| Installation, Upgrades and updates | 
  1.28.0-1.28.600,1.29.0-1.29.100 | 
  
    Binary Authorization webook blocks CNI plugin to start causing one of nodepool failed to come up
    Under rare race conditions, an incorrect installation sequence of the Binary Authorization webhook and the gke-connect pod may cause user cluster creation to stall due to a node failing to reach a ready state. In affected scenarios, user cluster creation may stall due to a node failing to reach a ready state. If this occurs, the following message will be displayed: 
     
     Node pool is not ready: ready condition is not true: CreateOrUpdateNodePool: 2/3 replicas are ready
    
      Workaround: 
      
       - Remove the Binary Authorization configuration from your config file. For setup instructions, please refer to the Binary Authorization day 2 installation guide for GKE on VMware.
       
 
       - To unblock an unhealthy node during the current cluster creation process, temporarily remove the Binary Authorization webhook configuration in user cluster using the following command.
        
        kubectl --kubeconfig USER_KUBECONFIG delete ValidatingWebhookConfiguration binauthz-validating-webhook-configuration
        
        Once the bootstrap process is complete, you can re-add the following webhook configuration.
        apiVersion: admissionregistration.k8s.io/v1
kind: ValidatingWebhookConfiguration
metadata:
  name: binauthz-validating-webhook-configuration
webhooks:
- name: "binaryauthorization.googleapis.com"
  namespaceSelector:
    matchExpressions:
    - key: control-plane
      operator: DoesNotExist
  objectSelector:
    matchExpressions:
    - key: "image-policy.k8s.io/break-glass"
      operator: NotIn
      values: ["true"]
  rules:
  - apiGroups:
    - ""
    apiVersions:
    - v1
    operations:
    - CREATE
    - UPDATE
    resources:
    - pods
    - pods/ephemeralcontainers
  admissionReviewVersions:
  - "v1beta1"
  clientConfig:
    service:
      name: binauthz
      namespace: binauthz-system
      path: /binauthz
    # CA Bundle will be updated by the cert rotator.
    caBundle: Cg==
  timeoutSeconds: 10
  # Fail Open
  failurePolicy: "Ignore"
  sideEffects: None
        
       
     
   | 
  | Upgrades | 
  1.16, 1.28, 1.29 | 
  
    CPV2 user cluster upgrade stuck due to mirrored machine with deletionTimestamp
    During a user cluster upgrade, the upgrade operation might get stuck
    if the mirrored machine object in the user cluster contains a
    deletionTimestamp. The following error message is displayed
    if the upgrade is stuck: 
    
    machine is still in the process of being drained and subsequently removed
    
    This issue can occur if you previously attempted to repair the user
    control plane node by running gkectl delete machine against the
    mirrored machine in the user cluster. 
    Workaround: 
    
    -  Get the mirrored machine object and save it to a local file for backup
    purposes.
 
    - Run the following command to delete the finalizer from the mirrored
    machine and wait for it to be deleted from the user cluster.
    
    kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG patch machine/MACHINE_OBJECT_NAME -n USER_CLUSTER_NAME-gke-onprem-mgmt -p '{"metadata":{"finalizers":[]}}' --type=merge 
    - Follow the steps in 
    Controlplane V2 user cluster control plane node to trigger node repair
    on the control plane nodes, so that the correct source machine spec will be
    re-synced into the user cluster.
 
    - Rerun the 
gkectl upgrade cluster to resume the upgrade 
     
   | 
  
  | Configuration, Installation | 
  1.15, 1.16, 1.28, 1.29 | 
  
    Cluster creation failure due to control plane VIP in different subnet
    For HA admin cluster or ControlPlane V2 user cluster, the control plane
    VIP needs to be in the same subnet as other cluster nodes. Otherwise, cluster
    creation fails because kubelet can't communicate with the API server using
    the control plane VIP. 
    Workaround: 
    Before cluster creation, ensure that the control plane VIP is configured
    in the same subnet as the other cluster nodes. 
   | 
  | Installation, Upgrades, Updates | 
  1.29.0 - 1.29.100 | 
  
    Cluster Creation/Upgrade Failure due to non-FQDN vCenter Username
    Cluster creation/upgrade fails with an error in vsphere CSI pods indicating that the vCenter username is invalid. This occurs because the username used is not a fully qualified domain name. Error message in the vsphere-csi-controller pod as below: 
    
    GetCnsconfig failed with err: username is invalid, make sure it is a fully qualified domain username
    
    This issue only occurs in version 1.29 and later, as a validation was added to the vSphere CSI driver to enforce the use of fully qualified domain usernames. 
    Workaround: 
    Use a fully qualified domain name for the vCenter username in the credentials configuration file. For example, instead of using "username1", use "username1@example.com". 
   | 
  | Upgrades, Updates | 
  1.28.0 - 1.28.500 | 
  
    Admin cluster upgrade fails for clusters created on versions 1.10 or
    earlier
    When upgrading an admin cluster from 1.16 to 1.28, the bootstrap of the
    new admin master machine might fail to generate the control-plane
    certificate. The issue is caused by changes in how certificates are
    generated for the Kubernetes API server in version 1.28 and later. The
    issue reproduces for clusters created on versions 1.10 and earlier that
    have been upgraded all the way to 1.16 and the leaf certificate was not
    rotated before the upgrade. 
    To determine if the admin cluster upgrade failure is caused by this
    issue, do the following steps: 
    
    - Connect to the failed admin master machine by using SSH.
 
    - Open 
/var/log/startup.log and search for an error like the
    following: 
     
    
Error adding extensions from section apiserver_ext
801B3213B57F0000:error:1100007B:X509 V3 routines:v2i_AUTHORITY_KEYID:unable to get issuer keyid:../crypto/x509/v3_akid.c:177:
801B3213B57F0000:error:11000080:X509 V3 routines:X509V3_EXT_nconf_int:error in extension:../crypto/x509/v3_conf.c:48:section=apiserver_ext, name=authorityKeyIdentifier, value=keyid>
    
   Workaround: 
   
   - Connect to the admin master machine by using SSH. For details, see
   Using SSH to connect to
   an admin cluster node.
 
   - Edit 
/etc/startup/pki-yaml.sh. Find
   authorityKeyIdentifier=keyidset and change it to
   authorityKeyIdentifier=keyid,issuer in the sections for
   the following extensions:
   apiserver_ext, client_ext,
   etcd_server_ext, and kubelet_server_ext. For
   example:
      [ apiserver_ext ]
      keyUsage = critical, digitalSignature, keyEncipherment
      extendedKeyUsage=serverAuth
      basicConstraints = critical,CA:false
      authorityKeyIdentifier = keyid,issuer
      subjectAltName = @apiserver_alt_names
 
    - Save the changes to 
/etc/startup/pki-yaml.sh. 
    - Run 
/opt/bin/master.sh to generate the certificate and
    complete the machine startup. 
    - Run the 
gkectl upgrade admin again to upgrade the admin
    cluster. 
    - After the upgrade completes, rotate the leaf certificate for both admin
    and user clusters, as described in Start the rotation.
 
    - After the certificate rotation completes, make the same edits to
    
/etc/startup/pki-yaml.sh as you did previously, and run
    /opt/bin/master.sh. 
     
   | 
  
  | Configuration | 
  1.29.0 | 
  
    Incorrect warning message for clusters with Dataplane V2 enabled
    The following incorrect warning message is output when you run 
    gkectl to create, update, or upgrade a cluster that already has
    Dataplane V2 enabled: 
WARNING: Your user cluster is currently running our original architecture with 
[DataPlaneV1(calico)]. To enable new and advanced features we strongly recommend
to update it to the newer architecture with [DataPlaneV2] once our migration 
tool is available.
 
    There's a bug in gkectl which causes it to always show this warning as
    long as the dataplaneV2.forwardMode is not being used, even if
    you already have set enableDataplaneV2: true in your cluster
    configuration file. 
    Workaround: 
    You can safely ignore this warning. 
   | 
  
  | Configuration | 
  1.28.0-1.28.400, 1.29.0 | 
  
    HA admin cluster installation preflight check reports wrong number of
    required static IPs
    When you create an HA admin cluster, the preflight check displays the
    following incorrect error message: 
- Validation Category: Network Configuration
    - [FAILURE] CIDR, VIP and static IP (availability and overlapping): needed
    at least X+1 IP addresses for admin cluster with X nodes
    The requirement is incorrect for 1.28 and higher HA admin clusters
    because they no longer have add-on nodes. Additionally, because the 3
    admin cluster control plane node IPs are specified in the
    network.controlPlaneIPBlock section in the admin cluster
    configuration file, the IPs in IP block file are only needed for
    kubeception user cluster control plane nodes. 
    Workaround: 
    To skip the incorrect preflight check in a non-fixed release, add --skip-validation-net-config to the gkectl
    command. 
   | 
  
  | Operation | 
  1.29.0-1.29.100 | 
  
    Connect Agent loses connection to Google Cloud after non-HA to HA
    admin cluster migration
    If you migrated 
    from a non-HA admin cluster to an HA admin cluster, the Connect Agent
    in the admin cluster loses the connection to
    gkeconnect.googleapis.com with the error "Failed to verify JWT
    signature". This is because during the migration, the KSA signing key is
    changed, thus a re-registration is needed to refresh the OIDC JWKs.
     
    Workaround: 
    To reconnect the admin cluster to Google Cloud, do the following steps
    to trigger a re-registration: 
    First get the gke-connect deployment name: 
kubectl --kubeconfig KUBECONFIG get deployment -n gke-connect 
    Delete the gke-connect deployment: 
kubectl --kubeconfig KUBECONFIG delete deployment GKE_CONNECT_DEPLOYMENT -n gke-connect 
    Trigger a force reconcile for the onprem-admin-cluster-controller
     by adding a "force-reconcile" annotation to your onpremadmincluster CR: 
kubectl --kubeconfig KUBECONFIG patch onpremadmincluster ADMIN_CLUSTER_NAME -n kube-system --type merge -p '
metadata:
  annotations:
    onprem.cluster.gke.io/force-reconcile: "true"
'
    The idea is that the onprem-admin-cluster-controller will
    always redeploy the gke-connect deployment and re-register
    the cluster if it finds no existing gke-connect deployment
    available. 
    After the workaround (it may take a few minutes for the controller to
    finish the reconcile), you can verify that the "Failed to
    verify JWT signature" 400 error is gone from the gke-connect-agent logs: 
kubectl --kubeconfig KUBECONFIG logs GKE_CONNECT_POD_NAME -n gke-connect 
   | 
  
  | Installation, Operating system | 
  1.28.0-1.28.500, 1.29.0 | 
  
    Docker bridge IP uses 172.17.0.1/16 for COS cluster control plane nodes
    Google Distributed Cloud specifies a dedicated subnet,
    --bip=169.254.123.1/24, for the Docker bridge IP in the
    Docker configuration to prevent reserving the default
    172.17.0.1/16 subnet. However, in version 1.28.0-1.28.500 and
    1.29.0, the Docker service wasn't restarted after Google Distributed Cloud
    customized the Docker configuration because of a regression in the COS OS
    image. As a result, Docker picks the default 172.17.0.1/16 as
    its bridge IP address subnet. This might cause an IP address conflict if you already
    have a workload running within that IP address range. 
    Workaround: 
    To work around this issue, you must restart the docker service: 
sudo systemctl restart docker 
      Verify that Docker picks the correct bridge IP address: 
ip a | grep docker0 
      This solution does not persist across VM re-creations. You must reapply
      this workaround whenever VMs are re-created. 
   | 
  
  | update | 
  1.28.0-1.28.400, 1.29.0-1.29.100 | 
  
    Using multiple network interfaces with standard CNI does not work
    The standard CNI binaries bridge, ipvlan, vlan, macvlan, dhcp, tuning,
    host-local, ptp, portmap are not included in the OS images in the affected
    versions. These CNI binaries are not used by data plane v2, but can be used
    for additional network interfaces in the multiple network interface feature. 
    Multiple network interface with these CNI plugins won't work. 
    Workaround: 
    Upgrade to the version with the fix if you are using this feature. 
   | 
  
  | update | 
  1.15, 1.16, 1.28  | 
  
    Netapp trident dependencies interfere with vSphere CSI driver
    Installing multipathd on cluster nodes interferes with the vSphere CSI driver resulting in user workloads being unable to start. 
    Workaround: 
    
   | 
  
  | Updates | 
  1.15, 1.16 | 
  
    The admin cluster webhook might block updates when you
    add required configurations
    If some required configurations are empty in the admin cluster
    because validations were skipped, adding them might be blocked by the admin
    cluster webhook. For example, if the gkeConnect field wasn't
    set in an existing admin cluster, adding it with the
    gkectl update admin command might get the following error
    message: 
    
admission webhook "vonpremadmincluster.onprem.cluster.gke.io" denied the request: connect: Required value: GKE connect is required for user clusters
 
    Workaround: 
    
      - 
        For 1.15 admin clusters, run 
gkectl update admin command with --disable-admin-cluster-webhook flag. For example:
                gkectl update admin --config ADMIN_CLUSTER_CONFIG_FILE --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG --disable-admin-cluster-webhook
        
       
      - 
        For 1.16 admin clusters, run 
gkectl update admin commands with --force flag. For example:
                gkectl update admin --config ADMIN_CLUSTER_CONFIG_FILE --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG --force
        
       
     
   | 
  
  
    | Configuration | 
    1.15.0-1.15.10, 1.16.0-1.16.6, 1.28.0-1.28.200 | 
    
      controlPlaneNodePort field defaults to 30968 when
          manualLB spec is empty
      If you will be using a manual load balancer
         (loadBalancer.kind is set to "ManualLB"),
         you shouldn't need to configre the loadBalancer.manualLB
         section in the configuration file for a high availability (HA) admin
         cluster in versions 1.16 and higher. But when this section is empty,
         Google Distributed Cloud assigns default values to all NodePorts including
         manualLB.controlPlaneNodePort, which causes cluster
        creation to fail with the following error message: 
- Validation Category: Manual LB
  - [FAILURE] NodePort configuration: manualLB.controlPlaneNodePort must
   not be set when using HA admin cluster, got: 30968 
      Workaround: 
      Specify manualLB.controlPlaneNodePort: 0 in you admin cluster configuration
      for the HA admin cluster: 
loadBalancer:
  ...
  kind: ManualLB
  manualLB:
    controlPlaneNodePort: 0
  ...
     | 
  
  
  
    | Storage | 
    1.28.0-1.28.100 | 
    
      nfs-common is missing from Ubuntu OS image
      nfs-common is missing from the Ubuntu OS image which may cause
      issues for customers using NFS-dependent drivers such as NetApp. 
      If the log contains an entry like the following after upgrading to 1.28, then you are affected by this issue:
      Warning FailedMount 63s (x8 over 2m28s) kubelet MountVolume.SetUp failed for volume "pvc-xxx-yyy-zzz" : rpc error: code = Internal desc = error mounting NFS volume 10.0.0.2:/trident_pvc_xxx-yyy-zzz on mountpoint /var/lib/kubelet/pods/aaa-bbb-ccc/volumes/kubernetes.io~csi/pvc-xxx-yyy-zzz/mount: exit status 32".
      
      Workaround: 
      Make sure your nodes can download packages from Canonical. 
      Next, apply the following DaemonSet to your cluster to install nfs-common: 
      apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: DaemonSet
metadata:
  name: install-nfs-common
  labels:
    name: install-nfs-common
  namespace: kube-system
spec:
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      name: install-nfs-common
  minReadySeconds: 0
  updateStrategy:
    type: RollingUpdate
    rollingUpdate:
      maxUnavailable: 100%
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        name: install-nfs-common
    spec:
      hostPID: true
      hostIPC: true
      hostNetwork: true
      initContainers:
      - name: install-nfs-common
        image: ubuntu
        imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
        securityContext:
          privileged: true
        command:
        - chroot
        - /host
        - bash
        - -c
        args:
        - |
          apt install -y nfs-common
        volumeMounts:
        - name: host
          mountPath: /host
      containers:
      - name: pause
        image: gcr.io/gke-on-prem-release/pause-amd64:3.1-gke.5
        imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
      volumes:
      - name: host
        hostPath:
          path: /
      
     | 
  
  
  
    | Storage | 
    1.28.0-1.28.100 | 
    
      Storage policy field is missing in the admin cluster configuration template
      SPBM in admin clusters is supported in 1.28.0 and later versions. But the field
      vCenter.storagePolicyName is missing in the configuration file template. 
      Workaround: 
      Add the `vCenter.storagePolicyName` field in you admin cluster configuration file if
      you want to configure the storage policy for the admin cluster. Please refer to the instructions. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Logging and monitoring | 
    1.28.0-1.28.100 | 
    
      
       The recently added API kubernetesmetadata.googleapis.com does not support VPC-SC.
      This will cause metadata collecting agent to fail to reach this API under VPC-SC. Subsequently, metric metadata labels will be missing.  
      Workaround: 
      Set in `kube-system` namespace the CR `stackdriver` set `featureGates.disableExperimentalMetadataAgent` field to `true` by running the command  
       `kubectl -n kube-system patch stackdriver stackdriver -p '{"spec":{"featureGates":{"disableExperimentalMetadataAgent":true}}}'`  
       then run  
       `kubectl -n kube-system patch deployment stackdriver-operator -p '{"spec":{"template":{"spec":{"containers":[{"name":"stackdriver-operator","env":[{"name":"ENABLE_LEGACY_METADATA_AGENT","value":"true"}]}]}}}}'`  
     | 
  
  
  | Upgrades, Updates | 
  1.15.0-1.15.7, 1.16.0-1.16.4, 1.28.0 | 
  
    The clusterapi-controller may crash when the admin cluster and any user cluster with ControlPlane V2 enabled use different vSphere credentials
    When an admin cluster and any user cluster with ControlPlane V2 enabled use
    different vSphere credentials, e.g., after updating vSphere credentials for the
    admin cluster, the clusterapi-controller may fail to connect to the vCenter after restart. View the log of the clusterapi-controller running in the admin cluster's
    `kube-system` namespace, 
      kubectl logs -f -l component=clusterapi-controllers -c vsphere-controller-manager \
    -n kube-system --kubeconfig KUBECONFIG
    If the log contains an entry like the following, then you are affected by this issue: 
    E1214 00:02:54.095668       1 machine_controller.go:165] Error checking existence of machine instance for machine object gke-admin-node-77f48c4f7f-s8wj2: Failed to check if machine gke-admin-node-77f48c4f7f-s8wj2 exists: failed to find datacenter "VSPHERE_DATACENTER": datacenter 'VSPHERE_DATACENTER' not found 
    Workaround: 
    Update vSphere credentials so that the admin cluster and all the user clusters with Controlplane V2 enabled are using the same vSphere credentials.  
   | 
  
  
    | Logging and monitoring | 
    1.14 | 
    
      etcd high number of failed GRPC requests in Prometheus Alert Manager
      Prometheus might report alerts similar to the following example: 
Alert Name: cluster:gke-admin-test1: Etcd cluster kube-system/kube-etcd: 100% of requests for Watch failed on etcd instance etcd-test-xx-n001. 
      To check if this alert is a false positive that can be ignored,
      complete the following steps: 
      
        - Check the raw 
grpc_server_handled_total metric against
        the grpc_method given in the alert message. In this
        example, check the grpc_code label for
        Watch.
  
        You can check this metric using Cloud Monitoring with the following
        MQL query:
fetch
    k8s_container | metric 'kubernetes.io/anthos/grpc_server_handled_total' | align rate(1m) | every 1m 
        - An alert on all codes other than 
OK can be safely
        ignored if the code is not one of the following:
Unknown|FailedPrecondition|ResourceExhausted|Internal|Unavailable|DataLoss|DeadlineExceeded  
       
      
 Workaround: 
      To configure Prometheus to ignore these false positive alerts, review
      the following options: 
      
        - Silence the alert
        from the Alert Manager UI.
 
        - If silencing the alert isn't an option, review the following steps
        to suppress the false positives:
        
          - Scale down the monitoring operator to 
0 replicas so
          that the modifications can persist. 
          - Modify the 
prometheus-config configmap, and add
          grpc_method!="Watch" to the
          etcdHighNumberOfFailedGRPCRequests alert config as shown
          in the following example:
            
              - Original:
rate(grpc_server_handled_total{cluster="CLUSTER_NAME",grpc_code!="OK",job=~".*etcd.*"}[5m]) 
              - Modified:
rate(grpc_server_handled_total{cluster="CLUSTER_NAME",grpc_code=~"Unknown|FailedPrecondition|ResourceExhausted|Internal|Unavailable|DataLoss|DeadlineExceeded",grpc_method!="Watch",job=~".*etcd.*"}[5m])
          Replace the following CLUSTER_NAME with
          the name of your cluster. 
              
          - Restart the Prometheus and Alertmanager Statefulset to pick up the
          new configuration.
 
          
        - If the code falls into one of the problematic cases, then check etcd
        log and 
kube-apiserver log to debug more. 
       
     | 
  
  
  
    | Networking | 
    1.16.0-1.16.2, 1.28.0 | 
    
      Egress NAT long lived connections are dropped
      Egress NAT connections might be dropped after 5 to 10 minutes of a
      connection being established if there's no traffic. 
      As the conntrack only matters in the inbound direction (external
      connections to the cluster), this issue only happens if the connection
      doesn't transmit any information for a while and then the destination side
      transmits something. If the egress NAT'd Pod always instantiates the
      messaging, then this issue won't be seen. 
      This issue occurs because the anetd garbage collection inadvertently
      removes conntrack entries that the daemon thinks are unused.
      An upstream fix
      was recently integrated into anetd to correct the behavior. 
      
 Workaround: 
      There is no easy workaround, and we haven't seen issues in version 1.16
      from this behavior. If you notice long lived connections dropped due to
      this issue, workarounds would be to use a workload on the same node as the
      egress IP address, or to consistently send messages on the TCP
      connection. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Operation | 
      1.14, 1.15, 1.16 | 
    
    The CSR signer ignores spec.expirationSeconds when signing
        certificates
    If you create a CertificateSigningRequest (CSR) with
       expirationSeconds set, the expirationSeconds
       is ignored. 
    Workaround: 
    If you're affected by this issue, you can update your user cluster by
    adding disableNodeIDVerificationCSRSigning: true in the user
    cluster configuration file and run the gkectl update cluster
    command to update the cluster with this configuration. 
      | 
  
  
  
    | Networking, Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.16.0-1.16.3 | 
    
      User cluster load balancer validation fails for
        disable_bundled_ingress
      If you try to
      disable bundled ingress for an existing cluster, the gkectl update cluster command fails with an error
      similar to the following example: 
[FAILURE] Config: ingress IP is required in user cluster spec
 
      This error happens because gkectl checks for a load
      balancer ingress IP address during preflight checks. Although this check
      isn't required when disabling bundled ingress, the gkectl
      preflight check fails when disableBundledIngress is set to
      true. 
      
 Workaround: 
      Use the --skip-validation-load-balancer parameter when you
      update the cluster, as shown in the following example: 
gkectl update cluster \
  --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG --config USER_CLUSTER_CONFIG  \
  --skip-validation-load-balancer 
      For more information, see how to
      disable bundled ingress for an existing cluster. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
      1.13, 1.14, 1.15.0-1.15.6 | 
    
    Admin cluster updates fail after CA rotation
    If you rotate admin cluster certificate authority (CA) certificates,
    subsequent attempts to run the gkectl update admin command fail.
    The error returned is similar to the following: 
failed to get last CARotationStage: configmaps "ca-rotation-stage" not found
 
    
 Workaround: 
    If you're affected by this issue, you can update your admin cluster by
    using the --disable-update-from-checkpoint flag with the
    gkectl update admin command: 
gkectl update admin --config ADMIN_CONFIG_file \
    --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    --disable-update-from-checkpoint
    When you use the --disable-update-from-checkpoint flag, the
    update command doesn't use the checkpoint file as the source of truth during the
    cluster update. The checkpoint file is still updated for future use. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Storage | 
    1.15.0-1.15.6, 1.16.0-1.16.2 | 
    
      CSI Workload preflight check fails due to Pod startup failure
      During preflight checks, the CSI Workload validation check installs a
      Pod in the default namespace. The CSI Workload Pod validates
      that the vSphere CSI Driver is installed and can do dynamic volume
      provisioning. If this Pod doesn't start, the CSI Workload validation check
      fails. 
      
      There are a few known issues that can prevent this Pod from starting:
       
      
      - If the Pod doesn't have resources limits specified, which is the case
      for some clusters with admissions webhooks installed, the Pod doesn't start.
 
      - If Cloud Service Mesh is installed in the cluster with
      automatic Istio sidecar injection enabled in the 
default
      namespace, the CSI Workload Pod doesn't start. 
       
      If the CSI Workload Pod doesn't start, you see a timeout error like the
      following during preflight validations: 
- [FAILURE] CSI Workload: failure in CSIWorkload validation: failed to create writer Job to verify the write functionality using CSI: Job default/anthos-csi-workload-writer-<run-id> replicas are not in Succeeded phase: timed out waiting for the condition 
      To see if the failure is caused by lack of Pod resources set, run the
      following command to check the anthos-csi-workload-writer-<run-id>
      job status: 
kubectl describe job anthos-csi-workload-writer-<run-id> 
      If the resources limits aren't set properly for the CSI Workload Pod,
      the job status contains an error message like the following: 
CPU and memory resource limits is invalid, as it are not defined for container: volume-tester 
      If the CSI Workload Pod doesn't start because of Istio sidecar injection,
      you can temporarily disable the automatic Istio sidecar injection in the
      default namespace. Check the labels of the namespace and use
      the following command to delete the label that starts with istio.io/rev: 
kubectl label namespace default istio.io/rev- 
      If the Pod is misconfigured, manually verify that dynamic volume
      provisioning with the vSphere CSI Driver works: 
      
      - Create a PVC that uses the 
standard-rwo StorageClass. 
      - Create a Pod that uses the PVC.
 
      - Verify that the Pod can read/write data to the volume.
 
      - Remove the Pod and the PVC after you've verified proper operation.
 
       
      If dynamic volume provisioning with the vSphere CSI Driver works, run
      gkectl diagnose or gkectl upgrade
      with the --skip-validation-csi-workload flag to skip the CSI
      Workload check.
       
     | 
  
    
  
    | Operation | 
    1.16.0-1.16.2 | 
    
      User cluster update timeouts when admin cluster version is 1.15
      When you are logged on to a 
      user-managed admin workstation, the gkectl update cluster
      command might timeout and fail to update the user cluster. This happens if
      the admin cluster version is 1.15 and you run gkectl update admin
      before you run the gkectl update cluster. 
      When this failure happens, you see the following error when trying to update the cluster:
       
      
      Preflight check failed with failed to run server-side preflight checks: server-side preflight checks failed: timed out waiting for the condition
Preflight check failed with failed to run server-side preflight checks: server-side preflight checks failed: timed out waiting for the condition
      
      During the update of a 1.15 admin cluster, the validation-controller
      that triggers the preflight checks is removed from the cluster. If you then
      try to update the user cluster, the preflight check hangs until the
      timeout is reached.
       
      Workaround: 
      
      - Run the following command  to redeploy the 
validation-controller:
      
      gkectl prepare --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG --bundle-path BUNDLE_PATH --upgrade-platform
      
       
      - 
      After the prepare completes, run the 
gkectl update cluster again to update the user cluster
       
      
     | 
  
  
  
    | Operation | 
    1.16.0-1.16.2 | 
    
      User cluster create timeouts when admin cluster version is 1.15
      When you are logged on to a 
      user-managed admin workstation, the gkectl create cluster
      command might timeout and fail to create the user cluster. This happens if
      the admin cluster version is 1.15. 
      When this failure happens, you see the following error when trying to create the cluster:
       
      
      Preflight check failed with failed to run server-side preflight checks: server-side preflight checks failed: timed out waiting for the condition
Preflight check failed with failed to run server-side preflight checks: server-side preflight checks failed: timed out waiting for the condition
      
      Since the validation-controller was added in 1.16 then when using 
      1.15 admin cluster the validation-controller that is responsible to trigger the preflight checks is missing. Therefore, when trying to create user cluster the preflight checks
      hang till timeout is reached.
       
      Workaround: 
      
      - Run the following command  to deploy the 
validation-controller:
      
      gkectl prepare --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG --bundle-path BUNDLE_PATH --upgrade-platform
      
       
      - 
      After the prepare completes, run the 
gkectl create cluster again to create the user cluster
       
      
     | 
  
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.16.0-1.16.2 | 
    
      Admin cluster update or upgrade fails if the projects or locations of
      add-on services don't match each other
      When you upgrade an admin cluster from version 1.15.x to 1.16.x, or
      add a connect, stackdriver,
      cloudAuditLogging, or gkeOnPremAPI configuration
      when you update an admin cluster, the operation might be rejected by admin
      cluster webhook. One of the following error messages might be displayed:
       
        "projects for connect, stackdriver and cloudAuditLogging must be the
        same when specified during cluster creation." 
        "locations for connect, gkeOnPremAPI, stackdriver and
        cloudAuditLogging must be in the same region when specified during
        cluster creation." 
        "locations for stackdriver and cloudAuditLogging must be the same
        when specified during cluster creation." 
       
      
      An admin cluster update or upgrade requires the
      onprem-admin-cluster-controller to reconcile the admin
      cluster in a kind cluster. When the admin cluster state is restored in the
      kind cluster, the admin cluster webhook can't distinguish if the
      OnPremAdminCluster object is for an admin cluster creation,
      or to resume operations for an update or upgrade. Some create-only
      validations are invoked on updating and upgrading unexpectedly. 
      
 Workaround: 
      Add the
      onprem.cluster.gke.io/skip-project-location-sameness-validation: true
      annotation to the OnPremAdminCluster object: 
      
        - Edit the 
onpremadminclusters cluster resource:
kubectl edit onpremadminclusters ADMIN_CLUSTER_NAME -n kube-system –kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG 
        Replace the following:
          
            ADMIN_CLUSTER_NAME: the name of
            the admin cluster. 
            ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG: the path
            of the admin cluster kubeconfig file. 
            
        - Add the
        
onprem.cluster.gke.io/skip-project-location-sameness-validation: true
        annotation and save the custom resource. 
        - Depending on the type of admin clusters, complete one of the
        following steps:
          
            - For non-HA admin clusters with a checkpoint file: add the
            parameter 
disable-update-from-checkpoint in the
            update command, or add the parameter
            `disable-upgrade-from-checkpoint` in the upgrade command. These
            parameters are only needed for the next time that you run the
            update or upgrade command:
            
              - 
gkectl update admin --config ADMIN_CONFIG_file --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
  --disable-update-from-checkpoint  
              - 
gkectl upgrade admin --config ADMIN_CONFIG_file --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
  --disable-upgrade-from-checkpoint  
              
            - For HA admin clusters or checkpoint file is disabled:
            update or upgrade admin cluster as normal. No additional parameters
            are needed on the update or upgrade commands.
 
           
         
       
     | 
  
  
  
    | Operation | 
    1.16.0-1.16.2 | 
    
      User cluster deletion fails when using a user-managed admin workstation
      When you are logged on to a 
      user-managed admin workstation, the gkectl delete cluster
      command might timeout and fail to delete the user cluster. This happens if
      you have first run gkectl on the user-managed workstation to
      create, update, or upgrade the user cluster. When this failure happens,
      you see the following error when trying to delete the cluster:
       
      
      failed to wait for user cluster management namespace "USER_CLUSTER_NAME-gke-onprem-mgmt"
      to be deleted: timed out waiting for the condition
      
      During deletion, a cluster first deletes all of its objects. The
      deletion of the Validation objects (that were created during the create,
      update, or upgrade) are stuck at the deleting phase. This happens
      because a finalizer blocks the object's deletion, which causes
      cluster deletion to fail.
       
      Workaround: 
      
      - Get the names of all the Validation objects:
        
         kubectl  --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG get validations \
           -n USER_CLUSTER_NAME-gke-onprem-mgmt 
        
       
      - 
      For each Validation object, run the following command to remove the
      finalizer from the Validation object:
      
      kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG patch validation/VALIDATION_OBJECT_NAME \
        -n USER_CLUSTER_NAME-gke-onprem-mgmt -p '{"metadata":{"finalizers":[]}}' --type=merge
      
      
      After removing the finalizer from all Validation objects, the objects
      are removed and the user cluster delete operation completes
      automatically. You don't need to take additional action.
       
       
       
     | 
  
  
  
    | Networking | 
    1.15, 1.16 | 
    
      Egress NAT gateway traffic to external server fails
      If the source Pod and egress NAT gateway Pod are on two different
      worker nodes, traffic from the source Pod can't reach any external
      services. If the Pods are located on the same host, the connection to
      external service or application is successful. 
      This issue is caused by vSphere dropping VXLAN packets when tunnel
      aggregation is enabled. There's a known issue with NSX and VMware that
      only sends aggregated traffic on known VXLAN ports (4789). 
      
 Workaround: 
      Change the VXLAN port used by Cilium to 4789:
       
        - Edit the 
cilium-config ConfigMap:
kubectl edit cm -n kube-system cilium-config --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG  
        - Add the following to the 
cilium-config ConfigMap:
tunnel-port: 4789  
        - Restart the anetd DaemonSet:
kubectl rollout restart ds anetd -n kube-system --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG  
       
    
    This workaround reverts every time the cluster is upgraded. You must
    reconfigure after each upgrade. VMware must resolve their issue in vSphere
    for a permanent fix. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Upgrades | 
    1.15.0-1.15.4 | 
    
      Upgrading an admin cluster with always-on secrets encryption enabled fails
      The admin cluster upgrade from 1.14.x to 1.15.x with
         always-on
        secrets encryption enabled fails due to a mismatch between the
        controller-generated encryption key with the key that persists on the
        admin master data disk. The output of gkectl upgrade
        admin contains the following error message:
       
      
      E0926 14:42:21.796444   40110 console.go:93] Exit with error:
      E0926 14:42:21.796491   40110 console.go:93] Failed to upgrade the admin cluster: failed to create admin cluster: failed to wait for OnPremAdminCluster "admin-cluster-name" to become ready: failed to wait for OnPremAdminCluster "admin-cluster-name" to be ready: error: timed out waiting for the condition, message: failed to wait for OnPremAdminCluster "admin-cluster-name" to stay in ready status for duration "2m0s": OnPremAdminCluster "non-prod-admin" is not ready: ready condition is not true: CreateOrUpdateControlPlane: Creating or updating credentials for cluster control plane
      
      Running kubectl get secrets -A --kubeconfig KUBECONFIG` fails with the following error:
       
      
      Internal error occurred: unable to transform key "/registry/secrets/anthos-identity-service/ais-secret": rpc error: code = Internal desc = failed to decrypt: unknown jwk
      
      Workaround
      If you have a backup of the admin cluster, do the following steps to
         workaround the upgrade failure: 
      
        - 
          
          Disable 
secretsEncryption in the admin cluster
          configuration file, and update the cluster using the
          following command:
          gkectl update admin --config ADMIN_CLUSTER_CONFIG_FILE --kubeconfig KUBECONFIG 
         
        - 
        When the new admin master VM is created, SSH to the admin master VM,
        replace the new key on the data disk with the old one from the
        backup. The key is located at 
/opt/data/gke-k8s-kms-plugin/generatedkeys
        on the admin master.
         
        - 
        Update the kms-plugin.yaml static Pod manifest in 
/etc/kubernetes/manifests
        to update the --kek-id to match the kid
        field in the original encryption key.
         
        - 
        Restart the kms-plugin static Pod by moving the
        
/etc/kubernetes/manifests/kms-plugin.yaml to another
        directory then move it back.
         
        - 
        Resume the admin upgrade by running 
gkectl upgrade admin again.
         
       
      Preventing the upgrade failure
      If you haven't already upgraded, we recommend that you don't upgrade
         to 1.15.0-1.15.4. If you must upgrade to an affected version, do
         the following steps before upgrading the admin cluster:
       
      
        - 
          
          Backup the admin cluster.
        
 
        - 
          
          Disable 
secretsEncryption in the admin cluster
          configuration file, and update the cluster using the
          following command:
          gkectl update admin --config ADMIN_CLUSTER_CONFIG_FILE --kubeconfig KUBECONFIG 
         
        - Upgrade the admin cluster.
 
        - 
            Renable always-on secrets encryption.
 
       
     | 
  
  
  
    | Storage | 
    1.11-1.16 | 
    
      Disk errors and attach failures when using Changed Block Tracking
      (CBT)
      Google Distributed Cloud does not support Changed Block Tracking (CBT) on
      disks. Some backup software uses the CBT feature to track disk state and
      perform backups, which causes the disk to be unable to connect to a VM
      that runs Google Distributed Cloud. For more information, see the
      VMware KB
      article. 
      
 Workaround: 
      Don't back up the Google Distributed Cloud VMs, as 3rd party backup software
      might cause CBT to be enabled on their disks. It's not necessary to back
      up these VMs. 
      Don't enable CBT on the node, as this change won't persist across
      updates or upgrades. 
      If you already have disks with CBT enabled, follow the
      Resolution steps in the
      VMware KB
      articleto disable CBT on the First Class Disk. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Storage | 
    1.14, 1.15, 1.16 | 
    
      Data corruption on NFSv3 when parallel appends to a shared file are
      done from multiple hosts
      If you use Nutanix storage arrays to provide NFSv3 shares to your
      hosts, you might experience data corruption or the inability for Pods to
      run successfully. This issue is caused by a known compatibility issue
      between certain versions of VMware and Nutanix versions. For more
      information, see the associated
      VMware KB
      article. 
      
 Workaround: 
      The VMware KB article is out of date in noting that there is no
      current resolution. To resolve this issue, update to the latest version
      of ESXi on your hosts and to the latest Nutanix version on your storage
      arrays. 
     | 
  
  | Operating system | 
  1.13.10, 1.14.6, 1.15.3 | 
  
    Version mismatch between the kubelet and the Kubernetes control plane
    For certain Google Distributed Cloud releases, the kubelet running on the
    nodes uses a different version than the Kubernetes control plane. There is a
    mismatch because the kubelet binary preloaded on the OS image is using a
    different version.
     
    The following table lists the identified version mismatches: 
    
      
        | Google Distributed Cloud version | 
        kubelet version | 
        Kubernetes version | 
       
      
        | 1.13.10 | 
        v1.24.11-gke.1200 | 
        v1.24.14-gke.2100 | 
       
      
        | 1.14.6 | 
        v1.25.8-gke.1500 | 
        v1.25.10-gke.1200 | 
       
      
        | 1.15.3 | 
        v1.26.2-gke.1001 | 
        v1.26.5-gke.2100 | 
       
     
    Workaround: 
     No action is needed. The inconsistency is only between Kubernetes patch
     versions and no problems have been caused by this version skew.
      
   | 
  | Upgrades, Updates | 
  1.15.0-1.15.4 | 
  
    Upgrading or updating an admin cluster with a CA version greater than 1 fails
    When an admin cluster has a certificate authority (CA) version greater
    than 1, an update or upgrade fails due to the CA version validation in the
    webhook. The output of
    gkectl upgrade/update contains the following error message:
     
        CAVersion must start from 1
    
    Workaround: 
    
      - 
        Scale down the 
auto-resize-controller deployment in the
        admin cluster to disable node auto-resizing. This is necessary 
        because a new field introduced to the admin cluster Custom Resource in
        1.15 can cause a nil pointer error in the auto-resize-controller.
         kubectl scale deployment auto-resize-controller -n kube-system --replicas=0 --kubeconfig KUBECONFIG
       
      - 
        Run 
gkectl commands with --disable-admin-cluster-webhook flag.For example:         gkectl upgrade admin --config ADMIN_CLUSTER_CONFIG_FILE --kubeconfig KUBECONFIG --disable-admin-cluster-webhook
        
       
    | 
  | Operation | 
  1.13, 1.14.0-1.14.8, 1.15.0-1.15.4, 1.16.0-1.16.1 | 
  
    Non-HA Controlplane V2 cluster deletion stuck until timeout
    When a non-HA Controlplane V2 cluster is deleted, it is stuck at node
       deletion until it timesout. 
    Workaround: 
    If the cluster contains a StatefulSet with critical data, contact
    contact Cloud Customer Care to
    resolve this issue. 
    Otherwise, do the following steps:
       
     - Delete all cluster VMs from vSphere. You can delete the
      VMs through the vSphere UI, or run the following command:
      
      govc vm.destroy . 
     - Force delete the cluster again:
     
     gkectl delete cluster --cluster USER_CLUSTER_NAME --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG --force
       
   | 
  | Storage | 
  1.15.0+, 1.16.0+ | 
  
    Constant CNS attachvolume tasks appear every minute for in-tree PVC/PV
    after upgrading to version 1.15+
    When a cluster contains in-tree vSphere persistent volumes (for example, PVCs created with the standard StorageClass), you will observe com.vmware.cns.tasks.attachvolume tasks triggered every minute from vCenter.
     
    
 Workaround: 
     Edit the vSphere CSI feature configMap and set list-volumes to false: 
          kubectl edit configmap internal-feature-states.csi.vsphere.vmware.com -n kube-system --kubeconfig KUBECONFIG
     
     Restart the vSphere CSI controller pods: 
          kubectl rollout restart deployment vsphere-csi-controller -n kube-system --kubeconfig KUBECONFIG
    
   | 
  | Storage | 
  1.16.0 | 
  
    False warnings agaisnt PVCs
    When a cluster contains intree vSphere persistent volumes, the commands
    gkectl diagnose and gkectl upgrade might raise
    false warnings against their persistent volume claims (PVCs) when
    validating the cluster storage settings. The warning message looks like
    the following
     
        CSIPrerequisites pvc/pvc-name: PersistentVolumeClaim pvc-name bounds to an in-tree vSphere volume created before CSI migration enabled, but it doesn't have the annotation pv.kubernetes.io/migrated-to set to csi.vsphere.vmware.com after CSI migration is enabled
    
    
 Workaround: 
    Run the following command to check the annotations of a PVC with the
    above warning: 
        kubectl get pvc PVC_NAME -n PVC_NAMESPACE -oyaml --kubeconfig KUBECONFIG
    
    If the annotations field in the
    output contains the following, you can safely ignore the warning: 
          pv.kubernetes.io/bind-completed: "yes"
      pv.kubernetes.io/bound-by-controller: "yes"
      volume.beta.kubernetes.io/storage-provisioner: csi.vsphere.vmware.com
    
 | 
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.15.0+, 1.16.0+ | 
    
      Service account key rotation fails when multiple keys are expired
      If your cluster is not using a private registry, and your component
      access service account key and Logging-monitoring (or Connect-register)
      service account keys are expired, when you
      rotate the
      service account keys, gkectl update credentials
      fails with an error similar to the following:  
Error: reconciliation failed: failed to update platform: ...  
      Workaround: 
      First, rotate the component access service account key. Although the
      same error message is displayed, you should be able to rotate the other
      keys after the component access service account key rotation.
       
      If the update is still not successful, contact Cloud Customer Care
      to resolve this issue. 
     | 
  
  | Upgrades | 
  1.16.0-1.16.5 | 
  
    1.15 User master machine encounters an unexpected recreation when the user cluster controller is upgraded to 1.16
    During a user cluster upgrade, after the user cluster controller is upgraded to 1.16, if you have other 1.15 user clusters managed by the same admin cluster, their user master machine might be unexpectedly recreated. 
    There is a bug in the 1.16 user cluster controller which can trigger the 1.15 user master machine recreation. 
    The workaround that you do depends on how you encounter this issue. 
    Workaround when upgrading the user cluster using the Google Cloud console: 
    Option 1: Use a 1.16.6+ version of GKE on VMware with the fix. 
    Option 2: Do the following steps: 
    
    - Manually add the rerun annotation by the following command:
    
kubectl edit onpremuserclusters USER_CLUSTER_NAME -n USER_CLUSTER_NAME-gke-onprem-mgmt --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG 
    The rerun annotation is: 
    onprem.cluster.gke.io/server-side-preflight-rerun: true 
     
    - Monitor the upgrade progress by checking the 
status field of the OnPremUserCluster. 
     
    Workaround when upgrading the user cluster using your own admin workstation: 
    Option 1: Use a 1.16.6+ version of GKE on VMware with the fix. 
    Option 2: Do the following steps: 
    
      - Add the build info file 
/etc/cloud/build.info with the following content. This causes the preflight checks to run locally on your admin workstation rather than on the server.
      gke_on_prem_version: GKE_ON_PREM_VERSION 
For example:
gke_on_prem_version: 1.16.0-gke.669 
       
      - Rerun the upgrade command.
 
      - After the upgrade completes, delete the build.info file.
 
     
   | 
  | Create | 
  1.16.0-1.16.5, 1.28.0-1.28.100 | 
  
    Preflight check fails when the hostname isn't in the IP block file.
    During cluster creation, if you don't specify a hostname for every IP
       address in the IP block file, the preflight check fails with the
       following error message:
     multiple VMs found by DNS name  in xxx datacenter. Anthos Onprem doesn't support duplicate hostname in the same vCenter and you may want to rename/delete the existing VM.`
    
    There is a bug in the preflight check which assumes empty hostname as duplicate. 
    Workaround: 
    Option 1: Use a version with the fix. 
    Option 2: Bypass this preflight check by adding --skip-validation-net-config flag. 
    Option 3: Specify a unique hostname for each IP address in IP block file. 
   | 
| Upgrades, Updates | 
1.16 | 
Volume mount failure when upgrade/update the admin cluster if using non-HA admin cluster and control plane v1 user cluster
For a non-HA admin cluster and a control plane v1 user cluster, when you upgrade or update the admin cluster, the admin cluster master machine recreation might happen at the same time as the user cluster master machine reboot, which can surface a race condition.
This causes the user cluster control plane Pods to be unable to communicate to the admin cluster control plane, which causes volume attach issues for kube-etcd and kube-apiserver on the user cluster control plane. 
To verify the issue, run the following commands for the impacted pod: 
kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG --namespace USER_CLUSTER_NAME describe pod IMPACTED_POD_NAME 
And you will see the events like:
Events:
  Type     Reason       Age                  From               Message
  ----     ------       ----                 ----               -------
  Warning  FailedMount  101s                 kubelet            Unable to attach or mount volumes: unmounted volumes=[kube-audit], unattached volumes=[], failed to process volumes=[]: timed out waiting for the condition
  Warning  FailedMount  86s (x2 over 3m28s)  kubelet            MountVolume.SetUp failed for volume "pvc-77cd0635-57c2-4392-b191-463a45c503cb" : rpc error: code = FailedPrecondition desc = volume ID: "bd313c62-d29b-4ecd-aeda-216648b0f7dc" does not appear staged to "/var/lib/kubelet/plugins/kubernetes.io/csi/csi.vsphere.vmware.com/92435c96eca83817e70ceb8ab994707257059734826fedf0c0228db6a1929024/globalmount"
 
Workaround: 
    - 
    SSH into user control plane node, since it is control plane v1 user cluster, the user control plane node is in admin cluster.
    
 
    - 
    Restart the kubelet using the following command:
    
    sudo systemctl restart kubelet
    
    After restart, the kubelet can reconstruct stage global mount properly.
     
   
 | 
  | Upgrades, Updates | 
  1.16.0 | 
  
    Control plane node fails to be created
    During an upgrade or update of an admin cluster, a race condition might
    cause the vSphere cloud controller manager to unexpectedly delete a new
    control plane node. This causes the clusterapi-controller to be stuck
    waiting for the node to be created, and evenutally the upgrade/update
    times out. In this case, the output of the gkectl
    upgrade/update command is similar to the following: 
        controlplane 'default/gke-admin-hfzdg' is not ready: condition "Ready": condition is not ready with reason "MachineInitializing", message "Wait for the control plane machine "gke-admin-hfzdg-6598459f9zb647c8-0\" to be rebooted"...
    
    To identify the symptom, run the command below to get log in vSphere cloud controller manager in the admin cluster: 
        kubectl get pods --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n kube-system | grep vsphere-cloud-controller-manager
    kubectl logs -f vsphere-cloud-controller-manager-POD_NAME_SUFFIX --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n kube-system
    
    Here is a sample error message from the above command: 
         node name: 81ff17e25ec6-qual-335-1500f723 has a different uuid. Skip deleting this node from cache.
    
    Workaround: 
    
      - 
      Reboot the failed machine to recreate the deleted node object.
      
 
      - 
      SSH into each control plane node and restart the vSphere cloud controller manager static pod:
      
      sudo crictl ps | grep vsphere-cloud-controller-manager | awk '{print $1}'
      sudo crictl stop PREVIOUS_COMMAND_OUTPUT
      
       
      - 
      Rerun upgrade/update command.
      
 
     
 | 
  | Operation | 
  1.16 | 
  
    Duplicate hostname in the same data center causes cluster upgrade or creation failures
    Upgrading a 1.15 cluster or creating a 1.16 cluster with static IPs fails if there are duplicate
    hostnames in the same data center. This failure happens because the
    vSphere cloud controller manager fails to add an external IP and provider
    ID in the node object. This causes the cluster upgrade/create to timeout. 
    To identify the issue, get the vSphere cloud controller manager pod logs
    for the cluster. The command that you use depends on the cluster type,
    as follows: 
    
      - Admin cluster:
      
      kubectl get pods --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n kube-system | grep vsphere-cloud-controller-manager
      kubectl logs -f vsphere-cloud-controller-manager-POD_NAME_SUFFIX --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n kube-system
      
     
      - User cluster (kubeception):
      
      kubectl get pods --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n USER_CLUSTER_NAME | grep vsphere-cloud-controller-manager
      kubectl logs -f vsphere-cloud-controller-manager-POD_NAME_SUFFIX --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n USER_CLUSTER_NAME
      
     
      - User cluster: (Controlplane V2):
      
      kubectl get pods --kubeconfig USER_KUBECONFIG -n kube-system | grep vsphere-cloud-controller-manager
      kubectl logs -f vsphere-cloud-controller-manager-POD_NAME_SUFFIX --kubeconfig USER_KUBECONFIG -n kube-system
      
       
       
    Here is a sample error message: 
        I1003 17:17:46.769676       1 search.go:152] Finding node admin-vm-2 in vc=vcsa-53598.e5c235a1.asia-northeast1.gve.goog and datacenter=Datacenter
    E1003 17:17:46.771717       1 datacenter.go:111] Multiple vms found VM by DNS Name. DNS Name: admin-vm-2
    
    Check if the hostname is duplicated in the data center: 
    You can use the following approach to check if the hostname is duplicated,
    and do a workaround if needed.
              export GOVC_DATACENTER=GOVC_DATACENTER
          export GOVC_URL=GOVC_URL
          export GOVC_USERNAME=GOVC_USERNAME
          export GOVC_PASSWORD=GOVC_PASSWORD
          export GOVC_INSECURE=true
          govc find . -type m -guest.hostName HOSTNAME
          
          Example commands and output:
                    export GOVC_DATACENTER=mtv-lifecycle-vc01
          export GOVC_URL=https://mtv-lifecycle-vc01.anthos/sdk
          export GOVC_USERNAME=xxx
          export GOVC_PASSWORD=yyy
          export GOVC_INSECURE=true
          govc find . -type m -guest.hostName f8c3cd333432-lifecycle-337-xxxxxxxz
          ./vm/gke-admin-node-6b7788cd76-wkt8g
          ./vm/gke-admin-node-6b7788cd76-99sg2
          ./vm/gke-admin-master-5m2jb
          
    The workaround that you do depends on the operation that failed. 
    Workaround for upgrades: 
    Do the workaround for the applicable cluster type. 
      
        - User cluster:
          
          - 
          Update the hostname of the affected machine in user-ip-block.yaml to a unique name and trigger a forced update:
 
                    gkectl update cluster --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG --config NEW_USER_CLUSTER_CONFIG --force
          
           
          - 
          Rerun 
gkectl upgrade cluster
           
           
         
        - Admin cluster:
          
          - Update the hostname of the affected machine in admin-ip-block.yaml to a unique name and trigger a forced update:
 
                    gkectl update admin --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG --config NEW_ADMIN_CLUSTER_CONFIG --force --skip-cluster-ready-check
          
           
          - If it is a non-HA admin cluster, and you find admin master vm is using duplicate hostname, you also need to:
 
          Get admin master machine name
                    kubectl get machine --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -owide -A
          
          Update admin master machine object 
          Note: The NEW_ADMIN_MASTER_HOSTNAME should be same to what you set in admin-ip-block.yaml in step 1. 
                    kubectl patch machine ADMIN_MASTER_MACHINE_NAME --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG --type='json' -p '[{"op": "replace", "path": "/spec/providerSpec/value/networkSpec/address/hostname", "value":"NEW_ADMIN_MASTER_HOSTNAME"}]'
          
          Verify hostname is updated in admin master machine object: 
                    kubectl get machine ADMIN_MASTER_MACHINE_NAME --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -oyaml
          kubectl get machine ADMIN_MASTER_MACHINE_NAME --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -o jsonpath='{.spec.providerSpec.value.networkSpec.address.hostname}'
          
           
          - Rerun admin cluster upgrade with checkpoint disabled:
 
                    gkectl upgrade admin --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG --config ADMIN_CLUSTER_CONFIG --disable-upgrade-from-checkpoint
          
           
           
         
       
      Workaround for installations: 
      Do the workaround for the applicable cluster type. 
      
   | 
  | Operation | 
  1.16.0, 1.16.1, 1.16.2, 1.16.3 | 
  
    $ and ` are not supported in vSphere username or password
    The following operations fail when the vSphere username or password
      contains $ or `:
       
        - Upgrading a 1.15 user cluster with Controlplane V2 enabled to 1.16
 
        - Upgrading a 1.15 high-availability (HA) admin cluster to 1.16
 
        - Creating a 1.16 user cluster with Controlplane V2 enabled
 
        - Creating a 1.16 HA admin cluster
 
       
    
    Use a 1.16.4+ version of Google Distributed Cloud with the fix or perform the below workaround. The workaround that you do depends on the operation that failed. 
    Workaround for upgrades: 
    
      - Change the vCenter username or password on the vCenter side to remove
       the 
$ and `.
       
      - Update the vCenter username or password in your
        credentials
        configuration file.
      
 
      - Trigger a forced update of the cluster.
 
      
        - User cluster:
        
        gkectl update cluster --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG --config USER_CLUSTER_CONFIG --force
        
         
        - Admin cluster: 
        
        gkectl update admin --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG --config ADMIN_CLUSTER_CONFIG --force --skip-cluster-ready-check
        
         
       
     
    Workaround for installations: 
    
      - Change the vCenter username or password on the vCenter side to remove
       the 
$ and `.
       
      - Update the vCenter username or password in your
        credentials
        configuration file.
      
 
    - Do the workaround for the applicable cluster type.
 
    
     
   | 
  | Storage | 
  1.11+, 1.12+, 1.13+, 1.14+, 1.15+, 1.16 | 
  
    PVC creation failure after node is recreated with the same name
    After a node is deleted and then recreated with the same node name,
    there is a slight chance that a subsequent PersistentVolumeClaim (PVC)
    creation fails with an error like the following: 
        The object 'vim.VirtualMachine:vm-988369' has already been deleted or has not been completely created 
    This is caused by race condition where vSphere CSI controller does not delete a removed machine from its cache. 
    
 Workaround: 
    Restart the vSphere CSI controller pods: 
        kubectl rollout restart deployment vsphere-csi-controller -n kube-system --kubeconfig KUBECONFIG
    
   | 
  
  
    | Operation | 
    1.16.0 | 
    
      gkectl repair admin-master returns kubeconfig unmarshall error
      When you run the gkectl repair admin-master command on an HA
      admin cluster, gkectl returns the following error message:
     Exit with error: Failed to repair: failed to select the template: failed to get cluster name from kubeconfig, please contact Google support. failed to decode kubeconfig data: yaml: unmarshal errors:
    line 3: cannot unmarshal !!seq into map[string]*api.Cluster
    line 8: cannot unmarshal !!seq into map[string]*api.Context
  
      
 Workaround: 
      Add the --admin-master-vm-template= flag to the command and
      provide the VM template of the machine to repair:
     gkectl repair admin-master --kubeconfig=ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
      --config ADMIN_CLUSTER_CONFIG_FILE \
      --admin-master-vm-template=/DATA_CENTER/vm/VM_TEMPLATE_NAME
  
      To find the VM template of the machine: 
      
        - Go to the Hosts and Clusters page in the vSphere client.
 
        - Click VM Templates and filter by the admin cluster name.
        
You should see the three VM templates for the admin cluster. 
         
        - Copy the name VM template that matches the name of the machine
        you're repairing and use the template name in the repair command.
 
       
    gkectl repair admin-master \
      --config=/home/ubuntu/admin-cluster.yaml \
      --kubeconfig=/home/ubuntu/kubeconfig \
      --admin-master-vm-template=/atl-qual-vc07/vm/gke-admin-98g94-zx...7vx-0-tmpl
     | 
  
  | Networking | 
  1.10.0+, 1.11.0+, 1.12.0+, 1.13.0+, 1.14.0-1.14.7, 1.15.0-1.15.3, 1.16.0 | 
  
    Seesaw VM broken due to disk space low
    If you use Seesaw as the load balancer type for your cluster and you see that
    a Seesaw VM is down or keeps failing to boot, you might see the following error
    message in the vSphere console: 
        GRUB_FORCE_PARTUUID set, initrdless boot failed. Attempting with initrd
    
    This error indicates that the disk space is low on the VM because the fluent-bit
    running on the Seesaw VM is not configured with correct log rotation. 
    
 Workaround: 
    Locate the log files that consume most of the disk space using du -sh -- /var/lib/docker/containers/* | sort -rh. Clean up the log file with largest size and reboot the VM. 
    Note: If the VM is completely inaccessible, attach the disk to a working VM (e.g. admin workstation), remove the file from the attached disk, then reattach the disk back to the original Seesaw VM. 
    To prevent the issue from happening again, connect to the VM and modify the /etc/systemd/system/docker.fluent-bit.service file. Add --log-opt max-size=10m --log-opt max-file=5 in the Docker command, then run systemctl restart docker.fluent-bit.service 
   | 
  | Operation | 
  1.13, 1.14.0-1.14.6, 1.15 | 
  
    Admin SSH public key error after admin cluster upgrade or update
    When you try to upgrade (gkectl upgrade admin) or update 
    (gkectl update admin) a non-High-Availability admin cluster
    with checkpoint enabled, the upgrade or update may fail with errors like the
    following:
 Checking admin cluster certificates...FAILURE
    Reason: 20 admin cluster certificates error(s).
Unhealthy Resources:
    AdminMaster clusterCA bundle: failed to get clusterCA bundle on admin master, command [ssh -o IdentitiesOnly=yes -i admin-ssh-key -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no -o ConnectTimeout=30 ubuntu@AdminMasterIP -- sudo cat /etc/kubernetes/pki/ca-bundle.crt] failed with error: exit status 255, stderr: Authorized uses only. All activity may be monitored and reported.
    ubuntu@AdminMasterIP: Permission denied (publickey).
failed to ssh AdminMasterIP, failed with error: exit status 255, stderr: Authorized uses only. All activity may be monitored and reported.
    ubuntu@AdminMasterIP: Permission denied (publickey)
error dialing ubuntu@AdminMasterIP: failed to establish an authenticated SSH connection: ssh: handshake failed: ssh: unable to authenticate, attempted methods [none publickey]... 
    
 Workaround: 
    If you're unable to upgrade to a patch version of Google Distributed Cloud with the fix,
    contact Google Support for assistance. 
   | 
  | Upgrades | 
  1.13.0-1.13.9, 1.14.0-1.14.6, 1.15.1-1.15.2 | 
  
    Upgrading an admin cluster enrolled in the Anthos On-Prem API could fail
    When an admin cluster is enrolled in the Anthos On-Prem API, upgrading the
    admin cluster to the affected versions could fail because the fleet membership
    couldn't be updated. When this failure happens, you see the
    following error when trying to upgrade the cluster: 
        failed to register cluster: failed to apply Hub Membership: Membership API request failed: rpc error: code = InvalidArgument desc = InvalidFieldError for field endpoint.on_prem_cluster.resource_link: field cannot be updated
    
    An admin cluster is enrolled in the API when you
    explicitly enroll the
    cluster, or when you upgrade
    a user cluster using a Anthos On-Prem API client. 
    
 Workaround: 
    Unenroll the admin cluster:
        gcloud alpha container vmware admin-clusters unenroll ADMIN_CLUSTER_NAME --project CLUSTER_PROJECT --location=CLUSTER_LOCATION --allow-missing
    
    and  resume
    upgrading the admin cluster. You might see the stale `failed to
    register cluster` error temporarily. After a while, it should be updated
    automatically.
   | 
  | Upgrades, Updates | 
  1.13.0-1.13.9, 1.14.0-1.14.4, 1.15.0 | 
  
    Enrolled admin cluster's resource link annotation is not preserved
    When an admin cluster is enrolled in the Anthos On-Prem API, its resource
    link annotation is applied to the OnPremAdminCluster custom
    resource, which is not preserved during later admin cluster updates due to
    the wrong annotation key being used. This can cause the admin cluster to be
    enrolled in the Anthos On-Prem API again by mistake.
     An admin cluster is enrolled in the API when you
    explicitly enroll the
    cluster, or when you upgrade
    a user cluster using a Anthos On-Prem API client. 
    
 Workaround: 
    Unenroll the admin cluster:
        gcloud alpha container vmware admin-clusters unenroll ADMIN_CLUSTER_NAME --project CLUSTER_PROJECT --location=CLUSTER_LOCATION --allow-missing
    
    and re-enroll
    the admin cluster again.
   | 
  
  
    | Networking | 
    1.15.0-1.15.2 | 
    
      CoreDNS orderPolicy not recognized
      OrderPolicy doesn't get recognized as a parameter and
      isn't used. Instead, Google Distributed Cloud always uses Random. 
      This issue occurs because the CoreDNS template was not updated, which
      causes orderPolicy to be ignored. 
      
 Workaround: 
      Update the CoreDNS template and apply the fix. This fix persists until
      an upgrade. 
      
        - Edit the existing template:
kubectl edit cm -n kube-system coredns-template 
        Replace the contents of the template with the following:
coredns-template: |-
  .:53 {
    errors
    health {
      lameduck 5s
    }
    ready
    kubernetes cluster.local in-addr.arpa ip6.arpa {
      pods insecure
      fallthrough in-addr.arpa ip6.arpa
    }
{{- if .PrivateGoogleAccess }}
    import zones/private.Corefile
{{- end }}
{{- if .RestrictedGoogleAccess }}
    import zones/restricted.Corefile
{{- end }}
    prometheus :9153
    forward . {{ .UpstreamNameservers }} {
      max_concurrent 1000
      {{- if ne .OrderPolicy "" }}
      policy {{ .OrderPolicy }}
      {{- end }}
    }
    cache 30
{{- if .DefaultDomainQueryLogging }}
    log
{{- end }}
    loop
    reload
    loadbalance
}{{ range $i, $stubdomain := .StubDomains }}
{{ $stubdomain.Domain }}:53 {
  errors
{{- if $stubdomain.QueryLogging }}
  log
{{- end }}
  cache 30
  forward . {{ $stubdomain.Nameservers }} {
    max_concurrent 1000
    {{- if ne $.OrderPolicy "" }}
    policy {{ $.OrderPolicy }}
    {{- end }}
  }
}
{{- end }} 
     
     | 
  
  | Upgrades, Updates | 
  1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13.0-1.13.7, 1.14.0-1.14.3 | 
  
    OnPremAdminCluster status inconsistent between checkpoint and actual CR 
    Certain race conditions could cause the OnPremAdminCluster status to be inconsistent between checkpoint and actual CR. When the issue happens, you could encounter the following error when update the admin cluster after you upgraded it: 
Exit with error:
E0321 10:20:53.515562  961695 console.go:93] Failed to update the admin cluster: OnPremAdminCluster "gke-admin-rj8jr" is in the middle of a create/upgrade ("" -> "1.15.0-gke.123"), which must be completed before it can be updated
Failed to update the admin cluster: OnPremAdminCluster "gke-admin-rj8jr" is in the middle of a create/upgrade ("" -> "1.15.0-gke.123"), which must be completed before it can be updated
    To workaround this issue, you will need to either edit the checkpoint or disable the checkpoint for upgrade/update, please reach out to our support team to proceed with the workaround.
   | 
  | Operation | 
  1.13.0-1.13.9, 1.14.0-1.14.5, 1.15.0-1.15.1 | 
  
    Reconciliation process changes admin certificates on admin clusters
    Google Distributed Cloud changes the admin certificates on admin cluster control planes
    with every reconciliation process, such as during a cluster upgrade. This behavior
    increases the possibility of getting invalid certificates for your admin cluster, 
    especially for version 1.15 clusters. 
    
    If you're affected by this issue, you may encounter problems like the 
    following: 
    
    
 Workaround: 
    Upgrade to a version of Google Distributed Cloud with the fix: 
    1.13.10+, 1.14.6+, 1.15.2+. 
    If upgrading isn't feasible for you, contact Cloud Customer Care to resolve this issue. 
   | 
  
  
    | Networking, Operation | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13, 1.14 | 
    
      Anthos Network Gateway components evicted or pending due to missing
      priority class
      Network gateway Pods in kube-system might show a status of
      Pending or Evicted, as shown in the following
      condensed example output: 
$ kubectl -n kube-system get pods | grep ang-node
ang-node-bjkkc     2/2     Running     0     5d2h
ang-node-mw8cq     0/2     Evicted     0     6m5s
ang-node-zsmq7     0/2     Pending     0     7h 
      These errors indicate eviction events or an inability to schedule Pods
      due to node resources. As Anthos Network Gateway Pods have no
      PriorityClass, they have the same default priority as other workloads.
      When nodes are resource-constrained, the network gateway Pods might be
      evicted. This behavior is particularly bad for the ang-node
      DaemonSet, as those Pods must be scheduled on a specific node and can't
      migrate. 
      
 Workaround: 
      Upgrade to 1.15 or later. 
      As a short-term fix, you can manually assign a
      PriorityClass
      to the Anthos Network Gateway components. The Google Distributed Cloud controller
      overwrites these manual changes during a reconciliation process, such as
      during a cluster upgrade. 
      
        - Assign the 
system-cluster-critical PriorityClass to the
        ang-controller-manager and autoscaler cluster
        controller Deployments. 
        - Assign the 
system-node-critical PriorityClass to the
        ang-daemon node DaemonSet. 
       
     | 
  
  | Upgrades, Updates | 
  1.12, 1.13, 1.14, 1.15.0-1.15.2 | 
  
    admin cluster upgrade fails after registering the cluster with gcloud
     After you use gcloud to register an admin cluster with non-empty
     gkeConnect section, you might see the following error when trying to upgrade the cluster: 
failed to register cluster: failed to apply Hub Mem\
bership: Membership API request failed: rpc error: code = InvalidArgument desc = InvalidFieldError for field endpoint.o\
n_prem_cluster.admin_cluster: field cannot be updated 
    Delete the gke-connect namespace:
 kubectl delete ns gke-connect --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG 
    Get the admin cluster name:
kubectl get onpremadmincluster -n kube-system --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG 
    Delete the fleet membership:
gcloud container fleet memberships delete ADMIN_CLUSTER_NAME  
    and  resume upgrading the admin cluster.
   | 
  | Operation | 
  1.13.0-1.13.8, 1.14.0-1.14.5, 1.15.0-1.15.1 | 
  
    gkectl diagnose snapshot --log-since fails to limit the time window for
journalctl commands running on the cluster nodes
    This does not affect the functionality of taking a snapshot of the
    cluster, as the snapshot still includes all logs that are collected by
    default by running journalctl on the cluster nodes. Therefore,
    no debugging information is missed. 
   | 
  | Installation, Upgrades, Updates | 
  1.9+, 1.10+, 1.11+, 1.12+ | 
  
    gkectl prepare windows fails
    gkectl prepare windows fails to install Docker on
    Google Distributed Cloud versions earlier than 1.13 because
    MicrosoftDockerProvider
    is deprecated. 
    
 Workaround: 
    The general idea to workaround this issue is to upgrade to Google Distributed Cloud 1.13
    and use the 1.13 gkectl to create a Windows VM template and then create
    Windows node pools. There are two options to get to Google Distributed Cloud 1.13 from your
    current version as shown below. 
    Note: We do have options to workaround this issue in your current version
    without needing to upgrade all the way to 1.13, but it will need more manual
    steps, please reach out to our support team if you would like to consider
    this option. 
    
 Option 1: Blue/Green upgrade 
    You can create a new cluster using Google Distributed Cloud 1.13+ version with windows node pools, and
    migrate your workloads to the new cluster, then tear down the current
    cluster. It's recommended to use the latest Google Distributed Cloud minor version. 
 
    Note: This will require extra resources to provision the new cluster, but
    less downtime and disruption for existing workloads. 
    
 Option 2: Delete Windows node pools and add them back when
    upgrading to Google Distributed Cloud 1.13 
    Note: For this option, the Windows workloads will not be able to run until
    the cluster is upgraded to 1.13 and Windows node pools are added back. 
    
      - Delete existing Windows node pools by removing the windows node pools
      config from user-cluster.yaml file, then run the command:
      
gkectl update cluster --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG --config USER_CLUSTER_CONFIG_FILE  
      - Upgrade the Linux-only admin+user clusters to 1.12 following the 
      upgrade user guide for the corresponding target minor version.
 
      - (Make sure to perform this step before upgrading to 1.13) Ensure the 
enableWindowsDataplaneV2: true is configured in OnPremUserCluster CR, otherwise the cluster will keep using Docker for Windows node pools, which will not be compatible with the newly created 1.13 Windows VM template that not have Docker installed. If not configured or setting to false, update your cluster to set it to true in user-cluster.yaml, then run:
      gkectl update cluster --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG --config USER_CLUSTER_CONFIG_FILE  
      - Upgrade the Linux-only admin+user clusters to 1.13 following the 
      upgrade user guide.
 
      - Prepare Windows VM template using 1.13 gkectl:
      
gkectl prepare windows --base-vm-template BASE_WINDOWS_VM_TEMPLATE_NAME --bundle-path 1.13_BUNDLE_PATH --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG  
      - Add back the Windows node pool configuration to user-cluster.yaml with the 
OSImage field set to the newly created Windows VM template. 
      - Update the cluster to add Windows node pools
      
gkectl update cluster --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG --config USER_CLUSTER_CONFIG_FILE  
     
   | 
  | Installation, Upgrades, Updates | 
  1.13.0-1.13.9, 1.14.0-1.14.5, 1.15.0-1.15.1 | 
  
    RootDistanceMaxSec configuration not taking effect for
    ubuntu nodes
    The 5 seconds default value for RootDistanceMaxSec will be
    used on the nodes, instead of 20 seconds which should be the expected
    configuration. If you check the node startup log by SSH'ing into the VM,
    which is located at `/var/log/startup.log`, you can find the following
    error: 
+ has_systemd_unit systemd-timesyncd
/opt/bin/master.sh: line 635: has_systemd_unit: command not found 
    Using a 5 seconds RootDistanceMaxSec might cause the system
    clock to be out of sync with NTP server when the clock drift is larger than
    5 seconds. 
    
 Workaround: 
    Apply the following DaemonSet to your cluster to configure RootDistanceMaxSec: 
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: DaemonSet
metadata:
  name: change-root-distance
  namespace: kube-system
spec:
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: change-root-distance
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: change-root-distance
    spec:
      hostIPC: true
      hostPID: true
      tolerations:
      # Make sure pods gets scheduled on all nodes.
      - effect: NoSchedule
        operator: Exists
      - effect: NoExecute
        operator: Exists
      containers:
      - name: change-root-distance
        image: ubuntu
        command: ["chroot", "/host", "bash", "-c"]
        args:
        - |
          while true; do
            conf_file="/etc/systemd/timesyncd.conf.d/90-gke.conf"
            if [ -f $conf_file ] && $(grep -q "RootDistanceMaxSec=20" $conf_file); then
              echo "timesyncd has the expected RootDistanceMaxSec, skip update"
            else
              echo "updating timesyncd config to RootDistanceMaxSec=20"
              mkdir -p /etc/systemd/timesyncd.conf.d
              cat > $conf_file << EOF
          [Time]
          RootDistanceMaxSec=20
          EOF
              systemctl restart systemd-timesyncd
            fi
            sleep 600
          done
        volumeMounts:
        - name: host
          mountPath: /host
        securityContext:
          privileged: true
      volumes:
      - name: host
        hostPath:
          path: /
   | 
  | Upgrades, Updates | 
  1.12.0-1.12.6, 1.13.0-1.13.6, 1.14.0-1.14.2 | 
  
    gkectl update admin fails because of empty osImageType field
    When you use version 1.13 gkectl to update a version 1.12
    admin cluster, you might see the following error: 
Failed to update the admin cluster: updating OS image type in admin cluster
is not supported in "1.12.x-gke.x" 
    When you use gkectl update admin for version 1.13 or 1.14
    clusters, you might see the following message in the response: 
Exit with error:
Failed to update the cluster: the update contains multiple changes. Please
update only one feature at a time 
    If you check the gkectl log, you might see that the multiple
    changes include setting osImageType from an empty string to
    ubuntu_containerd. 
    These update errors are due to improper backfilling of the
    osImageType field in the admin cluster config since it was
    introduced in version 1.9. 
    
 Workaround: 
    Upgrade to a version of Google Distributed Cloud with the fix. If upgrading
    isn't feasible for you, contact Cloud Customer Care to resolve this issue. 
   | 
  | Installation, Security | 
  1.13, 1.14, 1.15, 1.16 | 
  
    SNI doesn't work on user clusters with Controlplane V2
    The ability to provide an additional serving certificate for the
    Kubernetes API server of a user cluster with
    
    authentication.sni doesn't work when the Controlplane V2 is
    enabled (
    enableControlplaneV2: true). 
    
 Workaround: 
    Until a Google Distributed Cloud patch is available with the fix, if you
    need to use SNI, disable Controlplane V2 (enableControlplaneV2: false). 
   | 
  | Installation | 
  1.0-1.11, 1.12, 1.13.0-1.13.9, 1.14.0-1.14.5, 1.15.0-1.15.1 | 
  
    $ in the private registry username causes admin control plane machine startup failure
    The admin control plane machine fails to start up when the private registry username contains $.
    When checking the /var/log/startup.log on the admin control plane machine, you see the
    following error:
 ++ REGISTRY_CA_CERT=xxx
++ REGISTRY_SERVER=xxx
/etc/startup/startup.conf: line 7: anthos: unbound variable 
    
 Workaround: 
    Use a private registry username without $, or use a version of Google Distributed Cloud with
    the fix. 
   | 
  | Upgrades, Updates | 
  1.12.0-1.12.4 | 
  
    False-positive warnings about unsupported changes during admin cluster update
    When you 
    update admin clusters, you will see the following false-positive warnings in the log, and you can ignore them.  
        console.go:47] detected unsupported changes: &v1alpha1.OnPremAdminCluster{
      ...
      - 		CARotation:        &v1alpha1.CARotationConfig{Generated: &v1alpha1.CARotationGenerated{CAVersion: 1}},
      + 		CARotation:        nil,
      ...
    }
   | 
  | Upgrades, Updates | 
  1.13.0-1.13.9, 1.14.0-1.14.5, 1.15.0-1.15.1 | 
  
    Update user cluster failed after KSA signing key rotation
    After you rotate
    KSA signing keys and subsequently 
    update a user cluster, gkectl update might fail with the
    following error message:
     Failed to apply OnPremUserCluster 'USER_CLUSTER_NAME-gke-onprem-mgmt/USER_CLUSTER_NAME':
admission webhook "vonpremusercluster.onprem.cluster.gke.io" denied the request:
requests must not decrement *v1alpha1.KSASigningKeyRotationConfig Version, old version: 2, new version: 1" 
    
 Workaround: 
    Change the version of your KSA signing key version back to 1, but retain the latest key data:
    
      - Check the secret in admin cluster under 
USER_CLUSTER_NAME namespace, and get the name of ksa-signing-key secret:
      kubectl --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n=USER_CLUSTER_NAME get secrets | grep ksa-signing-key  
      - Copy the ksa-signing-key secret, and name the copied secret as service-account-cert:
      
kubectl --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n=USER_CLUSTER_NAME get secret KSA-KEY-SECRET-NAME -oyaml | \
sed 's/ name: .*/ name: service-account-cert/' | \
kubectl --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n=USER_CLUSTER_NAME apply -f -  
      - Delete the previous ksa-signing-key secret:
      
kubectl --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n=USER_CLUSTER_NAME delete secret KSA-KEY-SECRET-NAME  
      - Update the 
data.data field in ksa-signing-key-rotation-stage configmap to '{"tokenVersion":1,"privateKeyVersion":1,"publicKeyVersions":[1]}':
      kubectl --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n=USER_CLUSTER_NAME \
edit configmap ksa-signing-key-rotation-stage  
      - Disable the validation webhook to edit the version information in the OnPremUserCluster custom resource:
      
kubectl --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG patch validatingwebhookconfiguration onprem-user-cluster-controller -p '
webhooks:
- name: vonpremnodepool.onprem.cluster.gke.io
  rules:
  - apiGroups:
    - onprem.cluster.gke.io
    apiVersions:
    - v1alpha1
    operations:
    - CREATE
    resources:
    - onpremnodepools
- name: vonpremusercluster.onprem.cluster.gke.io
  rules:
  - apiGroups:
    - onprem.cluster.gke.io
    apiVersions:
    - v1alpha1
    operations:
    - CREATE
    resources:
    - onpremuserclusters
' 
      - Update the 
spec.ksaSigningKeyRotation.generated.ksaSigningKeyRotation field to 1 in your OnPremUserCluster custom resource:
      kubectl --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n=USER_CLUSTER_NAME-gke-onprem-mgmt \
edit onpremusercluster USER_CLUSTER_NAME  
      - Wait until the target user cluster to be ready, you can check the status by:
      
kubectl --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n=USER_CLUSTER_NAME-gke-onprem-mgmt \
get onpremusercluster  
      - Restore the validation webhook for the user cluster:
      
kubectl --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG patch validatingwebhookconfiguration onprem-user-cluster-controller -p '
webhooks:
- name: vonpremnodepool.onprem.cluster.gke.io
  rules:
  - apiGroups:
    - onprem.cluster.gke.io
    apiVersions:
    - v1alpha1
    operations:
    - CREATE
    - UPDATE
    resources:
    - onpremnodepools
- name: vonpremusercluster.onprem.cluster.gke.io
  rules:
  - apiGroups:
    - onprem.cluster.gke.io
    apiVersions:
    - v1alpha1
    operations:
    - CREATE
    - UPDATE
    resources:
    - onpremuserclusters
' 
      - Avoid another KSA signing key rotation until the cluster is
      upgraded to the version with the fix.
 
     
   | 
  | Operation | 
  1.13.1+, 1.14, 1., 1.16 | 
  
    
     When you use Terraform to delete a user cluster with a F5 BIG-IP load
    balancer, the F5 BIG-IP virtual servers aren't removed after the cluster
    deletion. 
    
 Workaround: 
    To remove the F5 resources, follow the steps to
    clean up a user cluster F5 partition
    | 
  | Installation, Upgrades, Updates | 
  1.13.8, 1.14.4 | 
  
    kind cluster pulls container images from docker.io
    If you create a version 1.13.8 or version 1.14.4 admin cluster, or
    upgrade an admin cluster to version 1.13.8 or 1.14.4, the kind cluster pulls
    the following container images from docker.io:
       docker.io/kindest/kindnetd
      docker.io/kindest/local-path-provisioner
      docker.io/kindest/local-path-helper
    
    If docker.io isn't accessible from your admin workstation,
    the admin cluster creation or upgrade fails to bring up the kind cluster.
    Running the following command on the admin workstation shows the
    corresponding containers pending with ErrImagePull: 
docker exec gkectl-control-plane kubectl get pods -A 
The response contains entries like the following: 
...
kube-system         kindnet-xlhmr                             0/1
    ErrImagePull  0    3m12s
...
local-path-storage  local-path-provisioner-86666ffff6-zzqtp   0/1
    Pending       0    3m12s
...
    These container images should be preloaded in the kind cluster container
    image. However, kind v0.18.0 has
    an issue with the preloaded container images,
    which causes them to be pulled from the internet by mistake. 
    
 Workaround: 
    Run the following commands on the admin workstation, while your admin cluster
    is pending on creation or upgrade: 
docker exec gkectl-control-plane ctr -n k8s.io images tag docker.io/kindest/kindnetd:v20230330-48f316cd@sha256:c19d6362a6a928139820761475a38c24c0cf84d507b9ddf414a078cf627497af docker.io/kindest/kindnetd:v20230330-48f316cd
docker exec gkectl-control-plane ctr -n k8s.io images tag docker.io/kindest/kindnetd:v20230330-48f316cd@sha256:c19d6362a6a928139820761475a38c24c0cf84d507b9ddf414a078cf627497af docker.io/kindest/kindnetd@sha256:c19d6362a6a928139820761475a38c24c0cf84d507b9ddf414a078cf627497af
docker exec gkectl-control-plane ctr -n k8s.io images tag docker.io/kindest/local-path-helper:v20230330-48f316cd@sha256:135203f2441f916fb13dad1561d27f60a6f11f50ec288b01a7d2ee9947c36270 docker.io/kindest/local-path-helper:v20230330-48f316cd
docker exec gkectl-control-plane ctr -n k8s.io images tag docker.io/kindest/local-path-helper:v20230330-48f316cd@sha256:135203f2441f916fb13dad1561d27f60a6f11f50ec288b01a7d2ee9947c36270 docker.io/kindest/local-path-helper@sha256:135203f2441f916fb13dad1561d27f60a6f11f50ec288b01a7d2ee9947c36270
docker exec gkectl-control-plane ctr -n k8s.io images tag docker.io/kindest/local-path-provisioner:v0.0.23-kind.0@sha256:f2d0a02831ff3a03cf51343226670d5060623b43a4cfc4808bd0875b2c4b9501 docker.io/kindest/local-path-provisioner:v0.0.23-kind.0
docker exec gkectl-control-plane ctr -n k8s.io images tag docker.io/kindest/local-path-provisioner:v0.0.23-kind.0@sha256:f2d0a02831ff3a03cf51343226670d5060623b43a4cfc4808bd0875b2c4b9501 docker.io/kindest/local-path-provisioner@sha256:f2d0a02831ff3a03cf51343226670d5060623b43a4cfc4808bd0875b2c4b9501 
   | 
  | Operation | 
  1.13.0-1.13.7, 1.14.0-1.14.4, 1.15.0 | 
  
    Unsuccessful failover on HA Controlplane V2 user cluster and admin cluster when the network filters out duplicate GARP requests
    If your cluster VMs are connected with a switch that filters out duplicate GARP (gratuitous ARP) requests, the
    keepalived leader election might encounter a race condition, which causes some nodes to have incorrect ARP table entries. 
    The affected nodes can ping the control plane VIP, but a TCP connection to the control plane VIP
    will time out. 
    
 Workaround: 
    Run the following command on each control plane node of the affected cluster:
        iptables -I FORWARD -i ens192 --destination CONTROL_PLANE_VIP -j DROP
    
   | 
  | Upgrades, Updates | 
  1.13.0-1.13.7, 1.14.0-1.14.4, 1.15.0 | 
  
    vsphere-csi-controller needs be restarted after the vCenter certificate rotation 
    vsphere-csi-controller should refresh its vCenter secret after vCenter certificate rotation. However, the current system does not properly restart the pods of vsphere-csi-controller, causing vsphere-csi-controller to crash after the rotation.
    
 
 Workaround: 
    For clusters created at 1.13 and later versions, follow the instructions below to restart vsphere-csi-controller
     
    kubectl --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG rollout restart deployment vsphere-csi-controller -n kube-system 
   | 
  | Installation | 
  1.10.3-1.10.7, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13.0-1.13.1 | 
  
    Admin cluster creation does not fail on cluster registration errors
    Even when
    cluster registration fails during admin cluster creation, the command gkectl create admin does not fail on the error and might succeed. In other words, the admin cluster creation could "succeed" without being registered to a fleet.  
    To identify the symptom, you can look for the following error messages in the log of `gkectl create admin`,
    
Failed to register admin cluster 
    You can also check whether you can find the cluster among registered clusters on cloud console.
    
  Workaround: 
    For clusters created at 1.12 and later versions, follow the instructions for re-attempting the admin cluster registration after cluster creation. For clusters created at earlier versions,
       
        - 
        Append a fake key-value pair like "foo: bar" to your connect-register SA key file
        
 
        - 
        Run 
gkectl update admin to re-register the admin cluster.
         
        
    
   | 
  | Upgrades, Updates | 
  1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13.0-1.13.1 | 
  
    Admin cluster re-registration might be skipped during admin cluster upgrade
    During admin cluster upgrade, if upgrading user control plane nodes times out, the admin cluster will not be re-registered with the updated connect agent version. 
    
 Workaround: 
      Check whether the cluster shows among registered clusters.
      As an optional step, Log in to the cluster after setting up authentication. If the cluster is still registered, you might skip the following instructions for re-attempting the registration.
      For clusters upgraded to 1.12 and later versions, follow the instructions for re-attempting the admin cluster registration after cluster creation. For clusters upgraded to earlier versions,
      
        - 
        Append a fake key-value pair like "foo: bar" to your connect-register SA key file
        
 
        - 
        Run 
gkectl update admin to re-register the admin cluster.
         
        
    
   | 
  | Configuration | 
  1.15.0 | 
  
    False error message about vCenter.dataDisk
    For a high-availability admin cluster, gkectl prepare shows
    this false error message: 
    
vCenter.dataDisk must be present in the AdminCluster spec 
    
 Workaround: 
    You can safely ignore this error message. 
   | 
  | VMware | 
  1.15.0 | 
  
    Node pool creation fails because of redundant VM-Host affinity rules
    During creation of a node pool that uses
    VM-Host affinity,
    a race condition might result in multiple
    VM-Host affinity rules
    being created with the same name. This can cause node pool creation to fail. 
    
 Workaround: 
    Remove the old redundant rules so that node pool creation can proceed.
    These rules are named [USER_CLUSTER_NAME]-[HASH]. 
   | 
  
  
    | Operation | 
    1.15.0 | 
    
      gkectl repair admin-master may fail due to failed
      to delete the admin master node object and reboot the admin master VM
      
      The gkectl repair admin-master command may fail due to a
      race condition with the following error.
       Failed to repair: failed to delete the admin master node object and reboot the admin master VM 
      
      
 Workaround: 
      This command is idempotent. It can rerun safely until the command
      succeeds. 
     | 
  
| Upgrades, Updates | 
  1.15.0 | 
  
    Pods remain in Failed state afer re-creation or update of a
    control-plane node
    After you re-create or update a control-plane node, certain Pods might
    be left in the Failed state due to NodeAffinity predicate
    failure. These failed Pods don't affect normal cluster operations or health.
 
    
 Workaround: 
    You can safely ignore the failed Pods or manually delete them. 
   | 
  | Security, Configuration | 
  1.15.0-1.15.1 | 
  
    OnPremUserCluster not ready because of private registry credentials
    If you use
    prepared credentials
    and a private registry, but you haven't configured prepared credentials for
    your private registry, the OnPremUserCluster might not become ready, and
    you might see the following error message:
     
failed to check secret reference for private registry … 
    
    
 Workaround: 
    Prepare the private registry credentials for the user cluster according
    to the instructions in
    Configure prepared credentials.
     
   | 
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.15.0 | 
    
      
       
        During gkectl upgrade admin, the storage preflight check for CSI Migration verifies
        that the StorageClasses don't have parameters that are ignored after CSI Migration.
        For example, if there's a StorageClass with the parameter diskformat then
        gkectl upgrade admin flags the StorageClass and reports a failure in the preflight validation.
        Admin clusters created in Google Distributed Cloud 1.10 and before have a StorageClass with diskformat: thin
        which will fail this validation however this StorageClass still works
        fine after CSI Migration. These failures should be interpreted as warnings instead.        
       
      
        For more information, check the StorageClass parameter section in  Migrating In-Tree vSphere Volumes to vSphere Container Storage Plug-in.
       
      
 Workaround: 
      After confirming that your cluster has a StorageClass with parameters ignored after CSI Migration
      run gkectl upgrade admin with the flag --skip-validation-cluster-health. 
     | 
  
  | Storage | 
  1.15, 1.16 | 
  
    Migrated in-tree vSphere volumes using the Windows file system can't be used with vSphere CSI driver
    Under certain conditions disks can be attached as readonly to Windows
    nodes. This results in the corresponding volume being readonly inside a Pod.
    This problem is more likely to occur when a new set of nodes replaces an old
    set of nodes (for example, cluster upgrade or node pool update). Stateful
    workloads that previously worked fine might be unable to write to their
    volumes on the new set of nodes. 
     
    Workaround: 
    
       
        - 
          Get the UID of the Pod that is unable to write to its volume:
          
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG get pod \
    POD_NAME --namespace POD_NAMESPACE \
    -o=jsonpath='{.metadata.uid}{"\n"}'
         
        - 
          Use the PersistentVolumeClaim to get the name of the PersistentVolume:
          
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG get pvc \
    PVC_NAME --namespace POD_NAMESPACE \
    -o jsonpath='{.spec.volumeName}{"\n"}'
         
        - 
        Determine the name of the node where the Pod is running:
        
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIGget pods \
    --namespace POD_NAMESPACE \
    -o jsonpath='{.spec.nodeName}{"\n"}'
         
        - 
        Obtain powershell access to the node, either through SSH or the vSphere
        web interface.
        
 
        - 
        Set environment variables:
        
PS C:\Users\administrator> pvname=PV_NAME
PS C:\Users\administrator> podid=POD_UID 
         
        - Identify the disk number for the disk associated with the
        PersistentVolume:
        
PS C:\Users\administrator> disknum=(Get-Partition -Volume (Get-Volume -UniqueId ("\\?\"+(Get-Item (Get-Item
"C:\var\lib\kubelet\pods\$podid\volumes\kubernetes.io~csi\$pvname\mount").Target).Target))).DiskNumber
         
        - 
        Verify that the disk is 
readonly:
        
PS C:\Users\administrator> (Get-Disk -Number $disknum).IsReadonly 
The result should be True.
         
        - Set 
readonly to false.
PS C:\Users\administrator> Set-Disk -Number $disknum -IsReadonly $false
PS C:\Users\administrator> (Get-Disk -Number $disknum).IsReadonly 
         
        - 
        Delete the Pod so that it will get restarted:
        
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG delete pod POD_NAME \
    --namespace POD_NAMESPACE
         
        - 
        The Pod should get scheduled to the same node. But in case the Pod gets
        scheduled to a new node, you might need to repeat the preceding steps on
        the new node.
        
 
       
    
   | 
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.12, 1.13.0-1.13.7, 1.14.0-1.14.4 | 
    
      vsphere-csi-secret is not updated after gkectl update credentials vsphere --admin-cluster
      If you update the vSphere credentials for an admin cluster following 
      updating cluster credentials, 
      you might find vsphere-csi-secret under kube-system namespace in the admin cluster still uses the old credential. 
       
      Workaround: 
      
        - Get the 
vsphere-csi-secret secret name:
          kubectl --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n=kube-system get secrets | grep vsphere-csi-secret 
         
        - Update the data of the 
vsphere-csi-secret secret you got from the above step:
          kubectl --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n=kube-system patch secret CSI_SECRET_NAME -p \
  "{\"data\":{\"config\":\"$( \
    kubectl --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n=kube-system get secrets CSI_SECRET_NAME -ojsonpath='{.data.config}' \
      | base64 -d \
      | sed -e '/user/c user = \"VSPHERE_USERNAME_TO_BE_UPDATED\"' \
      | sed -e '/password/c password = \"VSPHERE_PASSWORD_TO_BE_UPDATED\"' \
      | base64 -w 0 \
    )\"}}"
         
        - Restart 
vsphere-csi-controller:
          kubectl --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n=kube-system rollout restart deployment vsphere-csi-controller 
         
        - You can track the rollout status with:
         
kubectl --kubeconfig=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n=kube-system rollout status deployment vsphere-csi-controller 
          After the deployment is successfully rolled out, the updated vsphere-csi-secret should be used by the controller.
         
       
     | 
  
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12.0-1.12.6, 1.13.0-1.13.6, 1.14.0-1.14.2  | 
    
      audit-proxy crashloop when enabling Cloud Audit Logs with gkectl update cluster
      audit-proxy might crashloop because of empty --cluster-name.
      This behavior is caused by a bug in the update logic, where the cluster name is not propagated to the
      audit-proxy pod / container manifest. 
      
 Workaround: 
      For a control plane v2 user cluster with enableControlplaneV2: true, connect to the user control plane machine using SSH,
      and update /etc/kubernetes/manifests/audit-proxy.yaml with --cluster_name=USER_CLUSTER_NAME. 
      For a control plane v1 user cluster, edit the audit-proxy container in
      the kube-apiserver statefulset to add --cluster_name=USER_CLUSTER_NAME: 
      kubectl edit statefulset kube-apiserver -n USER_CLUSTER_NAME --kubeconfig=ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.11, 1.12, 1.13.0-1.13.5, 1.14.0-1.14.1  | 
    
      An additional control plane redeployment right after gkectl upgrade cluster
      Right after gkectl upgrade cluster, the control plane pods might be re-deployed again.
      The cluster state from gkectl list clusters change from RUNNING TO RECONCILING.
      Requests to the user cluster might timeout. 
      This behavior is because of the control plane certificate rotation happens automatically after
      gkectl upgrade cluster. 
      This issue only happens to user clusters that do NOT use control plane v2. 
      
 Workaround: 
      Wait for the cluster state to change back to RUNNING again in gkectl list clusters, or
      upgrade to versions with the fix: 1.13.6+, 1.14.2+ or 1.15+. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.12.7 | 
    
      Bad release 1.12.7-gke.19  has been removed
       Google Distributed Cloud 1.12.7-gke.19 is a bad release
      and you should not use it. The artifacts have been removed
      from the Cloud Storage bucket.
      
  Workaround: 
      Use the 1.12.7-gke.20 release instead. 
     | 
  
  
  
   | Upgrades, Updates | 
   1.12.0+, 1.13.0-1.13.7, 1.14.0-1.14.3 | 
   
    gke-connect-agent 
    continues to use the older image after registry credential updated
    If you update the registry credential using one of the following methods: 
    
      gkectl update credentials componentaccess if not using private registry 
      gkectl update credentials privateregistry if using private registry 
     
    you might find gke-connect-agent continues to use the older 
    image or the gke-connect-agent pods cannot be pulled up due
    to ImagePullBackOff. 
    This issue will be fixed in Google Distributed Cloud releases 1.13.8, 
    1.14.4, and subsequent releases. 
     
    Workaround: 
    Option 1: Redeploy gke-connect-agent manually:
     
      - Delete the 
gke-connect namespace:
        kubectl --kubeconfig=KUBECONFIG delete namespace gke-connect 
       
      - Redeploy 
gke-connect-agent with the original register 
      service account key (no need to update the key):
      
      For admin cluster:
      gkectl update credentials register --kubeconfig=ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG --config ADMIN_CLUSTER_CONFIG_FILE --admin-cluster 
      For user cluster:
      gkectl update credentials register --kubeconfig=ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG --config USER_CLUSTER_CONFIG_FILE 
       
     
    
    
    Option 2: You can manually change the data of the image pull secret 
    regcred which is used by gke-connect-agent 
    deployment: 
      kubectl --kubeconfig=KUBECONFIG -n=gke-connect patch secrets regcred -p "{\"data\":{\".dockerconfigjson\":\"$(kubectl --kubeconfig=KUBECONFIG -n=kube-system get secrets private-registry-creds -ojsonpath='{.data.\.dockerconfigjson}')\"}}"
    
    Option 3: You can add the default image pull secret for your cluster in 
    the gke-connect-agent deployment by: 
    
      - Copy the default secret to 
gke-connect namespace:
        kubectl --kubeconfig=KUBECONFIG -n=kube-system get secret private-registry-creds -oyaml | sed 's/ namespace: .*/ namespace: gke-connect/' | kubectl --kubeconfig=KUBECONFIG -n=gke-connect apply -f - 
       
      - Get the 
gke-connect-agent deployment name:
        kubectl --kubeconfig=KUBECONFIG -n=gke-connect get deployment | grep gke-connect-agent 
       
      - Add the default secret to 
gke-connect-agent deployment:
        kubectl --kubeconfig=KUBECONFIG -n=gke-connect patch deployment DEPLOYMENT_NAME -p '{"spec":{"template":{"spec":{"imagePullSecrets": [{"name": "private-registry-creds"}, {"name": "regcred"}]}}}}'
       
     
     | 
  
  
  
    | Installation | 
    1.13, 1.14 | 
    
      Manual LB configuration check failure
      When you validate the configuration before creating a cluster with Manual load balancer by running gkectl check-config, then the command will fail with the following error messages. 
 - Validation Category: Manual LB    Running validation check for "Network 
configuration"...panic: runtime error: invalid memory address or nil pointer 
dereference 
      
 Workaround: 
      Option 1: You can use the patch version 1.13.7 and 1.14.4 that will include the fix. 
      Option 2: You can also run the same command to validate the configuration but skip the load balancer validation. 
gkectl check-config --skip-validation-load-balancer 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Operation | 
     1.0, 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.5, 1.6, 1.7, 1.8, 1.9, 1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13, and 1.14 | 
     
       etcd watch starvation
       Clusters running etcd version 3.4.13 or earlier may experience watch
        starvation and non-operational resource watches, which can lead to the
        following problems:
        
       
         - Pod scheduling is disrupted
 
         - Nodes are unable to register
 
         - kubelet doesn't observe pod changes
 
        
       These problems can make the cluster non-functional.
        
       This issue is fixed in Google Distributed Cloud releases 1.12.7, 1.13.6,
        1.14.3, and subsequent releases. These newer releases use etcd version
        3.4.21. All prior versions of Google Distributed Cloud are affected by
        this issue. 
         
       Workaround 
       If you can't upgrade immediately, you can mitigate the risk of
       cluster failure by reducing the number of nodes in your cluster. Remove
       nodes until the etcd_network_client_grpc_sent_bytes_total
       metric is less than 300 MBps.
        
        To view this metric in Metrics Explorer: 
       
       - Go to the Metrics Explorer in the Google Cloud console:
       
       
       
       
Go to Metrics Explorer
 
        
       - Select the Configuration tab.
       
 - Expand the Select a metric, enter 
Kubernetes Container
       in the filter bar, and then use the submenus to select the metric:
       
        - In the Active resources menu, select Kubernetes Container.
       
 
       - In the Active metric categories menu, select Anthos.
 
       - In the Active metrics menu, select 
etcd_network_client_grpc_sent_bytes_total. 
- Click Apply.
 
 
         
      | 
   
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
     1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13, and 1.14 | 
     
       GKE Identity Service can cause control plane latencies
       At cluster restarts or upgrades, GKE Identity Service can get
       overwhelmed with traffic consisting of expired JWT tokens forwarded from
       the kube-apiserver to GKE Identity Service over the
       authentication webhook. Although GKE Identity Service doesn't
       crashloop, it becomes unresponsive and ceases to serve further requests.
       This problem ultimately leads to higher control plane latencies. 
       This issue is fixed in the following Google Distributed Cloud releases: 
       
To determine if you're affected by this issue, perform the following steps: 
  - Check whether the GKE Identity Service endpoint can be reached externally:
  
curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" \
    -X POST https://CLUSTER_ENDPOINT/api/v1/namespaces/anthos-identity-service/services/https:ais:https/proxy/authenticate -d '{}'
  Replace CLUSTER_ENDPOINT
  with the control plane VIP and control plane load balancer port for your
  cluster (for example, 172.16.20.50:443). 
  If you're affected by this issue, the command returns a 400
  status code. If the request times out, restart the ais Pod and
  rerun the curl command to see if that resolves the problem. If
  you get a status code of 000, the problem has been resolved and
  you are done. If you still get a 400 status code, the
  GKE Identity Service HTTP server isn't starting. In this case, continue. 
 
  - Check the GKE Identity Service and kube-apiserver logs:
  
  - Check the GKE Identity Service log:
  
kubectl logs -f -l k8s-app=ais -n anthos-identity-service \
    --kubeconfig KUBECONFIG
  If the log contains an entry like the following, then you are affected by this issue: 
I0811 22:32:03.583448      32 authentication_plugin.cc:295] Stopping OIDC authentication for ???. Unable to verify the OIDC ID token: JWT verification failed: The JWT does not appear to be from this identity provider. To match this provider, the 'aud' claim must contain one of the following audiences: 
   
  - Check the 
kube-apiserver logs for your clusters:
  In the following commands, KUBE_APISERVER_POD is the name of the kube-apiserver Pod on the given cluster. 
  Admin cluster: 
  kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG logs \
    -n kube-system KUBE_APISERVER_POD kube-apiserver
  User cluster: 
  kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG logs \
    -n USER_CLUSTER_NAME KUBE_APISERVER_POD kube-apiserver
  If the kube-apiserver logs contain entries like the following,
  then you are affected by this issue: 
E0811 22:30:22.656085       1 webhook.go:127] Failed to make webhook authenticator request: error trying to reach service: net/http: TLS handshake timeout
E0811 22:30:22.656266       1 authentication.go:63] "Unable to authenticate the request" err="[invalid bearer token, error trying to reach service: net/http: TLS handshake timeout]" 
   
    
 
       Workaround 
       If you can't upgrade your clusters immediately to get the fix, you can
       identify and restart the offending pods as a workaround: 
       
         - Increase the GKE Identity Service verbosity level to 9:
         
kubectl patch deployment ais -n anthos-identity-service --type=json \
    -p='[{"op": "add", "path": "/spec/template/spec/containers/0/args/-", \
    "value":"--vmodule=cloud/identity/hybrid/charon/*=9"}]' \
    --kubeconfig KUBECONFIG 
         - Check the GKE Identity Service log for the invalid token context:
  
kubectl logs -f -l k8s-app=ais -n anthos-identity-service \
    --kubeconfig KUBECONFIG
          
         - To get the token payload associated with each invalid token context,
         parse each related service account secret with the following command:
kubectl -n kube-system get secret SA_SECRET \
    --kubeconfig KUBECONFIG \
    -o jsonpath='{.data.token}' | base64 --decode 
        - To decode the token and see the source pod name and namespace, copy
        the token to the debugger at jwt.io.
        
 - Restart the pods identified from the tokens.
 
        
      | 
   
  
  
    | Operation | 
    1.8, 1.9, 1.10 | 
    
      The memory usage increase issue of etcd-maintenance pods
      The etcd maintenance pods that use etcddefrag:gke_master_etcddefrag_20210211.00_p0 image are affected. The `etcddefrag` container opens a new connection to etcd server during each defrag cycle and the old connections are not cleaned up. 
      
 Workaround: 
      Option 1: Upgrade to the latest patch version from 1.8 to 1.11 which contain the fix. 
      Option 2: If you are using patch version earlier than 1.9.6 and 1.10.3, you need to scale down the etcd-maintenance pod for admin and user cluster: 
kubectl scale --replicas 0 deployment/gke-master-etcd-maintenance -n USER_CLUSTER_NAME --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG
kubectl scale --replicas 0 deployment/gke-master-etcd-maintenance -n kube-system --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Operation | 
    1.9, 1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      Miss the health checks of user cluster control plane pods
      Both the cluster health controller and the gkectl diagnose cluster command perform a set of health checks including the pods health checks across namespaces. However, they start to skip the user control plane pods by mistake. If you use the control plane v2 mode, this won't affect your cluster. 
      
 Workaround: 
      This won't affect any workload or cluster management. If you want to check the control plane pods healthiness, you can run the following commands: 
kubectl get pods -owide -n USER_CLUSTER_NAME --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.6+, 1.7+ | 
    
      1.6 and 1.7 admin cluster upgrades may be affected by the k8s.gcr.io -> registry.k8s.io redirect
      Kubernetes redirected the traffic from k8s.gcr.io to registry.k8s.io on 3/20/2023. In Google Distributed Cloud 1.6.x and 1.7.x, the admin cluster upgrades use the container image k8s.gcr.io/pause:3.2. If you use a proxy for your admin workstation and the proxy doesn't allow registry.k8s.io and the container image k8s.gcr.io/pause:3.2 is not cached locally, the admin cluster upgrades will fail when pulling the container image. 
      
 Workaround: 
      Add registry.k8s.io to the allowlist of the proxy for your admin workstation. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Networking | 
     1.10, 1.11, 1.12.0-1.12.6, 1.13.0-1.13.6, 1.14.0-1.14.2 | 
     
       Seesaw validation failure on load balancer creation
       gkectl create loadbalancer fails with the following error message: 
       - Validation Category: Seesaw LB - [FAILURE] Seesaw validation: xxx cluster lb health check failed: LB"xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx" is not healthy: Get "http://xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:xxx/healthz": dial tcpxxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:xxx: connect: no route to host 
       This is due to the seesaw group file already existing. And the preflight check
       tries to validate a non-existent seesaw load balancer. 
       Workaround: 
       Remove the existing seesaw group file for this cluster. The file name
       is seesaw-for-gke-admin.yaml for the admin cluster, and
       seesaw-for-{CLUSTER_NAME}.yaml for a user cluster. 
      | 
   
  
  
    | Networking | 
     1.14 | 
     
       Application timeouts caused by conntrack table insertion failures
       Google Distributed Cloud version 1.14 is susceptible to netfilter
       connection tracking (conntrack) table insertion failures when using
       Ubuntu or COS operating system images. Insertion failures lead to random
       application timeouts and can occur even when the conntrack table has room
       for new entries. The failures are caused by changes in
       kernel 5.15 and higher that restrict table insertions based on chain
       length.  
       To see if you are affected by this issue, you can check the in-kernel
       connection tracking system statistics on each node with the following
       command: 
       sudo conntrack -S 
       The response looks like this: 
       cpu=0       found=0 invalid=4 insert=0 insert_failed=0 drop=0 early_drop=0 error=0 search_restart=0 clash_resolve=0 chaintoolong=0 
cpu=1       found=0 invalid=0 insert=0 insert_failed=0 drop=0 early_drop=0 error=0 search_restart=0 clash_resolve=0 chaintoolong=0 
cpu=2       found=0 invalid=16 insert=0 insert_failed=0 drop=0 early_drop=0 error=0 search_restart=0 clash_resolve=0 chaintoolong=0 
cpu=3       found=0 invalid=13 insert=0 insert_failed=0 drop=0 early_drop=0 error=0 search_restart=0 clash_resolve=0 chaintoolong=0 
cpu=4       found=0 invalid=9 insert=0 insert_failed=0 drop=0 early_drop=0 error=0 search_restart=0 clash_resolve=0 chaintoolong=0 
cpu=5       found=0 invalid=1 insert=0 insert_failed=0 drop=0 early_drop=0 error=519 search_restart=0 clash_resolve=126 chaintoolong=0 
... 
       If a chaintoolong value in the response is a non-zero
       number, you're affected by this issue. 
       Workaround 
       The short term mitigation is to increase the size of both the netfiler
       hash table (nf_conntrack_buckets) and the netfilter
       connection tracking table (nf_conntrack_max). Use the
       following commands on each cluster node to increase the size of the
       tables: 
       sysctl -w net.netfilter.nf_conntrack_buckets=TABLE_SIZE
sysctl -w net.netfilter.nf_conntrack_max=TABLE_SIZE 
     Replace TABLE_SIZE with new size in bytes. The
     default table size value is 262144. We suggest that you set a
     value equal to 65,536 times the number of cores on the node. For example,
     if your node has eight cores, set the table size to 524288. 
      | 
   
   
  
  
   | Networking | 
   1.13.0-1.13.2 | 
   
    calico-typha or anetd-operator crash loop on Windows nodes with Controlplane v2
    With Controlplane v2 or a new installation model, calico-typha or anetd-operator might be scheduled to Windows nodes and get into crash loop. 
    The reason is that the two deployments tolerate all taints including Windows node taint. 
    
 Workaround: 
    Either upgrade to 1.13.3+, or run the following commands to edit the `calico-typha` or `anetd-operator` deployment: 
        # If dataplane v2 is not used.
    kubectl edit deployment -n kube-system calico-typha --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG
    # If dataplane v2 is used.
    kubectl edit deployment -n kube-system anetd-operator --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG
    
    Remove the following spec.template.spec.tolerations: 
        - effect: NoSchedule
      operator: Exists
    - effect: NoExecute
      operator: Exists
    
    And add the following toleration: 
        - key: node-role.kubernetes.io/master
      operator: Exists
    
     | 
  
  
  
    | Configuration | 
    1.14.0-1.14.2 | 
    
      User cluster private registry credential file cannot be loaded
      You might not be able to create a user cluster if you specify the 
      privateRegistry section with credential fileRef.
      Preflight might fail with the following message:
 
[FAILURE] Docker registry access: Failed to login.
 
    
 Workaround: 
    
      - If you did not intend to specify the field or you want to use the same 
      private registry credential as admin cluster, you can simply remove or 
      comment the 
privateRegistry section in your user cluster 
      config file. 
      - If you want to use a specific private registry credential for your
      user cluster, you may temporarily specify the 
privateRegistry 
      section this way:
privateRegistry:
  address: PRIVATE_REGISTRY_ADDRESS
  credentials:
    username: PRIVATE_REGISTRY_USERNAME
    password: PRIVATE_REGISTRY_PASSWORD
  caCertPath: PRIVATE_REGISTRY_CACERT_PATH
      (NOTE: This is only a temporarily fix and these fields are already 
      deprecated, consider using the credential file when upgrading to 1.14.3+.)
 
     
     | 
  
  
  
   | Operations | 
   1.10+ | 
   
    Cloud Service Mesh and other service meshes not compatible with Dataplane v2
    Dataplane V2 takes over load balancing and creates a kernel socket instead of a packet based DNAT. This means that Cloud Service Mesh
    cannot do packet inspection as the pod is bypassed and never uses IPTables. 
    This manifests in kube-proxy free mode by loss of connectivity or incorrect traffic routing for services with Cloud Service Mesh as the sidecar cannot do packet inspection. 
    This issue is present on all versions of Google Distributed Cloud 1.10, however some newer versions of 1.10 (1.10.2+) have a workaround. 
    
 Workaround: 
    Either upgrade to 1.11 for full compatibility or if running 1.10.2 or later, run: 
        kubectl edit cm -n kube-system cilium-config --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG
    
    Add bpf-lb-sock-hostns-only: true to the configmap and then restart the anetd daemonset: 
          kubectl rollout restart ds anetd -n kube-system --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG
    
    
     | 
  
  
  
    | Storage | 
    1.12+, 1.13.3 | 
    
      kube-controller-manager might detach persistent volumes
      forcefully after 6 minutes
      kube-controller-manager might timeout when detaching
      PV/PVCs after 6 minutes, and forcefully detach the PV/PVCs. Detailed logs
      from kube-controller-manager show events similar to the
      following: 
$ cat kubectl_logs_kube-controller-manager-xxxx | grep "DetachVolume started" | grep expired
kubectl_logs_kube-controller-manager-gke-admin-master-4mgvr_--container_kube-controller-manager_--kubeconfig_kubeconfig_--request-timeout_30s_--namespace_kube-system_--timestamps:2023-01-05T16:29:25.883577880Z W0105 16:29:25.883446       1 reconciler.go:224] attacherDetacher.DetachVolume started for volume "pvc-8bb4780b-ba8e-45f4-a95b-19397a66ce16" (UniqueName: "kubernetes.io/csi/csi.vsphere.vmware.com^126f913b-4029-4055-91f7-beee75d5d34a") on node "sandbox-corp-ant-antho-0223092-03-u-tm04-ml5m8-7d66645cf-t5q8f"
This volume is not safe to detach, but maxWaitForUnmountDuration 6m0s expired, force detaching
 
      To verify the issue, log into the node and run the following commands: 
# See all the mounting points with disks
lsblk -f
# See some ext4 errors
sudo dmesg -T 
      In the kubelet log, errors like the following are displayed: 
Error: GetDeviceMountRefs check failed for volume "pvc-8bb4780b-ba8e-45f4-a95b-19397a66ce16" (UniqueName: "kubernetes.io/csi/csi.vsphere.vmware.com^126f913b-4029-4055-91f7-beee75d5d34a") on node "sandbox-corp-ant-antho-0223092-03-u-tm04-ml5m8-7d66645cf-t5q8f" :
the device mount path "/var/lib/kubelet/plugins/kubernetes.io/csi/pv/pvc-8bb4780b-ba8e-45f4-a95b-19397a66ce16/globalmount" is still mounted by other references [/var/lib/kubelet/plugins/kubernetes.io/csi/pv/pvc-8bb4780b-ba8e-45f4-a95b-19397a66ce16/globalmount
 
      
 Workaround: 
      Connect to the affected node using SSH and reboot the node. 
    | 
  
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.12+, 1.13+, 1.14+ | 
    
      Cluster upgrade is stuck if 3rd party CSI driver is used
      You might not be able to upgrade a cluster if you use a 3rd party CSI
      driver. The gkectl cluster diagnose command might return the
      following error:
 
"virtual disk "kubernetes.io/csi/csi.netapp.io^pvc-27a1625f-29e3-4e4f-9cd1-a45237cc472c" IS NOT attached to machine "cluster-pool-855f694cc-cjk5c" but IS listed in the Node.Status"
 
     
 Workaround: 
      Perform the upgrade using the --skip-validation-all
      option. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Operation | 
    1.10+, 1.11+, 1.12+, 1.13+, 1.14+ | 
    
      gkectl repair admin-master creates the admin master VM
      without upgrading its vm hardware version
      The admin master node created via gkectl repair admin-master
      may use a lower VM hardware version than expected. When the issue happens,
      you will see the error from the gkectl diagnose cluster
      report.
       CSIPrerequisites [VM Hardware]: The current VM hardware versions are lower than vmx-15 which is unexpected. Please contact Anthos support to resolve this issue. 
      
      
 Workaround: 
      Shutdown the admin master node, follow
      https://kb.vmware.com/s/article/1003746
      to upgrade the node to the expected version described in the error
      message, and then start the node. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Operating system | 
    1.10+, 1.11+, 1.12+, 1.13+, 1.14+, 1.15+, 1.16+  | 
    
      VM releases DHCP lease on shutdown/reboot unexpectedly, which may
      result in IP changes
      In systemd v244, systemd-networkd has a
      default behavior change
      on the KeepConfiguration configuration. Before this change,
      VMs did not send a DHCP lease release message to the DHCP server on
      shutdown or reboot. After this change, VMs send such a message and
      return the IPs to the DHCP server. As a result, the released IP may be
      reallocated to a different VM and/or a different IP may be assigned to the
      VM, resulting in IP conflict (at Kubernetes level, not vSphere level)
      and/or IP change on the VMs, which can break the clusters in various ways.
       
      For example, you may see the following symptoms. 
      
       
        - vCenter UI shows that no VMs use the same IP, but 
kubectl get
        nodes -o wide returns nodes with duplicate IPs.
        
NAME   STATUS    AGE  VERSION          INTERNAL-IP    EXTERNAL-IP    OS-IMAGE            KERNEL-VERSION    CONTAINER-RUNTIME
node1  Ready     28h  v1.22.8-gke.204  10.180.85.130  10.180.85.130  Ubuntu 20.04.4 LTS  5.4.0-1049-gkeop  containerd://1.5.13
node2  NotReady  71d  v1.22.8-gke.204  10.180.85.130  10.180.85.130  Ubuntu 20.04.4 LTS  5.4.0-1049-gkeop  containerd://1.5.13 
         
        - New nodes fail to start due to 
calico-node error
        
2023-01-19T22:07:08.817410035Z 2023-01-19 22:07:08.817 [WARNING][9] startup/startup.go 1135: Calico node 'node1' is already using the IPv4 address 10.180.85.130.
2023-01-19T22:07:08.817514332Z 2023-01-19 22:07:08.817 [INFO][9] startup/startup.go 354: Clearing out-of-date IPv4 address from this node IP="10.180.85.130/24"
2023-01-19T22:07:08.825614667Z 2023-01-19 22:07:08.825 [WARNING][9] startup/startup.go 1347: Terminating
2023-01-19T22:07:08.828218856Z Calico node failed to start 
         
       
      
      
 Workaround: 
      Deploy the following DaemonSet on the cluster to revert the
      systemd-networkd default behavior change. The VMs that run
      this DaemonSet will not release the IPs to the DHCP server on
      shutdown/reboot. The IPs will be freed automatically by the DHCP server
      when the leases expire.
             apiVersion: apps/v1
      kind: DaemonSet
      metadata:
        name: set-dhcp-on-stop
      spec:
        selector:
          matchLabels:
            name: set-dhcp-on-stop
        template:
          metadata:
            labels:
              name: set-dhcp-on-stop
          spec:
            hostIPC: true
            hostPID: true
            hostNetwork: true
            containers:
            - name: set-dhcp-on-stop
              image: ubuntu
              tty: true
              command:
              - /bin/bash
              - -c
              - |
                set -x
                date
                while true; do
                  export CONFIG=/host/run/systemd/network/10-netplan-ens192.network;
                  grep KeepConfiguration=dhcp-on-stop "${CONFIG}" > /dev/null
                  if (( $? != 0 )) ; then
                    echo "Setting KeepConfiguration=dhcp-on-stop"
                    sed -i '/\[Network\]/a KeepConfiguration=dhcp-on-stop' "${CONFIG}"
                    cat "${CONFIG}"
                    chroot /host systemctl restart systemd-networkd
                  else
                    echo "KeepConfiguration=dhcp-on-stop has already been set"
                  fi;
                  sleep 3600
                done
              volumeMounts:
              - name: host
                mountPath: /host
              resources:
                requests:
                  memory: "10Mi"
                  cpu: "5m"
              securityContext:
                privileged: true
            volumes:
            - name: host
              hostPath:
                path: /
            tolerations:
            - operator: Exists
              effect: NoExecute
            - operator: Exists
              effect: NoSchedule
      
      
     | 
  
  
  
    | Operation, Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.12.0-1.12.5, 1.13.0-1.13.5, 1.14.0-1.14.1 | 
    
      Component access service account key wiped out after admin cluster 
      upgraded from 1.11.x
      This issue will only affect admin clusters which are upgraded 
      from 1.11.x, and won't affect admin clusters which are newly created after 
      1.12. 
      After upgrading a 1.11.x cluster to 1.12.x, the 
      component-access-sa-key field in 
      admin-cluster-creds secret will be wiped out to empty. 
      This can be checked by running the following command:
       kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n kube-system get secret admin-cluster-creds -o yaml | grep 'component-access-sa-key' 
      If you find the output is empty that means the key is wiped out.
      
      After the component access service account key been deleted,
      installing new user clusters or upgrading existing user clusters will
      fail. The following lists some error messages you might encounter:
       
        - Slow validation preflight failure with error message: 
"Failed
        to create the test VMs: failed to get service account key: service
        account is not configured." 
        - Prepare by 
gkectl prepare failed with error message:
        "Failed to prepare OS images: dialing: unexpected end of JSON
        input" 
        - If you are upgrading a 1.13 user cluster using the Google Cloud
        Console or the gcloud CLI, when you run
        
gkectl update admin --enable-preview-user-cluster-central-upgrade
        to deploy the upgrade platform controller, the command fails
        with the message: "failed to download bundle to disk: dialing:
        unexpected end of JSON input" (You can see this message
        in the status field in
        the output of kubectl --kubeconfig 
        ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n kube-system get onprembundle -oyaml).
         
       
      
      
 Workaround:  
       Add the component access service account key back into the secret
      manually by running the following command:
       kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n kube-system get secret admin-cluster-creds -ojson | jq --arg casa "$(cat COMPONENT_ACESS_SERVICE_ACOOUNT_KEY_PATH | base64 -w 0)" '.data["component-access-sa-key"]=$casa' | kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG apply -f - 
      
     | 
  
  
  
    | Operation | 
    1.13.0+, 1.14.0+ | 
    
      Cluster autoscaler does not work when Controlplane V2 is enabled
       For user clusters created with Controlplane V2 or a new installation model, node pools with autoscaling enabled always use their autoscaling.minReplicas in the user-cluster.yaml. The log of the cluster-autoscaler pod also shows that their are unhealthy. 
     > kubectl --kubeconfig $USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG -n kube-system \
  logs $CLUSTER_AUTOSCALER_POD --container_cluster-autoscaler
 TIMESTAMP  1 gkeonprem_provider.go:73] error getting onpremusercluster ready status: Expected to get a onpremusercluster with id foo-user-cluster-gke-onprem-mgmt/foo-user-cluster
 TIMESTAMP 1 static_autoscaler.go:298] Failed to get node infos for groups: Expected to get a onpremusercluster with id foo-user-cluster-gke-onprem-mgmt/foo-user-cluster
   
  The cluster autoscaler pod can be found by running the following commands.
    > kubectl --kubeconfig $USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG -n kube-system \
   get pods | grep cluster-autoscaler
cluster-autoscaler-5857c74586-txx2c                          4648017n    48076Ki    30s
   
      
      
 Workaround:  
      Disable autoscaling in all the node pools with `gkectl update cluster` until upgrading to a version with the fix 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Installation | 
    1.12.0-1.12.4, 1.13.0-1.13.3, 1.14.0 | 
    
      CIDR is not allowed in the IP block file
      When users use CIDR in the IP block file, the config validation will fail with the following error:
   - Validation Category: Config Check
    - [FAILURE] Config: AddressBlock for admin cluster spec is invalid: invalid IP:
172.16.20.12/30
  
      
      
 Workaround:  
      Include individual IPs in the IP block file until upgrading to a version with the fix: 1.12.5, 1.13.4, 1.14.1+. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.14.0-1.14.1 | 
    
      OS image type update in the admin-cluster.yaml doesn't wait for user control plane machines to be re-created
      When Updating control plane OS image type in the admin-cluster.yaml, and if its corresponding user cluster was created via Controlplane V2, the user control plane machines may not finish their re-creation when the gkectl command finishes. 
      
 Workaround:  
      After the update is finished, keep waiting for the user control plane machines to also finish their re-creation by monitoring their node os image types using kubectl --kubeconfig USER_KUBECONFIG get nodes -owide. e.g. If updating from Ubuntu to COS, we should wait for all the control plane machines to completely change from Ubuntu to COS even after the update command is complete.
       
     | 
  
  
  
    | Operation | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13, 1.14.0 | 
    
      Pod create or delete errors due to Calico CNI service account auth token
      issue
      An issue with Calico in Google Distributed Cloud 1.14.0
      causes Pod creation and deletion to fail with the following error message in
      the output of kubectl describe pods: 
  
  error getting ClusterInformation: connection is unauthorized: Unauthorized
   
      This issue is only observed 24 hours after the cluster is
      created or upgraded to 1.14 using Calico. 
      Admin clusters are always using Calico, while for user cluster there is
      a config field `enableDataPlaneV2` in user-cluster.yaml, if that field is
      set to `false`, or not specified, that means you are using Calico in user
      cluster. 
      The nodes' install-cni container creates a kubeconfig with a
      token that is valid for 24 hours. This token needs to be periodically
      renewed by the calico-node Pod. The calico-node
      Pod is unable to renew the token as it doesn't have access to the directory
      that contains the kubeconfig file on the node. 
      
 Workaround: 
      This issue was fixed in Google Distributed Cloud version 1.14.1. Upgrade to
      this or a later version. 
      If you can't upgrade right away, apply the following patch on the
      calico-node DaemonSet in your admin and user cluster: 
    kubectl -n kube-system get daemonset calico-node \
    --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG -o json \
    | jq '.spec.template.spec.containers[0].volumeMounts += [{"name":"cni-net-dir","mountPath":"/host/etc/cni/net.d"}]' \
    | kubectl apply --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG -f -
  kubectl -n kube-system get daemonset calico-node \
    --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG -o json \
    | jq '.spec.template.spec.containers[0].volumeMounts += [{"name":"cni-net-dir","mountPath":"/host/etc/cni/net.d"}]' \
    | kubectl apply --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG -f -
  
        Replace the following:
          
            ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG: the path
            of the admin cluster kubeconfig file. 
            USER_CLUSTER_CONFIG_FILE: the path
            of your user cluster configuration file. 
           
     | 
  
  
  
    | Installation | 
    1.12.0-1.12.4, 1.13.0-1.13.3, 1.14.0 | 
    
      IP block validation fails when using CIDR
      Cluster creation fails despite the user having the proper configuration. User sees creation failing due to the cluster not having enough IPs. 
      
 Workaround:  
      Split CIDR's into several smaller CIDR blocks, such as 10.0.0.0/30 becomes 10.0.0.0/31, 10.0.0.2/31. As long as there are N+1 CIDR's, where N is the number of nodes in the cluster, this should suffice.
       
     | 
  
    
  
    | Operation, Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.11.0 - 1.11.1, 1.10.0 - 1.10.4, 1.9.0 - 1.9.6 | 
    
      
        Admin cluster backup does not include the always-on secrets encryption keys and configuration
      
      
        When the always-on secrets encryption feature is enabled along with cluster backup, the admin cluster backup fails to include the encryption keys and configuration required by always-on secrets encryption feature. As a result, repairing the admin master with this backup using gkectl repair admin-master --restore-from-backup causes the following error:
 Validating admin master VM xxx ...
Waiting for kube-apiserver to be accessible via LB VIP (timeout "8m0s")...  ERROR
Failed to access kube-apiserver via LB VIP. Trying to fix the problem by rebooting the admin master
Waiting for kube-apiserver to be accessible via LB VIP (timeout "13m0s")...  ERROR
Failed to access kube-apiserver via LB VIP. Trying to fix the problem by rebooting the admin master
Waiting for kube-apiserver to be accessible via LB VIP (timeout "18m0s")...  ERROR
Failed to access kube-apiserver via LB VIP. Trying to fix the problem by rebooting the admin master 
      
      Workaround: 
      
        -  Use the gkectl binary of the latest available patch version for the corresponding minor version to perform the admin cluster backup after critical cluster operations.  For example, if the cluster is running a 1.10.2 version, use the 1.10.5 gkectl binary to perform a manual admin cluster backup as described in Backup and Restore an admin cluster with gkectl.
        
 
       
      
      
     | 
  
  
    | Operation, Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.10+ | 
    
      
          Recreating the admin master VM with a new boot disk (e.g., gkectl repair admin-master) will fail if the always-on secrets encryption feature is enabled using `gkectl update` command.
      
      
          If the always-on secrets encryption feature is not enabled at cluster creation, but enabled later using gkectl update operation then the gkectl repair admin-master fails to repair the admin cluster control plane node. It is recommend that always-on secrets encryption feature is enabled at cluster creation. There is no current mitigation.
       
     | 
  
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.10 | 
    
      Upgrading the first user cluster from 1.9 to 1.10 recreates nodes in other user clusters
      Upgrading the first user cluster from 1.9 to 1.10 could recreate nodes in other user clusters under the same admin cluster. The recreation is performed in a rolling fashion. 
      The disk_label was removed from MachineTemplate.spec.template.spec.providerSpec.machineVariables, which triggered an update on all MachineDeployments unexpectedly. 
      
 Workaround: 
      
     | 
  
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.10.0 | 
    
      Docker restarts frequently after cluster upgrade
      Upgrade user cluster to 1.10.0 might cause docker restart frequently. 
      You can detect this issue by running kubectl describe node NODE_NAME --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG 
      A node condition will show whether the docker restart frequently. Here is an example output: 
Normal   FrequentDockerRestart    41m (x2 over 141m)     systemd-monitor  Node condition FrequentDockerRestart is now: True, reason: FrequentDockerRestart 
      To understand the root cause, you need to ssh to the node that has the symptom and run commands like sudo journalctl --utc -u docker or sudo journalctl -x 
      
 Workaround: 
        
     | 
  
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.11, 1.12 | 
    
      Self-deployed GMP components not preserved after upgrading to version 1.12
      If you are using a Google Distributed Cloud version below 1.12, and have manually set up Google-managed Prometheus (GMP) components in the gmp-system
      namespace for your cluster, the components are not preserved when you
      upgrade to version 1.12.x. 
      From version 1.12, GMP components in the gmp-system namespace and CRDs are managed by stackdriver
      object, with the enableGMPForApplications flag set to false by
      default. If you manually deploy GMP components in the namespace prior to upgrading to 1.12, the resources will be deleted by stackdriver. 
      
 Workaround: 
        
     | 
  
  
  
    | Operation | 
    1.11, 1.12, 1.13.0 - 1.13.1 | 
    
      Missing ClusterAPI objects in cluster snapshot system scenario
      In the system scenario, the cluster snapshot doesn't include any resources under the default namespace. 
      However, some Kubernetes resources like Cluster API objects that are under this namespace contain useful debugging information. The cluster snapshot should include them.  
      
 Workaround: 
      You can manually run the following commands to collect the debugging information. 
export KUBECONFIG=USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG
kubectl get clusters.cluster.k8s.io -o yaml
kubectl get controlplanes.cluster.k8s.io -o yaml
kubectl get machineclasses.cluster.k8s.io -o yaml
kubectl get machinedeployments.cluster.k8s.io -o yaml
kubectl get machines.cluster.k8s.io -o yaml
kubectl get machinesets.cluster.k8s.io -o yaml
kubectl get services -o yaml
kubectl describe clusters.cluster.k8s.io
kubectl describe controlplanes.cluster.k8s.io
kubectl describe machineclasses.cluster.k8s.io
kubectl describe machinedeployments.cluster.k8s.io
kubectl describe machines.cluster.k8s.io
kubectl describe machinesets.cluster.k8s.io
kubectl describe services 
    where:
        USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG is the user cluster's
          kubeconfig file. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.11.0-1.11.4, 1.12.0-1.12.3, 1.13.0-1.13.1 | 
    
      User cluster deletion stuck at node drain for vSAN setup
      When deleting, updating or upgrading a user cluster, node drain may be stuck in the following scenarios: 
      
        - The admin cluster has been using vSphere CSI driver on vSAN since version 1.12.x, and
 
        - There are no PVC/PV objects created by in-tree vSphere plugins in the admin and user cluster.
 
       
      To identify the symptom, run the command below: 
kubectl logs clusterapi-controllers-POD_NAME_SUFFIX  --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG -n USER_CLUSTER_NAMESPACE 
      Here is a sample error message from the above command: 
E0920 20:27:43.086567 1 machine_controller.go:250] Error deleting machine object [MACHINE]; Failed to delete machine [MACHINE]: failed to detach disks from VM "[MACHINE]": failed to convert disk path "kubevols" to UUID path: failed to convert full path "ds:///vmfs/volumes/vsan:[UUID]/kubevols": ServerFaultCode: A general system error occurred: Invalid fault 
      kubevols is the default directory for vSphere in-tree driver. When there are no PVC/PV objects created, you may hit a bug that node drain will be stuck at finding kubevols, since the current implementation assumes that kubevols always exists. 
      
 Workaround: 
      Create the directory kubevols in the datastore where the node is created. This is defined in the vCenter.datastore field in the user-cluster.yaml or admin-cluster.yaml files. 
     | 
  
    
  
    | Configuration | 
    1.7, 1.8, 1.9, 1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13, 1.14 | 
    
      Cluster Autoscaler  clusterrolebinding and clusterrole are deleted after deleting a user cluster.
      On user cluster deletion, the corresponding clusterrole and clusterrolebinding for cluster-autoscaler are also deleted. This affects all other user clusters on the same admin cluster with cluster autoscaler enabled. This is because the same clusterrole and clusterrolebinding are used for all cluster autoscaler pods within the same admin cluster. 
      The symptoms are the following: 
      
        cluster-autoscaler logs 
kubectl logs --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG -n kube-system \
cluster-autoscaler 
        where ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG is the admin cluster's
        kubeconfig file.
        Here is an example of error messages you might see:
2023-03-26T10:45:44.866600973Z W0326 10:45:44.866463       1 reflector.go:424] k8s.io/client-go/dynamic/dynamicinformer/informer.go:91: failed to list *unstructured.Unstructured: onpremuserclusters.onprem.cluster.gke.io is forbidden: User "..." cannot list resource "onpremuserclusters" in API group "onprem.cluster.gke.io" at the cluster scope
2023-03-26T10:45:44.866646815Z E0326 10:45:44.866494       1 reflector.go:140] k8s.io/client-go/dynamic/dynamicinformer/informer.go:91: Failed to watch *unstructured.Unstructured: failed to list *unstructured.Unstructured: onpremuserclusters.onprem.cluster.gke.io is forbidden: User "..." cannot list resource "onpremuserclusters" in API group "onprem.cluster.gke.io" at the cluster scope 
       
 Workaround: 
View workaround steps
 Verify whether the clusterrole and clusterrolebinding are missing on the admin cluster
 
- 
kubectl get clusterrolebindings --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG -n kube-system | grep cluster-autoscaler 
 
- 
kubectl get clusterrole --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG -n kube-system | grep cluster-autoscaler 
 
 
Apply the following clusterrole and clusterrolebinding to the admin cluster if they are missing. Add the service account subjects to the clusterrolebinding for each user cluster. 
  - 
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: ClusterRole
metadata:
  name: cluster-autoscaler
rules:
- apiGroups: ["cluster.k8s.io"]
  resources: ["clusters"]
  verbs: ["get", "list", "watch"]
- apiGroups: ["cluster.k8s.io"]
  resources: ["machinesets","machinedeployments", "machinedeployments/scale","machines"]
  verbs: ["get", "list", "watch", "update", "patch"]
- apiGroups: ["onprem.cluster.gke.io"]
  resources: ["onpremuserclusters"]
  verbs: ["get", "list", "watch"]
- apiGroups:
  - coordination.k8s.io
  resources:
  - leases
  resourceNames: ["cluster-autoscaler"]
  verbs:
  - get
  - list
  - watch
  - create
  - update
  - patch
- apiGroups:
  - ""
  resources:
  - nodes
  verbs: ["get", "list", "watch", "update", "patch"]
- apiGroups:
  - ""
  resources:
  - pods
  verbs: ["get", "list", "watch"]
- apiGroups:
  - ""
  resources:
  - pods/eviction
  verbs: ["create"]
# read-only access to cluster state
- apiGroups: [""]
  resources: ["services", "replicationcontrollers", "persistentvolumes", "persistentvolumeclaims"]
  verbs: ["get", "list", "watch"]
- apiGroups: ["apps"]
  resources: ["daemonsets", "replicasets"]
  verbs: ["get", "list", "watch"]
- apiGroups: ["apps"]
  resources: ["statefulsets"]
  verbs: ["get", "list", "watch"]
- apiGroups: ["batch"]
  resources: ["jobs"]
  verbs: ["get", "list", "watch"]
- apiGroups: ["policy"]
  resources: ["poddisruptionbudgets"]
  verbs: ["get", "list", "watch"]
- apiGroups: ["storage.k8s.io"]
  resources: ["storageclasses", "csinodes"]
  verbs: ["get", "list", "watch"]
# misc access
- apiGroups: [""]
  resources: ["events"]
  verbs: ["create", "update", "patch"]
- apiGroups: [""]
  resources: ["configmaps"]
  verbs: ["create"]
- apiGroups: [""]
  resources: ["configmaps"]
  resourceNames: ["cluster-autoscaler-status"]
  verbs: ["get", "update", "patch", "delete"] 
 
- 
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: ClusterRoleBinding
metadata:
  labels:
    k8s-app: cluster-autoscaler
  name: cluster-autoscaler
roleRef:
  apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
  kind: ClusterRole
  name: cluster-autoscaler
subjects:
  - kind: ServiceAccount
  name: cluster-autoscaler
  namespace:  NAMESPACE_OF_USER_CLUSTER_1 
  - kind: ServiceAccount
  name: cluster-autoscaler
  namespace:  NAMESPACE_OF_USER_CLUSTER_2 
  ...
 
 
 | 
  
  
    | Configuration | 
    1.7, 1.8, 1.9, 1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      admin cluster cluster-health-controller and vsphere-metrics-exporter do not work after deleting user cluster
      On user cluster deletion, the corresponding clusterrole is also deleted, which results in auto repair and vsphere metrics exporter not working 
      The symptoms are the following: 
      
        cluster-health-controller logs 
kubectl logs --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG -n kube-system \
cluster-health-controller 
        where ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG is the admin cluster's
        kubeconfig file.
        Here is an example of error messages you might see:
error retrieving resource lock default/onprem-cluster-health-leader-election: configmaps "onprem-cluster-health-leader-election" is forbidden: User "system:serviceaccount:kube-system:cluster-health-controller" cannot get resource "configmaps" in API group "" in the namespace "default": RBAC: clusterrole.rbac.authorization.k8s.io "cluster-health-controller-role" not found 
        vsphere-metrics-exporter logs 
kubectl logs --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG -n kube-system \
vsphere-metrics-exporter 
        where ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG is the admin cluster's
        kubeconfig file.
        Here is an example of error messages you might see:
vsphere-metrics-exporter/cmd/vsphere-metrics-exporter/main.go:68: Failed to watch *v1alpha1.Cluster: failed to list *v1alpha1.Cluster: clusters.cluster.k8s.io is forbidden: User "system:serviceaccount:kube-system:vsphere-metrics-exporter" cannot list resource "clusters" in API group "cluster.k8s.io" in the namespace "default" 
       
 Workaround: 
View workaround steps
Apply the following yaml to the admin cluster 
- For vsphere-metrics-exporter
 
kind: ClusterRole
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
metadata:
  name: vsphere-metrics-exporter
rules:
  - apiGroups:
      - cluster.k8s.io
    resources:
      - clusters
    verbs: [get, list, watch]
  - apiGroups:
      - ""
    resources:
      - nodes
    verbs: [get, list, watch]
---
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: ClusterRoleBinding
metadata:
  labels:
    k8s-app: vsphere-metrics-exporter
  name: vsphere-metrics-exporter
  namespace: kube-system
roleRef:
  apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
  kind: ClusterRole
  name: vsphere-metrics-exporter
subjects:
  - kind: ServiceAccount
    name: vsphere-metrics-exporter
    namespace: kube-system
- For cluster-health-controller
 
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: ClusterRole
metadata:
  name: cluster-health-controller-role
rules:
- apiGroups:
  - "*"
  resources:
  - "*"
  verbs:
  - "*" 
 
 | 
  
  
    | Configuration | 
    1.12.1-1.12.3, 1.13.0-1.13.2 | 
    
      gkectl check-config fails at OS image validation
      A known issue that could fail the gkectl check-config without running gkectl prepare. This is confusing because we suggest running the command before running gkectl prepare 
      The symptom is that the gkectl check-config command will fail with the
      following error message: 
Validator result: {Status:FAILURE Reason:os images [OS_IMAGE_NAME] don't exist, please run `gkectl prepare` to upload os images. UnhealthyResources:[]}
      
 Workaround: 
      Option 1: run gkectl prepare to upload the missing OS images. 
      Option 2: use gkectl check-config --skip-validation-os-images to skip the OS images validation. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      gkectl update admin/cluster fails at updating anti affinity groups
      A known issue that could fail the gkectl update admin/cluster when updating anti affinity groups.
       The symptom is that the gkectl update command will fail with the
      following error message: 
Waiting for machines to be re-deployed...  ERROR
Exit with error:
Failed to update the cluster: timed out waiting for the condition 
      
 Workaround: 
      
      View workaround steps
      For the update to take effect, the machines need to be recreated after the failed update.
       For admin cluster update, user master and admin addon nodes need to be recreated 
      For user cluster update, user worker nodes need to be recreated 
      To recreate user worker nodes
      Option 1  Follow update a node pool and change the cpu or memory to trigger a rolling recreation of the nodes. 
      Option 2  Use kubectl delete to recreate the machines one at a time 
kubectl delete machines MACHINE_NAME --kubeconfig USER_KUBECONFIG 
      To recreate user master nodes
      Option 1  Follow resize control plane and change the cpu or memory to trigger a rolling recreation of the nodes. 
      Option 2  Use kubectl delete to recreate the machines one at a time 
kubectl delete machines MACHINE_NAME --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG 
      To recreate admin addon nodes
      Use kubectl delete to recreate the machines one at a time 
kubectl delete machines MACHINE_NAME --kubeconfig ADMIN_KUBECONFIG 
     | 
    
  
  
  
    | Installation, Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.13.0-1.13.8, 1.14.0-1.14.4, 1.15.0 | 
    
      
       Node registration fails during cluster creation, upgrade, update and
      node auto repair, when ipMode.type is static and
      the configured hostname in the
      IP block file contains one
      or more periods. In this case, Certificate Signing Requests (CSR) for a
      node are not automatically approved. 
      To see pending CSRs for a node, run the following command: 
kubectl get csr -A -o wide 
      Check the following logs for error messages: 
      
        - View the logs in the admin cluster for the
        
clusterapi-controller-manager container in the
        clusterapi-controllers Pod:
kubectl logs clusterapi-controllers-POD_NAME \
    -c clusterapi-controller-manager -n kube-system \
    --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG 
        - To view the same logs in the user cluster, run the following
        command:
kubectl logs clusterapi-controllers-POD_NAME \
    -c clusterapi-controller-manager -n USER_CLUSTER_NAME \
    --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG
        where:
        
          - ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG is the admin cluster's
          kubeconfig file.
 
          - USER_CLUSTER_NAME is the name of the user cluster.
 
         
        Here is an example of error messages you might see: "msg"="failed
        to validate token id" "error"="failed to find machine for node
        node-worker-vm-1" "validate"="csr-5jpx9" 
        - View the 
kubelet logs on the problematic node:
journalctl --u kubelet 
        Here is an example of error messages you might see: "Error getting
        node" err="node \"node-worker-vm-1\" not found" 
       
      If you specify a domain name in the hostname field of an IP block file,
      any characters following the first period will be ignored. For example, if
      you specify the hostname as bob-vm-1.bank.plc, the VM
      hostname and node name will be set to bob-vm-1. 
      When node ID verification is enabled, the CSR approver compares the
      node name with the hostname in the Machine spec, and fails to reconcile
      the name. The approver rejects the CSR, and the node fails to
      bootstrap. 
      
 Workaround: 
      User cluster 
      Disable node ID verification by completing the following steps: 
      
        - Add the following fields in your user cluster configuration file:
disableNodeIDVerification: true
disableNodeIDVerificationCSRSigning: true  
        - Save the file, and update the user cluster by running the following
        command:
gkectl update cluster --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    --config USER_CLUSTER_CONFIG_FILE
        Replace the following:
        
          ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG: the path
          of the admin cluster kubeconfig file. 
          USER_CLUSTER_CONFIG_FILE: the path
          of your user cluster configuration file. 
         
         
       
      Admin cluster 
      
        - Open the 
OnPremAdminCluster custom resource for
        editing:
kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    edit onpremadmincluster -n kube-system 
        - Add the following annotation to the custom resource:
features.onprem.cluster.gke.io/disable-node-id-verification: enabled  
        - Edit the 
kube-controller-manager manifest in the admin
        cluster control plane:
        
          - SSH into the
          admin cluster control plane node.
 
          - Open the 
kube-controller-manager manifest for
          editing:
sudo vi /etc/kubernetes/manifests/kube-controller-manager.yaml  
          - Find the list of 
controllers:
--controllers=*,bootstrapsigner,tokencleaner,-csrapproving,-csrsigning  
          - Update this section as shown below:
--controllers=*,bootstrapsigner,tokencleaner  
         
         - Open the Deployment Cluster API controller for editing:
kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    edit deployment clusterapi-controllers -n kube-system 
        - Change the values of 
node-id-verification-enabled and
        node-id-verification-csr-signing-enabled to
        false:
--node-id-verification-enabled=false
--node-id-verification-csr-signing-enabled=false  
       
     | 
  
  | Installation, Upgrades, Updates | 
  1.11.0-1.11.4 | 
  
    Admin control plane machine startup failure caused by private registry
    certificate bundle
    The admin cluster creation/upgrade is stuck at the following log forever
    and eventually times out: 
Waiting for Machine gke-admin-master-xxxx to become ready...
 
    The Cluster API controller log in the
    
    external cluster snapshot includes the following log: 
Invalid value 'XXXX' specified for property startup-data
 
    Here is an example file path for the Cluster API controller log: 
kubectlCommands/kubectl_logs_clusterapi-controllers-c4fbb45f-6q6g6_--container_vsphere-controller-manager_--kubeconfig_.home.ubuntu..kube.kind-config-gkectl_--request-timeout_30s_--namespace_kube-system_--timestamps
    VMware has a 64k vApp property size limit. In the identified versions,
    the data passed via vApp property is close to the limit. When the private
    registry certificate contains a certificate bundle, it may cause the final
    data to exceed the 64k limit. 
    
 Workaround: 
    Only include the required certificates in the private registry
    certificate file configured in privateRegistry.caCertPath in
    the admin cluster config file. 
    Or upgrade to a version with the fix when available. 
   | 
  
  
    | Networking | 
    1.10, 1.11.0-1.11.3, 1.12.0-1.12.2, 1.13.0 | 
    
      NetworkGatewayNodes marked unhealthy from concurrent
      status update conflict
      In networkgatewaygroups.status.nodes, some nodes switch
      between NotHealthy and Up. 
      Logs for the ang-daemon Pod running on that node reveal
      repeated errors:
 
2022-09-16T21:50:59.696Z ERROR ANGd Failed to report status {"angNode": "kube-system/my-node", "error": "updating Node CR status: sending Node CR update: Operation cannot be fulfilled on networkgatewaynodes.networking.gke.io \"my-node\": the object has been modified; please apply your changes to the latest version and try again"}
      The NotHealthy status prevents the controller from
      assigning additional floating IPs to the node. This can result in higher
      burden on other nodes or a lack of redundancy for high availability. 
      Dataplane activity is otherwise not affected. 
      Contention on the networkgatewaygroup object causes some
      status updates to fail due to a fault in retry handling. If too many
      status updates fail, ang-controller-manager sees the node as
      past its heartbeat time limit and marks the node NotHealthy.
       The fault in retry handling has been fixed in later versions. 
      
 Workaround: 
      Upgrade to a fixed version, when available. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.12.0-1.12.2, 1.13.0 | 
    
      Race condition blocks machine object deletion during and update or
      upgrade
      A known issue that could cause the cluster upgrade or update to be
      stuck at waiting for the old machine object to be deleted. This is because
      the finalizer cannot be removed from the machine object. This affects any
      rolling update operation for node pools. 
      The symptom is that the gkectl command times out with the
      following error message: 
E0821 18:28:02.546121   61942 console.go:87] Exit with error:
E0821 18:28:02.546184   61942 console.go:87] error: timed out waiting for the condition, message: Node pool "pool-1" is not ready: ready condition is not true: CreateOrUpdateNodePool: 1/3 replicas are updated
Check the status of OnPremUserCluster 'cluster-1-gke-onprem-mgmt/cluster-1' and the logs of pod 'kube-system/onprem-user-cluster-controller' for more detailed debugging information.
 
      In clusterapi-controller Pod logs, the errors are like
      below: 
$ kubectl logs clusterapi-controllers-[POD_NAME_SUFFIX] -n cluster-1
    -c vsphere-controller-manager --kubeconfig [ADMIN_KUBECONFIG]
    | grep "Error removing finalizer from machine object"
[...]
E0821 23:19:45.114993       1 machine_controller.go:269] Error removing finalizer from machine object cluster-1-pool-7cbc496597-t5d5p; Operation cannot be fulfilled on machines.cluster.k8s.io "cluster-1-pool-7cbc496597-t5d5p": the object has been modified; please apply your changes to the latest version and try again
      The error repeats for the same machine for several minutes for
      successful runs even without this issue, for most of the time it can go
      through quickly, but for some rare cases it can be stuck at this race
      condition for several hours. 
      The issue is that the underlying VM is already deleted in vCenter, but
      the corresponding machine object cannot be removed, which is stuck at the
      finalizer removal due to very frequent updates from other controllers.
      This can cause the gkectl command to timeout, but the
      controller keeps reconciling the cluster so the upgrade or update process
      eventually completes. 
      
 Workaround: 
      We have prepared several different mitigation options for this issue,
      which depends on your environment and requirements. 
      
        - Option 1: Wait for the upgrade to eventually complete by
        itself.
  
        Based on the analysis and reproduction in your environment, the upgrade
        can eventually finish by itself without any manual intervention. The
        caveat of this option is that it's uncertain how long it will take for
        the finalizer removal to go through for each machine object. It can go
        through immediately if lucky enough, or it could last for several hours
        if the machineset controller reconcile is too fast and the machine
        controller never gets a chance to remove the finalizer in between the
        reconciliations.
  
        The good thing is that this option doesn't need any action from your
        side, and the workloads won't be disrupted. It just needs a longer time
        for the upgrade to finish. 
        - Option 2: Apply auto repair annotation to all the old machine
        objects.
  
        The machineset controller will filter out the machines that have the
        auto repair annotation and deletion timestamp being non zero, and won't
        keep issuing delete calls on those machines, this can help avoid the
        race condition.
  
        The downside is that the pods on the machines will be deleted directly
        instead of evicted, which means it won't respect the PDB configuration,
        this might potentially cause downtime for your workloads.
  
        The command for getting all machine names:
kubectl --kubeconfig CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG get machines 
        The command for applying auto repair annotation for each machine:
kubectl annotate --kubeconfig CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    machine MACHINE_NAME \
    onprem.cluster.gke.io/repair-machine=true 
       
      If you encounter this issue and the upgrade or update still can't
      complete after a long time,
      contact
      our support team for mitigations. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Installation, Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.10.2, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      gkectl prepare OS image validation preflight failure
      gkectl prepare command failed with: 
- Validation Category: OS Images
    - [FAILURE] Admin cluster OS images exist: os images [os_image_name] don't exist, please run `gkectl prepare` to upload os images.
      The preflight checks of gkectl prepare included an
      incorrect validation. 
      
 Workaround: 
      Run the same command with an additional flag
      --skip-validation-os-images. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Installation | 
    1.7, 1.8, 1.9, 1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      vCenter URL with https:// or http:// prefix
      may cause cluster startup failure
      Admin cluster creation failed with: 
Exit with error:
Failed to create root cluster: unable to apply admin base bundle to external cluster: error: timed out waiting for the condition, message:
Failed to apply external bundle components: failed to apply bundle objects from admin-vsphere-credentials-secret 1.x.y-gke.z to cluster external: Secret "vsphere-dynamic-credentials" is invalid:
[data[https://xxx.xxx.xxx.username]: Invalid value: "https://xxx.xxx.xxx.username": a valid config key must consist of alphanumeric characters, '-', '_' or '.'
(e.g. 'key.name', or 'KEY_NAME', or 'key-name', regex used for validation is '[-._a-zA-Z0-9]+'), data[https://xxx.xxx.xxx.password]:
Invalid value: "https://xxx.xxx.xxx.password": a valid config key must consist of alphanumeric characters, '-', '_' or '.'
(e.g. 'key.name', or 'KEY_NAME', or 'key-name', regex used for validation is '[-._a-zA-Z0-9]+')]
 
      The URL is used as part of a Secret key, which doesn't
      support "/" or ":". 
      
 Workaround: 
      Remove https:// or http:// prefix from the
      vCenter.Address field in the admin cluster or user cluster
      config yaml. 
     | 
  
  
    | Installation, Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      gkectl prepare panic on util.CheckFileExists
      
      gkectl prepare can panic with the following
      stacktrace: 
panic: runtime error: invalid memory address or nil pointer dereference [signal SIGSEGV: segmentation violation code=0x1 addr=0x18 pc=0xde0dfa]
goroutine 1 [running]:
gke-internal.googlesource.com/syllogi/cluster-management/pkg/util.CheckFileExists(0xc001602210, 0x2b, 0xc001602210, 0x2b) pkg/util/util.go:226 +0x9a
gke-internal.googlesource.com/syllogi/cluster-management/gkectl/pkg/config/util.SetCertsForPrivateRegistry(0xc000053d70, 0x10, 0xc000f06f00, 0x4b4, 0x1, 0xc00015b400)gkectl/pkg/config/util/utils.go:75 +0x85
...
 
      The issue is that gkectl prepare created the private
      registry certificate directory with a wrong permission. 
      
 Workaround: 
      To fix this issue, please run the following commands on the admin
      workstation: 
sudo mkdir -p /etc/docker/certs.d/PRIVATE_REGISTRY_ADDRESS
sudo chmod 0755 /etc/docker/certs.d/PRIVATE_REGISTRY_ADDRESS 
     | 
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      gkectl repair admin-master and resumable admin upgrade do
      not work together
      After a failed admin cluster upgrade attempt, don't run gkectl
      repair admin-master. Doing so may cause subsequent admin upgrade
      attempts to fail with issues such as admin master power on failure or the
      VM being inaccessible. 
      
 Workaround: 
      If you've already encountered this failure scenario,
      contact support. 
     | 
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.10, 1.11 | 
    
      Resumed admin cluster upgrade can lead to missing admin control plane
      VM template
      If the admin control plane machine isn't recreated after a resumed
      admin cluster upgrade attempt, the admin control plane VM template is
      deleted. The admin control plane VM template is the template of the admin
      master that is used to recover the control plane machine with
      gkectl
      repair admin-master. 
      
 Workaround: 
      The admin control plane VM template will be regenerated during the next
      admin cluster upgrade. 
     | 
  
  
    | Operating system | 
    1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      cgroup v2 could affect workloads
      In version 1.12.0, cgroup v2 (unified) is enabled by default for
      Container Optimized OS (COS) nodes. This could potentially cause
      instability for your workloads in a COS cluster. 
      
 Workaround: 
      We switched back to cgroup v1 (hybrid) in version 1.12.1. If you are
      using COS nodes, we recommend that you upgrade to version 1.12.1 as soon
      as it is released. 
     | 
  
  
    | Identity | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      ClientConfig custom resource
      gkectl update reverts any manual changes that you have
      made to the ClientConfig custom resource. 
      
 Workaround: 
      We strongly recommend that you back up the ClientConfig resource after
      every manual change. 
     | 
  
  
    | Installation | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      gkectl check-config validation fails: can't find F5
      BIG-IP partitions
      Validation fails because F5 BIG-IP partitions can't be found, even
      though they exist. 
      An issue with the F5 BIG-IP API can cause validation to fail. 
      
 Workaround: 
      Try running gkectl check-config again. 
     | 
  
  
    | Installation | 
    1.12 | 
    
      User cluster installation failed because of cert-manager/ca-injector's
      leader election issue
      You might see an installation failure due to
      cert-manager-cainjector in crashloop, when the apiserver/etcd
      is slow: 
# These are logs from `cert-manager-cainjector`, from the command
# `kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG -n kube-system
  cert-manager-cainjector-xxx`
I0923 16:19:27.911174       1 leaderelection.go:278] failed to renew lease kube-system/cert-manager-cainjector-leader-election: timed out waiting for the condition
E0923 16:19:27.911110       1 leaderelection.go:321] error retrieving resource lock kube-system/cert-manager-cainjector-leader-election-core:
  Get "https://10.96.0.1:443/api/v1/namespaces/kube-system/configmaps/cert-manager-cainjector-leader-election-core": context deadline exceeded
I0923 16:19:27.911593       1 leaderelection.go:278] failed to renew lease kube-system/cert-manager-cainjector-leader-election-core: timed out waiting for the condition
E0923 16:19:27.911629       1 start.go:163] cert-manager/ca-injector "msg"="error running core-only manager" "error"="leader election lost"
 
      
 Workaround: 
      
      View workaround steps
        Run the following commands to mitigate the problem. 
        First scale down the monitoring-operator so it won't
        revert the changes to the cert-manager Deployment: 
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG -n kube-system \
    scale deployment monitoring-operator --replicas=0
        Edit the cert-manager-cainjector Deployment to disable
        leader election, because we only have one replica running. It isn't
        required for a single replica: 
# Add a command line flag for cainjector: `--leader-elect=false`
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG edit \
    -n kube-system deployment cert-manager-cainjector
        The relevant YAML snippet for cert-manager-cainjector
        deployment should looks like the following example: 
...
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
  name: cert-manager-cainjector
  namespace: kube-system
...
spec:
  ...
  template:
    ...
    spec:
      ...
      containers:
      - name: cert-manager
        image: "gcr.io/gke-on-prem-staging/cert-manager-cainjector:v1.0.3-gke.0"
        args:
        ...
        - --leader-elect=false
...
        Keep monitoring-operator replicas at 0 as a mitigation
        until the installation is finished. Otherwise it will revert the change. 
        After the installation is finished and the cluster is up and running,
        turn on the monitoring-operator for day-2 operations: 
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG -n kube-system \
    scale deployment monitoring-operator --replicas=1
        After each upgrade, the changes are reverted. Perform the same
        steps again to mitigate the issue until this is fixed in a future
        release. 
      
     | 
  
  
    | VMware | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      Restarting or upgrading vCenter for versions lower than 7.0U2
      If the vCenter, for versions lower than 7.0U2, is restarted, after an
      upgrade or otherwise, the network name in vm information from vCenter is
      incorrect, and results in the machine being in an Unavailable
      state. This eventually leads to the nodes being auto-repaired to create
      new ones. 
      Related govmomi
      bug. 
      
 Workaround: 
      This workaround is provided by VMware support: 
      
        - The issue is fixed in vCenter versions 7.0U2 and above.
 
        - For lower versions, right-click the host, and then select
        Connection > Disconnect. Next, reconnect, which forces an update
        of the VM's portgroup.
 
       
     | 
  
  
    | Operating system | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      SSH connection closed by remote host
      For Google Distributed Cloud version 1.7.2 and above, the Ubuntu OS
      images are hardened with 
      CIS L1 Server Benchmark. 
      To meet the CIS rule "5.2.16 Ensure SSH Idle Timeout Interval is
      configured", /etc/ssh/sshd_config has the following
      settings: 
ClientAliveInterval 300
ClientAliveCountMax 0
 
      The purpose of these settings is to terminate a client session after 5
      minutes of idle time. However, the ClientAliveCountMax 0
      value causes unexpected behavior. When you use the ssh session on the
      admin workstation, or a cluster node, the SSH connection might be
      disconnected even your ssh client is not idle, such as when running a
      time-consuming command, and your command could get terminated with the
      following message: 
Connection to [IP] closed by remote host.
Connection to [IP] closed.
 
      
 Workaround: 
      You can either: 
      
        - Use 
nohup to prevent your command being terminated on
        SSH disconnection,
nohup gkectl upgrade admin --config admin-cluster.yaml \
    --kubeconfig kubeconfig 
        - Update the 
sshd_config to use a non-zero
        ClientAliveCountMax value. The CIS rule recommends to use
        a value less than 3:
sudo sed -i 's/ClientAliveCountMax 0/ClientAliveCountMax 1/g' \
    /etc/ssh/sshd_config
sudo systemctl restart sshd 
       
      Make sure you reconnect your SSH session. 
     | 
  
  
    | Installation | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      Conflicting cert-manager installation
      In 1.13 releases, monitoring-operator will install
      cert-manager in the cert-manager namespace. If for certain
      reasons, you need to install your own cert-manager, follow the following
      instructions to avoid conflicts: 
      You only need to apply this work around once for each cluster, and the
      changes will be preserved across cluster upgrade. 
      Note: One common symptom of installing your own cert-manager
      is that the cert-manager version or image (for example
      v1.7.2) may revert back to its older version. This is caused by
      monitoring-operator trying to reconcile the
      cert-manager, and reverting the version in the process.
      
 Workaround: 
      Avoid conflicts during upgrade 
      
        - Uninstall your version of 
cert-manager. If you defined
        your own resources, you may want to
        backup
         them. 
        - Perform the upgrade.
 
        - Follow the following instructions to restore your own
        
cert-manager. 
       
      Restore your own cert-manager in user clusters 
      
        - Scale the 
monitoring-operator Deployment to 0:
kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    -n USER_CLUSTER_NAME \
    scale deployment monitoring-operator --replicas=0 
        - Scale the 
cert-manager deployments managed by
        monitoring-operator to 0:
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    -n cert-manager scale deployment cert-manager --replicas=0
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    -n cert-manager scale deployment cert-manager-cainjector\
    --replicas=0
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    -n cert-manager scale deployment cert-manager-webhook --replicas=0 
        - Reinstall your version of 
cert-manager.
        Restore
        your customized resources if you have. 
        - You can skip this step if you are using
        
        upstream default cert-manager installation, or you are sure your
        cert-manager is installed in the 
cert-manager namespace.
        Otherwise, copy the metrics-ca cert-manager.io/v1
        Certificate and the metrics-pki.cluster.local Issuer
        resources from cert-manager to the cluster resource
        namespace of your installed cert-manager.
relevant_fields='
{
  apiVersion: .apiVersion,
  kind: .kind,
  metadata: {
    name: .metadata.name,
    namespace: "YOUR_INSTALLED_CERT_MANAGER_NAMESPACE"
  },
  spec: .spec
}
'
f1=$(mktemp)
f2=$(mktemp)
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    get issuer -n cert-manager metrics-pki.cluster.local -o json \
    | jq "${relevant_fields}" > $f1
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    get certificate -n cert-manager metrics-ca -o json \
    | jq "${relevant_fields}" > $f2
kubectl apply --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG -f $f1
kubectl apply --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG -f $f2 
       
      Restore your own cert-manager in admin clusters 
      In general, you shouldn't need to re-install cert-manager in admin
      clusters because admin clusters only run Google Distributed Cloud control
      plane workloads. In the rare cases that you also need to install your own
      cert-manager in admin clusters, please follow the following instructions
      to avoid conflicts. Please note, if you are an Apigee customer and you
      only need cert-manager for Apigee, you do not need to run the admin
      cluster commands. 
      
        - Scale the 
monitoring-operator deployment to 0.
kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    -n kube-system scale deployment monitoring-operator --replicas=0 
        - Scale the 
cert-manager deployments managed by
        monitoring-operator to 0.
kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    -n cert-manager scale deployment cert-manager \
    --replicas=0
kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
     -n cert-manager scale deployment cert-manager-cainjector \
     --replicas=0
kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    -n cert-manager scale deployment cert-manager-webhook \
    --replicas=0 
        - Reinstall your version of 
cert-manager.
        Restore
        your customized resources if you have. 
        - You can skip this step if you are using
        
        upstream default cert-manager installation, or you are sure your
        cert-manager is installed in the 
cert-manager namespace.
        Otherwise, copy the metrics-ca cert-manager.io/v1
        Certificate and the metrics-pki.cluster.local Issuer
        resources from cert-manager to the cluster resource
        namespace of your installed cert-manager.
relevant_fields='
{
  apiVersion: .apiVersion,
  kind: .kind,
  metadata: {
    name: .metadata.name,
    namespace: "YOUR_INSTALLED_CERT_MANAGER_NAMESPACE"
  },
  spec: .spec
}
'
f3=$(mktemp)
f4=$(mktemp)
kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \n
    get issuer -n cert-manager metrics-pki.cluster.local -o json \
    | jq "${relevant_fields}" > $f3
kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    get certificate -n cert-manager metrics-ca -o json \
    | jq "${relevant_fields}" > $f4
kubectl apply --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG -f $f3
kubectl apply --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG -f $f4 
       
     | 
  
  
    | Operating system | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      False positives in docker, containerd, and runc vulnerability scanning
      
      The Docker, containerd, and runc in the Ubuntu OS images shipped with
      Google Distributed Cloud are pinned to special versions using
      Ubuntu PPA. This ensures
      that any container runtime changes will be qualified by
      Google Distributed Cloud before each release. 
      However, the special versions are unknown to the
      Ubuntu CVE
      Tracker, which is used as the vulnerability feeds by various CVE
      scanning tools. Therefore, you will see false positives in Docker,
      containerd, and runc vulnerability scanning results. 
      For example, you might see the following false positives from your CVE
      scanning results. These CVEs are already fixed in the latest patch
      versions of Google Distributed Cloud. 
      
      Refer to the release notes]
      for any CVE fixes. 
      
 Workaround: 
      Canonical is aware of this issue, and the fix is tracked at
      
      https://github.com/canonical/sec-cvescan/issues/73. 
     | 
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      Network connection between admin and user cluster might be unavailable
      for a short time during non-HA cluster upgrade
      If you are upgrading non-HA clusters from 1.9 to 1.10, you might notice
      that the kubectl exec, kubectl log and webhook
      against user clusters might be unavailable for a short time. This downtime
      can be up to one minute. This happens because the incoming request
      (kubectl exec, kubectl log and webhook) is handled by kube-apiserver for
      the user cluster. User kube-apiserver is a
      
      Statefulset. In a non-HA cluster, there is only one replica for the
      Statefulset. So during upgrade, there is a chance that the old
      kube-apiserver is unavailable while the new kube-apiserver is not yet
      ready. 
      
 Workaround: 
      This downtime only happens during upgrade process. If you want a
      shorter downtime during upgrade, we recommend you to switch to
      HA
      clusters. 
     | 
  
  
    | Installation, Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      Konnectivity readiness check failed in HA cluster diagnose after
      cluster creation or upgrade
      If you are creating or upgrading an HA cluster and notice konnectivity
      readiness check failed in cluster diagnose, in most cases it will not
      affect the functionality of Google Distributed Cloud (kubectl exec, kubectl
      log and webhook). This happens because sometimes one or two of the
      konnectivity replicas might be unready for a period of time due to
      unstable networking or other issues. 
      
 Workaround: 
      The konnectivity will recover by itself. Wait for 30 minutes to 1 hour
      and rerun cluster diagnose. 
     | 
  
  
    | Operating system | 
    1.7, 1.8, 1.9, 1.10, 1.11 | 
    
      /etc/cron.daily/aide CPU and memory spike issue
      Starting from Google Distributed Cloud version 1.7.2, the Ubuntu OS
      images are hardened with
      CIS L1 Server
      Benchmark. 
      As a result, the cron script /etc/cron.daily/aide has been
      installed so that an aide check is scheduled so as to ensure
      that the CIS L1 Server rule "1.4.2 Ensure filesystem integrity is
      regularly checked" is followed. 
      The cron job runs daily at 6:25 AM UTC. Depending on the number of
      files on the filesystem, you may experience CPU and memory usage spikes
      around that time that are caused by this aide process. 
      
 Workaround: 
      If the spikes are affecting your workload, you can disable the daily
      cron job: 
sudo chmod -x /etc/cron.daily/aide 
     | 
  
  
    | Networking | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      Load balancers and NSX-T stateful distributed firewall rules interact
      unpredictably
      When deploying Google Distributed Cloud version 1.9 or later, when the
      deployment has the Seesaw bundled load balancer in an environment that
      uses NSX-T stateful distributed firewall rules,
      stackdriver-operator might fail to create
      gke-metrics-agent-conf ConfigMap and cause
      gke-connect-agent Pods to be in a crash loop. 
      The underlying issue is that the stateful NSX-T distributed firewall
      rules terminate the connection from a client to the user cluster API
      server through the Seesaw load balancer because Seesaw uses asymmetric
      connection flows. The integration issues with NSX-T distributed firewall
      rules affect all Google Distributed Cloud releases that use Seesaw. You
      might see similar connection problems on your own applications when they
      create large Kubernetes objects whose sizes are bigger than 32K. 
      
 Workaround: 
      Follow
      
      these instructions to disable NSX-T distributed firewall rules, or to
      use stateless distributed firewall rules for Seesaw VMs. 
      If your clusters use a manual load balancer, follow
      
      these instructions to configure your load balancer to reset client
      connections when it detects a backend node failure. Without this
      configuration, clients of the Kubernetes API server might stop responding
      for several minutes when a server instance goes down. 
     | 
  
  
    | Logging and monitoring | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13, 1.14, 1.15 | 
    
      Unexpected monitoring billing  
      For Google Distributed Cloud versions 1.10 to 1.15, some customers have
      found unexpectedly high billing for Metrics volume on the
      Billing page. This issue affects you only when all of the
      following circumstances apply: 
      
        - Application logging and monitoring is enabled (
enableStackdriverForApplications=true)
         
        - Application Pods have the 
prometheus.io/scrap=true
        annotation. (Installing Cloud Service Mesh can also add this annotation.) 
       
      To confirm whether you are affected by this issue,
      list your
      user-defined metrics. If you see billing for unwanted metrics with external.googleapis.com/prometheus name prefix and also see enableStackdriverForApplications set to true in the response of kubectl -n kube-system get stackdriver stackdriver -o yaml, then
      this issue applies to you. 
      
 Workaround 
       If you are affected by this issue, we recommend that you upgrade your
clusters to version 1.12 or above, stop using the enableStackdriverForApplications flag, and switch to new application monitoring solution managed-service-for-prometheus that no longer relies on the prometheus.io/scrap=true annotation. With the new solution, you can also control logs and metrics collection separately for your applications, with the enableCloudLoggingForApplications and enableGMPForApplications flag, respectively.  
       To stop using the enableStackdriverForApplications flag, open the `stackdriver` object for editing: 
kubectl --kubeconfig=USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG --namespace kube-system edit stackdriver stackdriver
 
       Remove the enableStackdriverForApplications: true line, save and close the editor. 
      If you can't switch away from the annotation based metrics collection, use the following steps: 
      
        - Find the source Pods and Services that have the unwanted billed metrics.
kubectl --kubeconfig KUBECONFIG \
  get pods -A -o yaml | grep 'prometheus.io/scrape: "true"'
kubectl --kubeconfig KUBECONFIG get \
  services -A -o yaml | grep 'prometheus.io/scrape: "true"'  
        - Remove the 
prometheus.io/scrap=true annotation from the
        Pod or Service. If the annotation is added by Cloud Service Mesh, consider
        configuring Cloud Service Mesh without the Prometheus option,
        or turning off the Istio Metrics Merging feature. 
       
     | 
  
  
    | Installation | 
    1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      Installer fails when creating vSphere datadisk
      
      The Google Distributed Cloud installer can fail if custom roles are bound
      at the wrong permissions level. 
      When the role binding is incorrect, creating a vSphere datadisk with
      govc hangs and the disk is created with a size equal to 0. To
      fix the issue, you should bind the custom role at the vSphere vCenter
      level (root). 
      
 Workaround: 
      If you want to bind the custom role at the DC level (or lower than
      root), you also need to bind the read-only role to the user at the root
      vCenter level. 
      For more information on role creation, see
      
      vCenter user account privileges. 
     | 
  
  
    | Logging and monitoring | 
    1.9.0-1.9.4, 1.10.0-1.10.1 | 
    
      High network traffic to monitoring.googleapis.com
      
      You might see high network traffic to
      monitoring.googleapis.com, even in a new cluster that has no
      user workloads. 
      This issue affects version 1.10.0-1.10.1 and version 1.9.0-1.9.4. This
      issue is fixed in version 1.10.2 and 1.9.5. 
      
 Workaround: 
      
      View workaround steps
        Upgrade to version 1.10.2/1.9.5 or later. 
        To mitigate this issue for an earlier version: 
        
          - Scale down `stackdriver-operator`:
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    --namespace kube-system \
    scale deployment stackdriver-operator --replicas=0
          Replace USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG with the path of the user
          cluster kubeconfig file. 
          - Open the 
gke-metrics-agent-conf ConfigMap for editing:
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    --namespace kube-system \
    edit configmap gke-metrics-agent-conf 
          - Increase the probe interval from 0.1 seconds to 13 seconds:
  processors:
    disk_buffer/metrics:
      backend_endpoint: https://monitoring.googleapis.com:443
      buffer_dir: /metrics-data/nsq-metrics-metrics
      probe_interval: 13s
      retention_size_mib: 6144
  disk_buffer/self:
      backend_endpoint: https://monitoring.googleapis.com:443
      buffer_dir: /metrics-data/nsq-metrics-self
      probe_interval: 13s
      retention_size_mib: 200
    disk_buffer/uptime:
      backend_endpoint: https://monitoring.googleapis.com:443
      buffer_dir: /metrics-data/nsq-metrics-uptime
      probe_interval: 13s
      retention_size_mib: 200 
          - Close the editing session.
 
          - Change 
gke-metrics-agent DaemonSet version to
          1.1.0-anthos.8:
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG  \
  --namespace kube-system  set image daemonset/gke-metrics-agent \
  gke-metrics-agent=gcr.io/gke-on-prem-release/gke-metrics-agent:1.1.0-anthos.8  
       
      
     | 
  
  
    | Logging and monitoring | 
    1.10, 1.11 | 
    
      gke-metrics-agent has frequent CrashLoopBackOff errors
      
      For Google Distributed Cloud version 1.10 and above, `gke-metrics-agent`
      DaemonSet has frequent CrashLoopBackOff errors when
      `enableStackdriverForApplications` is set to `true` in the `stackdriver`
      object. 
      
 Workaround: 
      To mitigate this issue, disable application metrics collection by
      running the following commands. These commands will not disable
      application logs collection. 
      
        - To prevent the following changes from reverting, scale down
        
stackdriver-operator:
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    --namespace kube-system scale deploy stackdriver-operator \
    --replicas=0
        Replace USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG with the path of the user
        cluster kubeconfig file. 
        - Open the 
gke-metrics-agent-conf ConfigMap for editing:
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    --namespace kube-system edit configmap gke-metrics-agent-conf 
        - Under 
services.pipelines, comment out the entire
        metrics/app-metrics section:
services:
  pipelines:
    #metrics/app-metrics:
    #  exporters:
    #  - googlecloud/app-metrics
    #  processors:
    #  - resource
    #  - metric_to_resource
    #  - infer_resource
    #  - disk_buffer/app-metrics
    #  receivers:
    #  - prometheus/app-metrics
    metrics/metrics:
      exporters:
      - googlecloud/metrics
      processors:
      - resource
      - metric_to_resource
      - infer_resource
      - disk_buffer/metrics
      receivers:
      - prometheus/metrics 
        - Close the editing session.
 
        - Restart the 
gke-metrics-agent DaemonSet:
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    --namespace kube-system rollout restart daemonset gke-metrics-agent 
      | 
  
  
    | Logging and monitoring | 
    1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      Replace deprecated metrics in dashboard
      If deprecated metrics are used in your OOTB dashboards, you will see
      some empty charts. To find deprecated metrics in the Monitoring
      dashboards, run the following commands: 
gcloud monitoring dashboards list > all-dashboard.json
# find deprecated metrics
cat all-dashboard.json | grep -E \
  'kube_daemonset_updated_number_scheduled\
    |kube_node_status_allocatable_cpu_cores\
    |kube_node_status_allocatable_pods\
    |kube_node_status_capacity_cpu_cores'
      The following deprecated metrics should be migrated to their
      replacements. 
      
        | Deprecated | Replacement |  
        
          kube_daemonset_updated_number_scheduled | 
          kube_daemonset_status_updated_number_scheduled | 
         
        
          kube_node_status_allocatable_cpu_cores 
          kube_node_status_allocatable_memory_bytes 
          kube_node_status_allocatable_pods | 
          kube_node_status_allocatable | 
         
        
          kube_node_status_capacity_cpu_cores 
          kube_node_status_capacity_memory_bytes 
          kube_node_status_capacity_pods | 
          kube_node_status_capacity | 
         
        
          kube_hpa_status_current_replicas | 
          kube_horizontalpodautoscaler_status_current_replicas | 
         
       
      
 Workaround: 
      To replace the deprecated metrics 
      
        - Delete "GKE on-prem node status" in the Google Cloud Monitoring
        dashboard. Reinstall "GKE on-prem node status" following
        
        these instructions.
 
        - Delete "GKE on-prem node utilization" in the Google Cloud Monitoring
        dashboard. Reinstall "GKE on-prem node utilization" following
        
        these instructions.
 
        - Delete "GKE on-prem vSphere vm health" in the Google Cloud
        Monitoring dashboard. Reinstall "GKE on-prem vSphere vm health"
        following
        
        these instructions.
 
      
      This deprecation is due to the upgrade of
      
      kube-state-metrics agent from v1.9 to v2.4, which is required for
      Kubernetes 1.22. You can replace all deprecated
      kube-state-metrics metrics, which have the prefix
      kube_, in your custom dashboards or alerting policies. 
      | 
  
  
    | Logging and monitoring | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      Unknown metric data in Cloud Monitoring
      For Google Distributed Cloud version 1.10 and above, the data for
      clusters in Cloud Monitoring may contain irrelevant summary metrics
      entries such as the following: 
Unknown metric: kubernetes.io/anthos/go_gc_duration_seconds_summary_percentile
 
      Other metrics types that may have irrelevant summary metrics
      include :
      
        apiserver_admission_step_admission_duration_seconds_summary 
        go_gc_duration_seconds 
        scheduler_scheduling_duration_seconds 
        gkeconnect_http_request_duration_seconds_summary 
        alertmanager_nflog_snapshot_duration_seconds_summary 
       
      While these summary type metrics are in the metrics list, they are not
      supported by gke-metrics-agent at this time. 
     | 
  
  
    | Logging and monitoring | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      Missing metrics on some nodes
      You might find that the following metrics are missing on some, but not
      all, nodes: 
      
        kubernetes.io/anthos/container_memory_working_set_bytes 
        kubernetes.io/anthos/container_cpu_usage_seconds_total 
        kubernetes.io/anthos/container_network_receive_bytes_total 
       
      
 Workaround: 
      To fix this issue, perform the following steps as a workaround. For
      [version 1.9.5+, 1.10.2+, 1.11.0]:  increase cpu for gke-metrics-agent
      by following steps 1 - 4 
      
        - Open your 
stackdriver resource for editing:
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    --namespace kube-system edit stackdriver stackdriver
         - To  increase the CPU request for 
gke-metrics-agent from
        10m to 50m, CPU limit from 100m
        to 200m add the following resourceAttrOverride
        section to the stackdriver manifest :
spec:
  resourceAttrOverride:
    gke-metrics-agent/gke-metrics-agent:
      limits:
        cpu: 100m
        memory: 4608Mi
      requests:
        cpu: 10m
        memory: 200Mi
        Your edited resource should look similar to the following:
spec:
  anthosDistribution: on-prem
  clusterLocation: us-west1-a
  clusterName: my-cluster
  enableStackdriverForApplications: true
  gcpServiceAccountSecretName: ...
  optimizedMetrics: true
  portable: true
  projectID: my-project-191923
  proxyConfigSecretName: ...
  resourceAttrOverride:
    gke-metrics-agent/gke-metrics-agent:
      limits:
        cpu: 200m
        memory: 4608Mi
      requests:
        cpu: 50m
        memory: 200Mi 
        - Save your changes and close the text editor.
 
        - To verify your changes have taken effect, run the following command:
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    --namespace kube-system get daemonset gke-metrics-agent -o yaml \
    | grep "cpu: 50m"
        The command finds cpu: 50m if your edits have taken effect. 
       
     | 
  
  
  
    | Logging and monitoring | 
    1.11.0-1.11.2, 1.12.0 | 
    
       Missing scheduler and controller-manager metrics in admin cluster
      
      If your admin cluster is affected by this issue, scheduler and
      controller-manager metrics are missing. For example, these two metrics are
      missing 
# scheduler metric example
scheduler_pending_pods
# controller-manager metric example
replicaset_controller_rate_limiter_use
 
      
 Workaround: 
      Upgrade to v1.11.3+, v1.12.1+, or v1.13+. 
     | 
  
  
  
     | 
    1.11.0-1.11.2, 1.12.0 | 
    
      Missing scheduler and controller-manager metrics in user cluster
       If your user cluster is affected by this issue, scheduler and
      controller-manager metrics are missing. For example, these two metrics are
      missing: 
# scheduler metric example
scheduler_pending_pods
# controller-manager metric example
replicaset_controller_rate_limiter_use
 
      
 Workaround: 
      This issue is fixed in Google Distributed Cloud version 1.13.0 and later.
      Upgrade your cluster to a version with the fix. 
     | 
  
  
    | Installation, Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      Failure to register admin cluster during creation
      If you create an admin cluster for version 1.9.x or 1.10.0, and if the
      admin cluster fails to register with the provided gkeConnect
      spec during its creation, you will get the following error. 
Failed to create root cluster: failed to register admin cluster: failed to register cluster: failed to apply Hub Membership: Membership API request failed: rpc error:  ode = PermissionDenied desc = Permission 'gkehub.memberships.get' denied on PROJECT_PATH
 
      You will still be able to use this admin cluster, but you will get the
      following error if you later attempt to upgrade the admin cluster to
      version 1.10.y. 
failed to migrate to first admin trust chain: failed to parse current version "": invalid version: "" failed to migrate to first admin trust chain: failed to parse current version "": invalid version: ""
 
      
 Workaround: 
      
      View workaround steps
        If this error occurs, follow these steps to fix the cluster
        registration issue. After you do this fix, you can then upgrade your admin
        cluster. 
        
          - Run 
gkectl update admin to register the admin cluster
          with the correct service account key. 
          - Create a dedicated service account for patching the
          
OnPremAdminCluster custom resource.
export KUBECONFIG=ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG
# Create Service Account modify-admin
kubectl apply -f - <<EOF
apiVersion: v1
kind: ServiceAccount
metadata:
  name: modify-admin
  namespace: kube-system
EOF
# Create ClusterRole
kubectl apply -f - <<EOF
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: ClusterRole
metadata:
  creationTimestamp: null
  name: modify-admin-role
rules:
- apiGroups:
  - "onprem.cluster.gke.io"
  resources:
  - "onpremadminclusters/status"
  verbs:
  - "patch"
EOF
# Create ClusterRoleBinding for binding the permissions to the modify-admin SA
kubectl apply -f - <<EOF
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: ClusterRoleBinding
metadata:
  creationTimestamp: null
  name: modify-admin-rolebinding
roleRef:
  apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
  kind: ClusterRole
  name: modify-admin-role
subjects:
- kind: ServiceAccount
  name: modify-admin
  namespace: kube-system
EOF 
          Replace ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG with the path of your admin
          cluster kubeconfig file. 
          - Run these commands to update the 
OnPremAdminCluster
          custom resource.
export KUBECONFIG=ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG
SERVICE_ACCOUNT=modify-admin
SECRET=$(kubectl get serviceaccount ${SERVICE_ACCOUNT} \
    -n kube-system -o json \
    | jq -Mr '.secrets[].name | select(contains("token"))')
TOKEN=$(kubectl get secret ${SECRET} -n kube-system -o json \
    | jq -Mr '.data.token' | base64 -d)
kubectl get secret ${SECRET} -n kube-system -o json \
    | jq -Mr '.data["ca.crt"]' \
    | base64 -d > /tmp/ca.crt
APISERVER=https://$(kubectl -n default get endpoints kubernetes \
    --no-headers | awk '{ print $2 }')
# Find out the admin cluster name and gkeOnPremVersion from the OnPremAdminCluster CR
ADMIN_CLUSTER_NAME=$(kubectl get onpremadmincluster -n kube-system \
    --no-headers | awk '{ print $1 }')
GKE_ON_PREM_VERSION=$(kubectl get onpremadmincluster \
    -n kube-system $ADMIN_CLUSTER_NAME \
    -o=jsonpath='{.spec.gkeOnPremVersion}')
# Create the Status field and set the gkeOnPremVersion in OnPremAdminCluster CR
curl -H "Accept: application/json" \
    --header "Authorization: Bearer $TOKEN" -XPATCH \
    -H "Content-Type: application/merge-patch+json" \
    --cacert /tmp/ca.crt \
    --data '{"status": {"gkeOnPremVersion": "'$GKE_ON_PREM_VERSION'"}}' \
    $APISERVER/apis/onprem.cluster.gke.io/v1alpha1/namespaces/kube-system/onpremadminclusters/$ADMIN_CLUSTER_NAME/status 
          - Attempt to upgrade the admin cluster again with the
          
--disable-upgrade-from-checkpoint flag.
gkectl upgrade admin --config ADMIN_CLUSTER_CONFIG \
    --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    --disable-upgrade-from-checkpoint
          Replace ADMIN_CLUSTER_CONFIG with the path of your admin
          cluster configuration file. 
         
      
     | 
  
  
    | Identity | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      Using GKE Identity Service can cause the
      Connect Agent to restart unpredictably
      
      If you are using the
      GKE Identity Service
      feature to manage
      
      GKE Identity Service ClientConfig, the
      
      Connect Agent might restart unexpectedly. 
      
 Workaround: 
      If you have experienced this issue with an existing cluster, you can do
      one of the following: 
      
        - Disable GKE Identity Service. If you disable
        GKE Identity Service, that won't remove the deployed
        GKE Identity Service binary or remove
        GKE Identity Service ClientConfig. To disable
        GKE Identity Service, run this command:
gcloud container fleet identity-service disable \
    --project PROJECT_ID
        Replace PROJECT_ID with the ID of the cluster's
        
        fleet host project. 
        - Update the cluster to version 1.9.3 or later, or version 1.10.1 or
        later, so as to upgrade the Connect Agent version.
 
      
      | 
  
  
    | Networking | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      Cisco ACI doesn't work with Direct Server Return (DSR)
      Seesaw runs in DSR mode, and by default it doesn't work in Cisco ACI
      because of data-plane IP learning. 
      
 Workaround: 
      A possible workaround is to disable IP learning by adding the Seesaw IP
      address as a L4-L7 Virtual IP in the Cisco Application Policy
      Infrastructure Controller (APIC). 
      You can configure the L4-L7 Virtual IP option by going to Tenant >
      Application Profiles > Application EPGs or uSeg EPGs. Failure
      to disable IP learning will result in IP endpoint flapping between
      different locations in the Cisco API fabric. 
     | 
  
  
    | VMware | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      vSphere 7.0 Update 3 issues
      VMWare has recently identified critical issues with the following
      vSphere 7.0 Update 3 releases: 
      
        - vSphere ESXi 7.0 Update 3 (build 18644231)
 
        - vSphere ESXi 7.0 Update 3a (build 18825058)
 
        - vSphere ESXi 7.0 Update 3b (build 18905247)
 
        - vSphere vCenter 7.0 Update 3b (build 18901211)
 
       
      
 Workaround: 
      VMWare has since removed these releases. You should upgrade the
      ESXi and
      vCenter
      Servers to a newer version. 
     | 
  
  
    | Operating system | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      Failure to mount emptyDir volume as exec into Pod running
      on COS nodes
      For Pods running on nodes that use Container-Optimized OS (COS) images,
      you cannot mount emptyDir volume as exec. It mounts as
      noexec and you will get the following error: exec user
      process caused: permission denied. For example, you will see this
      error message if you deploy the following test Pod: 
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
  creationTimestamp: null
  labels:
    run: test
  name: test
spec:
  containers:
  - args:
    - sleep
    - "5000"
    image: gcr.io/google-containers/busybox:latest
    name: test
    volumeMounts:
      - name: test-volume
        mountPath: /test-volume
    resources:
      limits:
        cpu: 200m
        memory: 512Mi
  dnsPolicy: ClusterFirst
  restartPolicy: Always
  volumes:
    - emptyDir: {}
      name: test-volume
      And in the test Pod, if you run mount | grep test-volume,
      it would show noexec option: 
/dev/sda1 on /test-volume type ext4 (rw,nosuid,nodev,noexec,relatime,commit=30)
 
      
 Workaround: 
      
      View workaround steps
        Apply a DaemonSet resource, for example: 
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: DaemonSet
metadata:
  name: fix-cos-noexec
  namespace: kube-system
spec:
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: fix-cos-noexec
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: fix-cos-noexec
    spec:
      hostIPC: true
      hostPID: true
      containers:
      - name: fix-cos-noexec
        image: ubuntu
        command: ["chroot", "/host", "bash", "-c"]
        args:
        - |
          set -ex
          while true; do
            if ! $(nsenter -a -t 1 findmnt -l | grep -qe "^/var/lib/kubelet\s"); then
              echo "remounting /var/lib/kubelet with exec"
              nsenter -a -t 1 mount --bind /var/lib/kubelet /var/lib/kubelet
              nsenter -a -t 1 mount -o remount,exec /var/lib/kubelet
            fi
            sleep 3600
          done
        volumeMounts:
        - name: host
          mountPath: /host
        securityContext:
          privileged: true
      volumes:
      - name: host
        hostPath:
          path: /
      
     | 
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      Cluster node pool replica update does not work after autoscaling has
      been disabled on the node pool
      Node pool replicas do not update once autoscaling has been enabled and
      disabled on a node pool. 
      
 Workaround: 
      Removing the
      cluster.x-k8s.io/cluster-api-autoscaler-node-group-max-size
      and cluster.x-k8s.io/cluster-api-autoscaler-node-group-min-size
      annotations from the machine deployment of the corresponding node pool. 
     | 
  
  
    | Logging and monitoring | 
    1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      Windows monitoring dashboards show data from Linux clusters
      From version 1.11, on the out-of-the-box monitoring dashboards, the
      Windows Pod status dashboard and Windows node status dashboard also show
      data from Linux clusters. This is because the Windows node and Pod metrics
      are also exposed on Linux clusters. 
     | 
  
    
  
    | Logging and monitoring | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12 | 
    
      stackdriver-log-forwarder in constant CrashLoopBackOff
      For Google Distributed Cloud version 1.10, 1.11, and 1.12, stackdriver-log-forwarder
      DaemonSet might have CrashLoopBackOff errors when there are
      broken buffered logs on the disk. 
      
 Workaround: 
      To mitigate this issue, we will need to clean up the buffered logs on
      the node. 
      
        - To prevent the unexpected behaviour, scale down
        
stackdriver-log-forwarder:
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    -n kube-system patch daemonset stackdriver-log-forwarder -p '{"spec": {"template": {"spec": {"nodeSelector": {"non-existing": "true"}}}}}'
        Replace USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG with the path of the user
        cluster kubeconfig file. 
        - Deploy the clean-up DaemonSet to clean up broken chunks:
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    -n kube-system -f - << EOF
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: DaemonSet
metadata:
  name: fluent-bit-cleanup
  namespace: kube-system
spec:
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: fluent-bit-cleanup
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: fluent-bit-cleanup
    spec:
      containers:
      - name: fluent-bit-cleanup
        image: debian:10-slim
        command: ["bash", "-c"]
        args:
        - |
          rm -rf /var/log/fluent-bit-buffers/
          echo "Fluent Bit local buffer is cleaned up."
          sleep 3600
        volumeMounts:
        - name: varlog
          mountPath: /var/log
        securityContext:
          privileged: true
      tolerations:
      - key: "CriticalAddonsOnly"
        operator: "Exists"
      - key: node-role.kubernetes.io/master
        effect: NoSchedule
      - key: node-role.gke.io/observability
        effect: NoSchedule
      volumes:
      - name: varlog
        hostPath:
          path: /var/log
EOF 
        - To make sure the clean-up DaemonSet has cleaned up all the chunks,
        you can run the following commands. The output of the two commands
        should be equal to your node number in the cluster:
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
  logs -n kube-system -l app=fluent-bit-cleanup | grep "cleaned up" | wc -l
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
  -n kube-system get pods -l app=fluent-bit-cleanup --no-headers | wc -l  
    - Delete the clean-up DaemonSet:
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
  -n kube-system delete ds fluent-bit-cleanup  
    - Resume 
stackdriver-log-forwarder:
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
  -n kube-system patch daemonset stackdriver-log-forwarder --type json -p='[{"op": "remove", "path": "/spec/template/spec/nodeSelector/non-existing"}]' 
      | 
  
    
  
    | Logging and monitoring | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13, 1.14, 1.15, 1.16 | 
    
      stackdriver-log-forwarder doesn't send logs to Cloud Logging
      If you don't see logs in Cloud Logging from your clusters, and you
      notice the following error in your logs:
       2023-06-02T10:53:40.444017427Z [2023/06/02 10:53:40] [error] [input chunk] chunk 1-1685703077.747168499.flb would exceed total limit size in plugin stackdriver.0
2023-06-02T10:53:40.444028047Z [2023/06/02 10:53:40] [error] [input chunk] no available chunk
      
      It's likely the logs input rate exceeds the limit of the logging agent,
      which causes stackdriver-log-forwarder to not send logs.
      This issue occurs in all Google Distributed Cloud versions.
      Workaround: 
      To mitigate this issue, you need to increase the resource limit on
      the logging agent. 
      
        - Open your 
stackdriver resource for editing:
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    --namespace kube-system edit stackdriver stackdriver
         - To increase the CPU request for 
stackdriver-log-forwarder
        , add the following resourceAttrOverride
        section to the stackdriver manifest :
spec:
  resourceAttrOverride:
    stackdriver-log-forwarder/stackdriver-log-forwarder:
      limits:
        cpu: 1200m
        memory: 600Mi
      requests:
        cpu: 600m
        memory: 600Mi
        Your edited resource should look similar to the following:
spec:
  anthosDistribution: on-prem
  clusterLocation: us-west1-a
  clusterName: my-cluster
  enableStackdriverForApplications: true
  gcpServiceAccountSecretName: ...
  optimizedMetrics: true
  portable: true
  projectID: my-project-191923
  proxyConfigSecretName: ...
  resourceAttrOverride:
    stackdriver-log-forwarder/stackdriver-log-forwarder:
      limits:
        cpu: 1200m
        memory: 600Mi
      requests:
        cpu: 600m
        memory: 600Mi 
        - Save your changes and close the text editor.
 
        - To verify your changes have taken effect, run the following command:
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    --namespace kube-system get daemonset stackdriver-log-forwarder -o yaml \
    | grep "cpu: 1200m"
        The command finds cpu: 1200m if your edits have taken effect. 
       
     | 
  
  
    | Security | 
    1.13 | 
    
      Kubelet service will be temporarily unavailable after NodeReady
      there is a short period where node is ready but kubelet server
      certificate is not ready. kubectl exec and
      kubectl logs are unavailable during this tens of seconds.
      This is because it takes time for the new server certificate approver to
      see the updated valid IPs of the node. 
      This issue affects kubelet server certificate only, it will not affect
      Pod scheduling. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.12 | 
    
      Partial admin cluster upgrade does not block later user cluster
      upgrade
      User cluster upgrade failed with: 
.LBKind in body is required (Check the status of OnPremUserCluster 'cl-stg-gdl-gke-onprem-mgmt/cl-stg-gdl' and the logs of pod 'kube-system/onprem-user-cluster-controller' for more detailed debugging information.
 
      The admin cluster is not fully upgraded, and the status version is
      still 1.10. User cluster upgrade to 1.12 won't be blocked by any preflight
      check, and fails with version skew issue. 
      
 Workaround: 
      Complete to upgrade the admin cluster to 1.11 first, and then upgrade
      the user cluster to 1.12. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Storage | 
    1.10.0-1.10.5, 1.11.0-1.11.2, 1.12.0 | 
    
      Datastore incorrectly reports insufficient free space
      gkectl diagnose cluster command failed with:
 
Checking VSphere Datastore FreeSpace...FAILURE
    Reason: vCenter datastore: [DATASTORE_NAME] insufficient FreeSpace, requires at least [NUMBER] GB
      The validation of datastore free space should not be used for existing
      cluster node pools, and was added in gkectl diagnose cluster
      by mistake. 
      
 Workaround: 
      You can ignore the error message or skip the validation using
      --skip-validation-infra. 
     | 
  
  
    | Operation, Networking | 
    1.11, 1.12.0-1.12.1 | 
    
      
       You may not be able to add a new user cluster if your admin cluster is
      set up with a MetalLB load balancer configuration. 
      The user cluster deletion process may get stuck for some reason which
      results in an invalidation of the MatalLB ConfigMap. It won't be possible
      to add a new user cluster in this state. 
      
 Workaround: 
      You can 
      force delete your user cluster. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Installation, Operating system | 
    1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      Failure when using Container-Optimized OS (COS) for user cluster
      If osImageType is using cos for admin
      cluster, and when gkectl check-config is executed after admin
      cluster creation and before user cluster creation, it would fail on:
 
Failed to create the test VMs: VM failed to get IP addresses on the network.
 
      The test VM created for user cluster check-config by
      default uses the same osImageType from admin cluster, and
      currently test VM is not compatible with COS yet. 
      
 Workaround: 
      To avoid the slow preflight check which creates the test VM, using
      gkectl check-config --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG --config
      USER_CLUSTER_CONFIG --fast. 
     | 
  
  
    | Logging and monitoring | 
    1.12.0-1.12.1 | 
    
      Grafana in the admin cluster unable to reach user clusters
      This issue affects customers using Grafana in the admin cluster to
      monitor user clusters in Google Distributed Cloud versions 1.12.0 and
      1.12.1. It comes from a mismatch of pushprox-client certificates in user
      clusters and the allowlist in the pushprox-server in the admin cluster.
      The symptom is pushprox-client in user clusters printing error logs like
      the following: 
level=error ts=2022-08-02T13:34:49.41999813Z caller=client.go:166 msg="Error reading request:" err="invalid method \"RBAC:\""
 
      
 Workaround: 
      
      View workaround steps
        perform the following steps: 
        
          - Scale down monitoring-operator deployment in admin cluster
          kube-system namespace.
kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    --namespace kube-system scale deploy monitoring-operator \
    --replicas=0 
          - Edit the 
pushprox-server-rbac-proxy-config ConfigMap
          in admin cluster kube-system namespace.
kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG \
    --namespace kube-system edit cm pushprox-server-rbac-proxy-config
          Locate the principals line for the
          external-pushprox-server-auth-proxy listener and correct
          the principal_name for all user clusters by removing the
          kube-system substring from
          pushprox-client.metrics-consumers.kube-system.cluster.
          The new config should look like the following:
permissions:
- or_rules:
    rules:
    - header: { name: ":path", exact_match: "/poll" }
    - header: { name: ":path", exact_match: "/push" }
principals: [{"authenticated":{"principal_name":{"exact":"pushprox-client.metrics-consumers.kube-system.cluster.local"}}},{"authenticated":{"principal_name":{"exact":"pushprox-client.metrics-consumers.kube-system.cluster."}}},{"authenticated":{"principal_name":{"exact":"pushprox-client.metrics-consumers.cluster."}}}]
 
          - Restart the 
pushprox-server deployment in the admin
          cluster and the pushprox-client deployment in affected
          user clusters:
kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG --namespace kube-system rollout restart deploy pushprox-server
kubectl --kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG --namespace kube-system rollout restart deploy pushprox-client  
          - The preceding steps should resolve the issue. Once the cluster is
          upgraded to 1.12.2 and later where the issue is fixed, scale up the
          admin cluster kube-system monitoring-operator so that it can manage the
          pipeline again.
kubectl --kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG --namespace kube-system scale deploy monitoring-operator --replicas=1  
         
      
     | 
  
  
  
    | Other | 
    1.11.3 | 
    
      gkectl repair admin-master does not provide the VM
      template to be used for recovery
      gkectl repair admin-master command failed with:
 
Failed to repair: failed to select the template: no VM templates is available for repairing the admin master (check if the admin cluster version >= 1.4.0 or contact support
 
      gkectl repair admin-master is not able to fetch the VM
      template to be used for repairing the admin control plane VM if the name
      of the admin control plane VM ends with the characters t,
      m, p, or l. 
      
 Workaround: 
      Rerun the command with --skip-validation. 
     | 
  
  
    | Logging and monitoring | 
    1.11, 1.12, 1.13, 1.14, 1.15, 1.16 | 
    
      Cloud audit logging failure due to permission denied
      
      Cloud Audit Logs needs a special permission setup that is
      currently only automatically performed for user clusters through GKE Hub.
      It is recommended to have at least one user cluster that uses the same
      project ID and service account with the admin cluster for
      Cloud Audit Logs so the admin cluster will have the required
      permission. 
      However in cases where the admin cluster uses a different project ID or
      different service account than any user cluster, audit logs from the admin
      cluster would fail to be injected into Google Cloud. The symptom is a
      series of Permission Denied errors in the
      audit-proxy Pod in the admin cluster. 
      Workaround: 
      
      View workaround steps
        To resolve this issue, the permission can be setup by interacting with
        the cloudauditlogging Hub feature: 
        
          - First check the existing service accounts allowlisted for
           Cloud Audit Logs in your project:
curl -H "Authorization: Bearer $(gcloud auth print-access-token)" \
    https://gkehub.googleapis.com/v1alpha/projects/PROJECT_ID/locations/global/features/cloudauditlogging 
          - Depend on the response, do one of the following:
            
              - If you received a 
404 Not_found error, it means
              there is no service account allowlisted for this project ID. You can
              allowlist a service account by enabling the
              cloudauditlogging Hub feature:
curl -X POST -H "Authorization: Bearer $(gcloud auth print-access-token)" \
    -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
    https://gkehub.googleapis.com/v1alpha/projects/PROJECT_ID/locations/global/features?feature_id=cloudauditlogging -d \
    '{"spec":{"cloudauditlogging":{"allowlistedServiceAccounts":["SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL"]}}}' 
              - If you received a feature spec that contains
              
"lifecycleState": "ENABLED" with "code":
              "OK" and a list of service accounts in
              allowlistedServiceAccounts, it means there are existing
              service accounts allowed for this project, you can either use a
              service account from this list in your cluster, or add a new service
              account to the allowlist:
curl -X PATCH -H "Authorization: Bearer $(gcloud auth print-access-token)" \
    -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
    https://gkehub.googleapis.com/v1alpha/projects/PROJECT_ID/locations/global/features/cloudauditlogging?update_mask=spec.cloudauditlogging.allowlistedServiceAccounts -d \
    '{"spec":{"cloudauditlogging":{"allowlistedServiceAccounts":["SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL"]}}}' 
              - If you received a feature spec that contains
              
"lifecycleState": "ENABLED" with "code":
              "FAILED", it means the permission setup was not successful.
              Try to address the issues in the description field of
              the response, or back up the current allowlist, delete the
              cloudauditlogging hub feature, and re-enable it following step 1 of
              this section again. You can delete the cloudauditlogging
              Hub feature by:
curl -X DELETE -H "Authorization: Bearer $(gcloud auth print-access-token)" \
    https://gkehub.googleapis.com/v1alpha/projects/PROJECT_ID/locations/global/features/cloudauditlogging 
             
           
           
          In above commands: 
          
        
     | 
  
  
    | Operation, Security | 
    1.11 | 
    
      gkectl diagnose checking certificates failure
      If your work station does not have access to user cluster worker nodes,
      it will get the following failures when running
      gkectl diagnose: 
Checking user cluster certificates...FAILURE
    Reason: 3 user cluster certificates error(s).
    Unhealthy Resources:
    Node kubelet CA and certificate on node xxx: failed to verify kubelet certificate on node xxx: dial tcp xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:10250: connect: connection timed out
    Node kubelet CA and certificate on node xxx: failed to verify kubelet certificate on node xxx: dial tcp xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:10250: connect: connection timed out
    Node kubelet CA and certificate on node xxx: failed to verify kubelet certificate on node xxx: dial tcp xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:10250: connect: connection timed out
      If your work station does not have access to admin cluster worker nodes
      or admin cluster worker nodes, it will get the following failures when
      running gkectl diagnose: 
Checking admin cluster certificates...FAILURE
    Reason: 3 admin cluster certificates error(s).
    Unhealthy Resources:
    Node kubelet CA and certificate on node xxx: failed to verify kubelet certificate on node xxx: dial tcp xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:10250: connect: connection timed out
    Node kubelet CA and certificate on node xxx: failed to verify kubelet certificate on node xxx: dial tcp xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:10250: connect: connection timed out
    Node kubelet CA and certificate on node xxx: failed to verify kubelet certificate on node xxx: dial tcp xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:10250: connect: connection timed out
      
 Workaround: 
      If is safe to ignore these messages. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Operating system | 
    1.8, 1.9, 1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13 | 
    
      /var/log/audit/ filling up disk space on VMs
      /var/log/audit/ is filled with audit logs. You can check
      the disk usage by running sudo du -h -d 1 /var/log/audit. 
      Certain gkectl commands on the admin workstation, for
      example, gkectl diagnose snapshot contribute to disk space
      usage. 
      Since Google Distributed Cloud v1.8, the Ubuntu image is hardened with CIS Level 2
      Benchmark. And one of the compliance rules, "4.1.2.2 Ensure audit logs are
      not automatically deleted", ensures the auditd setting
      max_log_file_action = keep_logs. This results in all the
      audit rules kept on the disk. 
      
 Workaround: 
      
      View workaround steps
        Admin workstation 
        For the admin workstation, you can manually change the auditd
        settings to rotate the logs automatically, and then restart the auditd
        service: 
sed -i 's/max_log_file_action = keep_logs/max_log_file_action = rotate/g' /etc/audit/auditd.conf
sed -i 's/num_logs = .*/num_logs = 250/g' /etc/audit/auditd.conf
systemctl restart auditd 
        The above setting would make auditd automatically rotate its logs
        once it has generated more than 250 files (each with 8M size). 
        Cluster nodes 
        For cluster nodes, upgrade to 1.11.5+, 1.12.4+, 1.13.2+ or 1.14+. If
        you can't upgrade to those versions yet, apply the following DaemonSet to your cluster: 
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: DaemonSet
metadata:
  name: change-auditd-log-action
  namespace: kube-system
spec:
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: change-auditd-log-action
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: change-auditd-log-action
    spec:
      hostIPC: true
      hostPID: true
      containers:
      - name: update-audit-rule
        image: ubuntu
        command: ["chroot", "/host", "bash", "-c"]
        args:
        - |
          while true; do
            if $(grep -q "max_log_file_action = keep_logs" /etc/audit/auditd.conf); then
              echo "updating auditd max_log_file_action to rotate with a max of 250 files"
              sed -i 's/max_log_file_action = keep_logs/max_log_file_action = rotate/g' /etc/audit/auditd.conf
              sed -i 's/num_logs = .*/num_logs = 250/g' /etc/audit/auditd.conf
              echo "restarting auditd"
              systemctl restart auditd
            else
              echo "auditd setting is expected, skip update"
            fi
            sleep 600
          done
        volumeMounts:
        - name: host
          mountPath: /host
        securityContext:
          privileged: true
      volumes:
      - name: host
        hostPath:
          path: /
        Note that making this auditd config change would violate CIS Level 2
        rule "4.1.2.2 Ensure audit logs are not automatically deleted". 
      
     | 
  
  
  
    | Networking | 
    1.10, 1.11.0-1.11.3, 1.12.0-1.12.2, 1.13.0 | 
    
      NetworkGatewayGroup Floating IP conflicts with node
      address
      Users are unable to create or update NetworkGatewayGroup
      objects because of the following validating webhook error: 
[1] admission webhook "vnetworkgatewaygroup.kb.io" denied the request: NetworkGatewayGroup.networking.gke.io "default" is invalid: [Spec.FloatingIPs: Invalid value: "10.0.0.100": IP address conflicts with node address with name: "my-node-name"
 
      In affected versions, the kubelet can erroneously bind to a floating IP
      address assigned to the node and report it as a node address in
      node.status.addresses. The validating webhook checks
      NetworkGatewayGroup floating IP addresses against all
      node.status.addresses in the cluster and sees this as a
      conflict. 
      
 Workaround: 
      In the same cluster where create or update of
      NetworkGatewayGroup objects is failing, temporarily disable
      the ANG validating webhook and submit your change: 
      
        - Save the webhook config so it can be restored at the end:
kubectl -n kube-system get validatingwebhookconfiguration \
    ang-validating-webhook-configuration -o yaml > webhook-config.yaml 
        - Edit the webhook config:
kubectl -n kube-system edit validatingwebhookconfiguration \
    ang-validating-webhook-configuration 
        - Remove the 
vnetworkgatewaygroup.kb.io item from the
        webhook config list and close to apply the changes. 
        - Create or edit your 
NetworkGatewayGroup object. 
        - Reapply the original webhook config:
kubectl -n kube-system apply -f webhook-config.yaml  
      | 
  
  
    | Installation, Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.10.0-1.10.2 | 
    
      Creating or upgrading admin cluster timeout
      During an admin cluster upgrade attempt, the admin control plane VM
      might get stuck during creation. The admin control plane VM goes into an
      infinite waiting loop during the boot up, and you will see the following
      infinite loop error in the /var/log/cloud-init-output.log
      file: 
+ echo 'waiting network configuration is applied'
waiting network configuration is applied
++ get-public-ip
+++ ip addr show dev ens192 scope global
+++ head -n 1
+++ grep -v 192.168.231.1
+++ grep -Eo 'inet ([0-9]{1,3}\.){3}[0-9]{1,3}'
+++ awk '{print $2}'
++ echo
+ '[' -n '' ']'
+ sleep 1
+ echo 'waiting network configuration is applied'
waiting network configuration is applied
++ get-public-ip
+++ ip addr show dev ens192 scope global
+++ grep -Eo 'inet ([0-9]{1,3}\.){3}[0-9]{1,3}'
+++ awk '{print $2}'
+++ grep -v 192.168.231.1
+++ head -n 1
++ echo
+ '[' -n '' ']'
+ sleep 1
      This is because when Google Distributed Cloud tries to get the node IP
      address in the startup script, it uses grep -v
      ADMIN_CONTROL_PLANE_VIP to skip the admin cluster control-plane VIP
      which can be assigned to the NIC too. However, the command also skips over
      any IP address that has a prefix of the control-plane VIP, which causes
      the startup script to hang. 
      For example, suppose that the admin cluster control-plane VIP is
      192.168.1.25. If the IP address of the admin cluster control-plane VM has
      the same prefix, for example,192.168.1.254, then the control-plane VM will
      get stuck during creation. This issue can also be triggered if the
      broadcast address has the same prefix as the control-plane VIP, for
      example, 192.168.1.255. 
      
 Workaround: 
      
        - If the reason for the admin cluster creation timeout is due to the
        broadcast IP address, run the following command on the admin cluster
        control-plane VM:
ip addr add ${ADMIN_CONTROL_PLANE_NODE_IP}/32 dev ens192
        This will create a line without a broadcast address, and unblock the
        boot up process. After the startup script is unblocked, remove this
        added line by running the following command:
ip addr del ${ADMIN_CONTROL_PLANE_NODE_IP}/32 dev ens192 
        - However, if the reason for the admin cluster creation timeout is due
        to the IP address of the control-plane VM, you cannot unblock the
        startup script. Switch to a different IP address, and recreate or
        upgrade to version 1.10.3 or later.
 
       
     | 
  
  
    | Operating system, Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.10.0-1.10.2 | 
    
      The state of the admin cluster using COS image will get lost upon
      admin cluster upgrade or admin master repair
      DataDisk can't be mounted correctly to admin cluster master node when
      using COS image and the state of the admin cluster using COS image will
      get lost upon admin cluster upgrade or admin master repair. (admin cluster
      using COS image is a preview feature) 
      
 Workaround: 
      Re-create admin cluster with osImageType set to ubuntu_containerd 
      After you create the admin cluster with osImageType set to cos, grab
      the admin cluster SSH key and SSH into admin master node.
      df -h result contains /dev/sdb1        98G  209M   93G
      1% /opt/data. And lsblk result contains -sdb1      
      8:17   0  100G  0 part /opt/data 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Operating system | 
    1.10 | 
    
      systemd-resolved failed DNS lookup on .local domains
      In Google Distributed Cloud version 1.10.0, name resolutions on Ubuntu
      are routed to local systemd-resolved listening on 127.0.0.53
      by default. The reason is that on the Ubuntu 20.04 image used in version
      1.10.0, /etc/resolv.conf is sym-linked to
      /run/systemd/resolve/stub-resolv.conf, which points to the
      127.0.0.53 localhost DNS stub. 
      As a result, the localhost DNS name resolution refuses to check the
      upstream DNS servers (specified in
      /run/systemd/resolve/resolv.conf) for names with a
      .local suffix, unless the names are specified as search
      domains. 
      This causes any lookups for .local names to fail. For
      example, during node startup, kubelet fails on pulling images
      from a private registry with a .local suffix. Specifying a
      vCenter address with a .local suffix will not work on an
      admin workstation. 
      
 Workaround: 
      You can avoid this issue for cluster nodes if you specify the
      searchDomainsForDNS field in your admin cluster configuration
      file and the user cluster configuration file to include the domains. 
      Currently gkectl update doesn't support updating the
      searchDomainsForDNS field yet. 
      Therefore, if you haven't set up this field before cluster creation,
      you must SSH into the nodes and bypass the local systemd-resolved stub by
      changing the symlink of /etc/resolv.conf from
      /run/systemd/resolve/stub-resolv.conf (which contains the
      127.0.0.53 local stub) to
      /run/systemd/resolve/resolv.conf (which points to the actual
      upstream DNS):
 sudo ln -sf /run/systemd/resolve/resolv.conf /etc/resolv.conf 
      As for the admin workstation, gkeadm doesn't support
      specifying search domains, so must work around this issue with this manual
      step. 
      This solution for does not persist across VM re-creations. You must
      reapply this workaround whenever VMs are re-created. 
     | 
  
  
    | Installation, Operating system | 
    1.10 | 
    
      Docker bridge IP uses 172.17.0.1/16 instead of
      169.254.123.1/24
      Google Distributed Cloud specifies a dedicated subnet for the Docker
      bridge IP address that uses --bip=169.254.123.1/24, so that
      it won't reserve the default 172.17.0.1/16 subnet. However,
      in version 1.10.0, there is a bug in Ubuntu OS image that caused the
      customized Docker config to be ignored. 
      As a result, Docker picks the default 172.17.0.1/16 as its
      bridge IP address subnet. This might cause an IP address conflict if you
      already have workload running within that IP address range. 
      
 Workaround: 
      To work around this issue, you must rename the following systemd config
      file for dockerd, and then restart the service: 
sudo mv /etc/systemd/system/docker.service.d/50-cloudimg-settings.cfg \
    /etc/systemd/system/docker.service.d/50-cloudimg-settings.conf
sudo systemctl daemon-reload
sudo systemctl restart docker
      Verify that Docker picks the correct bridge IP address: 
ip a | grep docker0 
      This solution does not persist across VM re-creations. You must reapply
      this workaround whenever VMs are re-created. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Upgrades, Updates | 
    1.11 | 
    
      Upgrade to 1.11 blocked by stackdriver readiness
      In Google Distributed Cloud version 1.11.0, there are changes in the definition of custom resources related to logging and monitoring: 
      
        - Group name of the 
stackdriver custom resource changed from addons.sigs.k8s.io to addons.gke.io; 
        - Group name of the 
monitoring and metricsserver custom resources changed from addons.k8s.io to addons.gke.io; 
        - The specs of the above resources start to be validated against its schema. In particular, the resourceAttrOverride and storageSizeOverride spec in the 
stackdriver custom resource need to have string type in the values of the cpu, memory and storage size requests and limits. 
       
      The group name changes are made to comply with CustomResourceDefinition updates in Kubernetes 1.22. 
      There is no action required if you do not have additional logic that applies or edits the affected custom resources. The Google Distributed Cloud upgrade process will take care of the migration of the affected resources and keep their existing specs after the group name change. 
      However if you run any logic that applies or edits the affected resources, special attention is needed. First, they need to be referenced with the new group name in your manifest file. For example: 
apiVersion: addons.gke.io/v1alpha1  ## instead of `addons.sigs.k8s.io/v1alpha1`
kind: Stackdriver 
      Secondly, make sure the resourceAttrOverride and storageSizeOverride spec values are of string type. For example: 
spec:
  resourceAttrOverride:
    stackdriver-log-forwarder/stackdriver-log-forwarder
      limits:
        cpu: 1000m # or "1"
        # cpu: 1 # integer value like this would not work 
        memory: 3000Mi
      Otherwise, the applies and edits will not take effect and may lead to unexpected status in logging and monitoring components. Potential symptoms may include: 
      
        - Reconciliation error logs in 
onprem-user-cluster-controller, for example: potential reconciliation error: Apply bundle components failed, requeue after 10s, error: failed to apply addon components: failed to apply bundle objects from stackdriver-operator-addon 1.11.2-gke.53 to cluster my-cluster: failed to create typed live object: .spec.resourceAttrOverride.stackdriver-log-forwarder/stackdriver-log-forwarder.limits.cpu: expected string, got &value.valueUnstructured{Value:1} 
        - Failure in 
kubectl edit stackdriver stackdriver, for example: Error from server (NotFound): stackdrivers.addons.gke.io "stackdriver" not found  
       
      If you encounter the above errors, it means an unsupported type under stackdriver CR spec was already present before the upgrade. As a workaround, you could manually edit the stackdriver CR under the old group name kubectl edit stackdrivers.addons.sigs.k8s.io stackdriver and do the following: 
       
        - Change the resource requests and limits to string type;
 
        - Remove any 
addons.gke.io/migrated-and-deprecated: true annotation if present. 
       
      Then resume or restart the upgrade process.
      
     | 
  
  
  
    | Operating system | 
    1.7, 1.8, 1.9, 1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13, 1.14, 1.15, 1.16 | 
    
      COS VMs show no IPs when VMs are moved through non-graceful shutdown of the host 
      Whenever there is a fault in a ESXi server and the vCenter HA function has been enabled for the server, all VMs in the faulty ESXi server trigger the vMotion mechanism and are moved to another normal ESXi server. Migrated COS VMs would lose their IPs. 
      Workaround: 
      Reboot the VM 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Networking | 
    all versions prior to 1.14.7, 1.15.0-1.15.3, 1.16.0 | 
    
      GARP reply sent by Seesaw doesn't set target IP
      The periodic GARP (Gratuitous ARP) sent by Seesaw every 20s doesn't set
the target IP in the ARP header. Some networks might not accept such packets (like Cisco ACI). It can cause longer service down time after a split brain (due to VRRP packet drops) is recovered.  
      Workaround: 
      Trigger a Seeaw failover by running sudo seesaw -c failover on either of the Seesaw VMs. This should
restore the traffic. 
     | 
  
  
  
    | Operating system | 
    1.16, 1.28.0-1.28.200 | 
    
      Kubelet is flooded with logs stating that "/etc/kubernetes/manifests" does not exist on the worker nodes
      "staticPodPath" was mistakenly set for worker nodes 
      Workaround: 
      Manually create the folder "/etc/kubernetes/manifests" 
     |