprised if he fights them harder.
* sometimes ear and chin cleaning for Garfield (very rarely do we need to clean Odie's ears).
* if there was any medicine to administer, this is when we'd do it
* Odie gets dental kibbles since his teeth are horrible.
I think it may well be amazing if you can actually get it installed. The (major?) problem is I don't have appropriate network access for our AWS or our ovirt. You would think since ovirt is a Red Hat project they could get it to work, and again, maybe it does, but I don't have any visibility into the network right now to see where things are actually failing.
If I can get the ovirt agent to install via the yaml, then perhaps I will have some insight into what is going on.
console-openshift-console.apps.<cluster_name>.<base_domain>, or the host name that is specified in the spec.route.hostname field of the consoles.operator/cluster object if the field is not empty.
Does not look like a yaml config to me (particularly after a grep -R). Where the hell is this "specified"? I mean, I know the field can be empty, but it seems to be non-existent.
I normally don't care too much about network. We have a spreadsheet and set static IPs, but something is causing my #okd install to fail and I can't find anything online to suggest why.
I *might* be able to figure out the IP addresses by using an image that has the ovirt tools, but my colleague said CentOS 7 and 8 have those and it's pretty clear than not all of our CentOS 7 and 8 images come with those preinstalled.
There is very little running on ovirt network, so we really shouldn't be getting IP address conflicts.