.. cwn1581381515361
.. _configure-oidc-auth-applications:

=============================
Set up OIDC Auth Applications
=============================

The **oidc-auth-apps** application is a system application that enables the use
of a remote Windows Active Directory server or an |LDAP| server to authenticate
users of the Kubernetes API.

In this document, the |LDAP| server presented is the one present in the |prod|
deploy, called Local |LDAP| server. This |LDAP| server runs in the controllers
except for DC environments, where it runs only in the SystemController's
controllers.

The ``oidc-auth-apps`` is packaged in the ISO and uploaded by default.


Configure OIDC Auth Applications
================================

.. rubric:: |prereq|

.. _configure-oidc-auth-applications-ul-gpz-x51-llb:

-   You must have configured the Kubernetes ``kube-apiserver`` to use
    the **oidc-auth-apps** |OIDC| identity provider for validation of
    tokens in Kubernetes API requests, which use |OIDC| authentication. For
    more information on configuring the Kubernetes ``kube-apiserver``, see
    :ref:`Configure Kubernetes for OIDC Token Validation while
    Bootstrapping the System
    <configure-kubernetes-for-oidc-token-validation-while-bootstrapping-the-system>`
    or :ref:`Configure Kubernetes for OIDC Token Validation after
    Bootstrapping the System
    <configure-kubernetes-for-oidc-token-validation-after-bootstrapping-the-system>`.


.. rubric:: |proc|

#. Create certificates using one of the following options.

   #. Create certificates using cert-manager (recommended):

      Certificates used by ``oidc-auth-apps`` can be managed by Cert-Manager.
      Doing so will automatically renew the certificates before they expire.
      The ``system-local-ca`` ClusterIssuer (see
      :ref:`starlingx-rest-api-applications-and-the-web-admin-server-cert-9196c5794834`)
      will be used to issue this certificate.

      .. note::
          If a signing |CA| is not a well-known trusted |CA|, you must ensure the
          system trusts the |CA| by specifying it either during the bootstrap
          phase of system installation, by specifying ``ssl_ca_cert: <certificate_file>``
          in the ansible bootstrap overrides localhost.yml file, or by using the
          :command:`system certificate-install -m ssl_ca <certificate_file>`
          command.

      Also refer to :ref:`Add a Trusted CA <add-a-trusted-ca>`
      for installing a root |CA|, which includes instruction to `lock/unlock`
      controller nodes when using :command:`system certificate-install`
      command.

      .. important::
          The namespace for ``oidc-auth-apps`` must be ``kube-system``.

      #. Create the |OIDC| client and identity provider server certificate and
         private key pair.

         .. code-block:: none

            ~(keystone_admin)]$ cat <<EOF > oidc-auth-apps-certificate.yaml
            ---
            apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1
            kind: Certificate
            metadata:
              name: oidc-auth-apps-certificate
              namespace: kube-system
            spec:
              secretName: oidc-auth-apps-certificate
              duration: 2160h # 90 days
              renewBefore: 360h # 15 days
              issuerRef:
                name: system-local-ca
                kind: ClusterIssuer
              commonName: <OAM_floating_IP_address>
              subject:
                organizations:
                  - ABC-Company
                organizationalUnits:
                  - StarlingX-system-oidc-auth-apps
              ipAddresses:
              - <OAM_floating_IP_address>

            EOF

         .. include:: /shared/_includes/recommended-renewbefore-value-for-certificates-c929cf42b03b.rest

      #. Apply the configuration.

         .. code-block:: none

             ~(keystone_admin)]$ kubectl apply -f oidc-auth-apps-certificate.yaml

      #. Verify the configuration.

         .. code-block:: none

             ~(keystone_admin)]$ kubectl get certificate oidc-auth-apps-certificate –n kube-system

      #. Configure the |OIDC|-client with both the |OIDC| Client and Identity
         Server Certificate and the |OIDC| Client and Identity Trusted |CA|
         certificate.

         .. only:: starlingx

             Create a secret with the certificate of the root |CA| that signed
             the |OIDC| client and identity provider's server certificate. In
             this example, it will be the ``ca.crt`` of the ``system-local-ca``
             (ClusterIssuer).

         .. only:: partner

             .. include:: /_includes/configure-oidc-auth-applications.rest
                :start-after: configure-oidc-begin
                :end-before: configure-oidc-end

         .. only:: starlingx

             .. code-block:: none

                 ~(keystone_admin)]$ mkdir /home/sysadmin/ssl
                 ~(keystone_admin)]$ kubectl get secret system-local-ca -n cert-manager -o=jsonpath='{.data.ca\.crt}' | base64 --decode > /home/sysadmin/ssl/dex-ca-cert.crt

                 ~(keystone_admin)]$ kubectl create secret generic dex-ca-cert --from-file=/home/sysadmin/ssl/dex-ca-cert.crt  -n kube-system

                 ~(keystone_admin)]$ cat <<EOF > stx-oidc-client.yaml
                 tlsName: oidc-auth-apps-certificate
                 config:
                    # The OIDC-client container mounts the dex-ca-cert secret at /home, therefore
                    # issuer_root_ca: /home/<filename-only-of-generic-secret>
                    issuer_root_ca: /home/dex-ca-cert.crt
                    issuer_root_ca_secret: dex-ca-cert
                 EOF

                 ~(keystone_admin)]$ system helm-override-update oidc-auth-apps oidc-client kube-system --values stx-oidc-client.yaml

         .. only:: partner

             .. include:: /_includes/configure-oidc-auth-applications.rest
                :start-after: configure-oidc-tls1-begin
                :end-before: configure-oidc-tls1-end

      #. Create a secret with the certificate of the |CA| that signed the
         certificate of the Identity Providers (IdPs) that you will be using.

         If you will use a |WAD| server, create the secret ``wad-ca-cert`` with
         the |CA|'s certificate that signed the Active Directory's certificate
         using the command below.

         .. code-block:: none

             ~(keystone_admin)]$ kubectl create secret generic wad-ca-cert --from-file=wad-ca-cert.crt -n kube-system

         .. only:: starlingx

             If you will use the Local |LDAP| server, create the secret
             ``local-ldap-ca-cert`` with the |CA|'s certificate that signed the
             Local |LDAP|'s certificate using the command below. This |CA|'s
             certificate, presented below as file ``local-ldap-ca-cert.crt``, can
             be extracted from the controller where the Local |LDAP| server is
             running (the SystemController in DC environments) using the command
             `kubectl get secret system-local-ca -n cert-manager
             -o=jsonpath=\'{.data.ca\\.crt}\' | base64 \-\-decode >
             local-ldap-ca-cert.crt`.

         .. only:: partner

             .. include:: /_includes/configure-oidc-auth-applications.rest
                :start-after: configure-oidc-tls2-begin
                :end-before: configure-oidc-tls2-end

         .. code-block:: none

             ~(keystone_admin)]$ kubectl create secret generic local-ldap-ca-cert --from-file=local-ldap-ca-cert.crt -n kube-system

         The secrets ``wad-ca-cert`` and/or ``local-ldap-ca-cert`` will be used
         later in the application overrides.

      #. Configure the secret observer to track changes.

         Change the cronSchedule according to your needs. The cronSchedule
         controls how often the application checks to see if the certificate
         mounted on the dex and oidc-client pods had changed.

         Create a YAML configuration to modify the cronSchedule according to
         your needs.

         The cronSchedule controls how often the application checks to see
         if the certificate mounted on the dex and oidc-client pods changed.
         The following example sets the schedule to every 15 minutes.

         .. code-block:: none

               ~(keystone_admin)]$ cat <<EOF > secret-observer-overrides.yaml
               cronSchedule: "*/15 * * * *"
               observedSecrets:
                 - secretName: "dex-ca-cert"
                   filename: "dex-ca-cert.crt"
                   deploymentToRestart: "stx-oidc-client"
                 - secretName: "oidc-auth-apps-certificate"
                   filename: "tls.crt"
                   deploymentToRestart: "stx-oidc-client"
                 - secretName: "oidc-auth-apps-certificate"
                   filename: "tls.crt"
                   deploymentToRestart: "oidc-dex"
               EOF

      Execute the following command to update the overrides:

      .. code-block:: none

         ~(keystone_admin)]$ system helm-override-update oidc-auth-apps secret-observer kube-system --values secret-observer-overrides.yaml

   #. Use certificates generated and signed by an external |CA|.

      Although it is recommended to use cert-manager to manage certificates, as
      described above in item "Create certificates using cert-manager
      (recommended)", one can instead use certificates generated by an external
      |CA|.

      For backwards compatibility reasons, the default helm chart overrides of
      dex, oidc-client and secret-observer in ``oidc-auth-apps`` application
      are set for this example of using externally generated certificates. The
      default override values of helm charts in ``oidc-auth-apps`` application
      include the use of kubernetes secrets named ``local-dex.tls``, and
      ``dex-client-secret`` for declaring the dex server certificate and the
      |CA| which signed it, respectively. These secrets are created in this
      example.

      In addition, one can indicate the certificates for a |WAD| server and/or a
      Local |LDAP| server that have https enabled by using the secrets
      ``wad-ca-cert`` and/or ``local-ldap-ca-cert`` as in this example.

      .. rubric:: |prereq|

      -   You must have a |CA| signed certificate (``dex-cert.pem`` file), and
          private key (``dex-key.pem file``) for the dex |OIDC| Identity
          Provider of **oidc-auth-apps**.

          This certificate *must* have the |prod|'s floating |OAM| IP Address
          in the |SAN| list. If you are planning on defining and using a DNS
          name for the |prod|'s floating |OAM| IP Address, then this DNS name
          *must* also be in the |SAN| list. Refer to the documentation for the
          external |CA| that you are using, in order to create a signed
          certificate and key.

          If you are using an intermediate |CA| to sign the dex certificate,
          include both the dex certificate (signed by the intermediate |CA|),
          and the intermediate |CA|'s certificate (signed by the Root |CA|) in
          that order, in ``dex-cert.pem``.

      -   You must have the certificate of the |CA| (``dex-ca.pem`` file) that
          signed the above certificate for the dex |OIDC| Identity Provider of
          **oidc-auth-apps**.

          If an intermediate |CA| was used to sign the dex certificate and both
          the dex certificate and the intermediate |CA| certificate was
          included in ``dex-cert.pem``, then the ``dex-ca.pem`` file should
          contain the root |CA|'s certificate.

          If the signing |CA| (``dex-ca.pem``) is not a well-known trusted
          |CA|, you must ensure the system trusts the |CA| by specifying it
          either during the bootstrap phase of system installation, by
          specifying ``ssl_ca_cert: dex-ca.pem`` in the ansible bootstrap
          overrides ``localhost.yml`` file, or by using the :command:`system
          certificate-install -m ssl_ca dex-ca.pem` command.

          Also refer to :ref:`Add a Trusted CA <add-a-trusted-ca>`
          for installing a root |CA|, which includes instruction to `lock/unlock`
          controller nodes when using :command:`system certificate-install`
          command.

      -   Create the secret, ``local-dex.tls``, with the certificate and key,
          to be used by the **oidc-auth-apps**, as well as the secret,
          ``dex-client-secret``, with the |CA|'s certificate that signed the
          ``local-dex.tls`` certificate.

          For example, assuming the cert and key pem files for creating these
          secrets are in ``/home/sysadmin/ssl/``, run the following commands to
          create the secrets:

          .. note::
              **oidc-auth-apps** looks specifically for secrets of these names
              in the ``kube-system`` namespace.

              For the generic secret ``dex-client-secret``, the filename must
              be ``dex-ca.pem``.

          .. code-block:: none

              ~(keystone_admin)]$ kubectl create secret tls local-dex.tls --cert=ssl/dex-cert.pem --key=ssl/dex-key.pem -n kube-system

              ~(keystone_admin)]$ kubectl create secret generic dex-client-secret --from-file=/home/sysadmin/ssl/dex-ca.pem -n kube-system

          If you will use a |WAD| server, create the secret ``wad-ca-cert`` with
          the |CA|'s certificate that signed the Active Directory's certificate
          using the command below.

          .. code-block:: none

              ~(keystone_admin)]$ kubectl create secret generic wad-ca-cert --from-file=wad-ca-cert.crt -n kube-system

          .. only:: starlingx

              If you will use the Local |LDAP| server, create the secret
              ``local-ldap-ca-cert`` with the |CA|'s certificate that signed the
              Local |LDAP|'s certificate using the command below. This |CA|'s
              certificate, presented below as file ``local-ldap-ca-cert.crt``, can
              be extracted from the controller where the Local |LDAP| server is
              running (the SystemController in DC environments) using the command
              `kubectl get secret system-local-ca -n cert-manager
              -o=jsonpath=\'{.data.ca\\.crt}\' | base64 \-\-decode >
              local-ldap-ca-cert.crt`.

          .. only:: partner

              .. include:: /_includes/configure-oidc-auth-applications.rest
                 :start-after: configure-oidc-tls3-begin
                 :end-before: configure-oidc-tls3-end

          .. code-block:: none

              ~(keystone_admin)]$ kubectl create secret generic local-ldap-ca-cert --from-file=local-ldap-ca-cert.crt -n kube-system

#.  Specify user overrides for **oidc-auth-apps** application, by using the
    following command:

    .. code-block:: none

        ~(keystone_admin)]$ system helm-override-update oidc-auth-apps dex kube-system --values /home/sysadmin/dex-overrides.yaml

    The dex-overrides.yaml file contains the desired dex helm chart overrides
    (that is, the |LDAP| connector configuration for the Active Directory
    service, optional token expiry, and so on), and volume mounts for
    providing access to the ``wad-ca-cert`` secret and/or to the
    ``local-ldap-ca-cert``, described in this section.

    For the complete list of dex helm chart values supported, see `Dex Helm
    Chart Values
    <https://github.com/dexidp/helm-charts/blob/dex-0.15.3/charts/dex/values.yaml>`__.
    For the complete list of parameters of the dex |LDAP| connector
    configuration, see `Authentication Through LDAP
    <https://dexidp.io/docs/connectors/ldap/>`__.

    The overall Dex documentation is available on `dexidp.io
    <https://dexidp.io/docs/>`__.  The configuration of dex server version
    v2.37.0 is described on github
    (https://github.com/dexidp/dex/blob/v2.37.0/config.yaml.dist) with example
    ``config.dev.yaml``
    (https://github.com/dexidp/dex/blob/v2.37.0/config.dev.yaml).

    The examples below configure a token expiry of ten hours, the |LDAP|
    connectors to the remote servers using HTTPS (LDAPS) using the servers |CA|
    secrets, the required remote servers login information (that is, bindDN,
    and bindPW), and example :command:`userSearch`, and :command:`groupSearch`
    clauses.

    (Optional) There is a default secret in the dex configuration for
    ``staticClients``. You can change this using helm overrides. For example,
    to change the secret, first run the following command to see the default
    settings. In this example, ``10.10.10.2`` is the |prod-long| |OAM| floating
    IP address.

    .. code-block:: none

        ~(keystone_admin)]$ system helm-override-show oidc-auth-apps dex kube-system

        config:
          staticClients:
          - id: stx-oidc-client-app
            name: STX OIDC Client app
            redirectURIs: ['https://10.10.10.2:30555/callback']
            secret: St8rlingX

    Change the secret from the output and copy the entire configuration section
    shown above in to your dex overrides file shown in the example below.

    .. warning::
        Do not forget to include the id, name, and redirectURIs parameters.

    .. note::
        There is an internal password (called ``secret`` in dex overrides and
        ``client_secret`` in oidc-client overrides) that is used between the
        oidc-client container and the dex container. It is recommended that you
        configure a unique, more secure password by specifying the value in the
        dex overrides file, as shown in the example below.

    For only a |WAD| server, the configuration is shown below.

    .. begin-wad-connector-config

    .. code-block:: none

        config:
          staticClients:
          - id: stx-oidc-client-app
            name: STX OIDC Client app
            redirectURIs: ['https://<OAM floating IP address>:30555/callback']
            secret: BetterSecret
          expiry:
            idTokens: "10h"
          connectors:
          - type: ldap
            name: WAD
            id: wad-1
            config:
              host: pv-windows-acti.windows-activedir.example.com:636
              rootCA: /etc/ssl/certs/adcert/wad-ca-cert.crt
              insecureNoSSL: false
              insecureSkipVerify: false
              bindDN: cn=Administrator,cn=Users,dc=windows-activedir,dc=example,dc=com
              bindPW: [<password>]
              usernamePrompt: Username
              userSearch:
                baseDN: ou=Users,ou=Titanium,dc=windows-activedir,dc=example,dc=com
                filter: "(objectClass=user)"
                username: sAMAccountName
                idAttr: sAMAccountName
                emailAttr: sAMAccountName
                nameAttr: displayName
              groupSearch:
                baseDN: ou=Groups,ou=Titanium,dc=windows-activedir,dc=example,dc=com
                filter: "(objectClass=group)"
                userMatchers:
                - userAttr: DN
                  groupAttr: member
                nameAttr: cn
        volumeMounts:
        - mountPath: /etc/ssl/certs/adcert
          name: certdir
        - mountPath: /etc/dex/tls
          name: https-tls
        volumes:
        - name: certdir
          secret:
            secretName: wad-ca-cert
        - name: https-tls
          secret:
            defaultMode: 420
            secretName: oidc-auth-apps-certificate

    .. end-wad-connector-config

    For only the Local |LDAP| server, the configuration is shown below. The
    value of ``bindPW`` can be retrieved through command `keyring get ldap
    ldapadmin` executed in the controller where the Local |LDAP| server is
    running. In DC environments, the MGMT floating IP address to be used is the
    one from the SystemController.

    .. begin-local-ldap-connector-config

    .. code-block:: none

        config:
          staticClients:
          - id: stx-oidc-client-app
            name: STX OIDC Client app
            redirectURIs: ['https://<OAM floating IP address>:30555/callback']
            secret: BetterSecret
          expiry:
            idTokens: "10h"
          connectors:
          - type: ldap
            name: LocalLDAP
            id: localldap-1
            config:
              host: <MGMT floating IP address>:636
              rootCA: /etc/ssl/certs/adcert/local-ldap-ca-cert.crt
              insecureNoSSL: false
              insecureSkipVerify: false
              bindDN: CN=ldapadmin,DC=cgcs,DC=local
              bindPW: [<password>]
              usernamePrompt: Username
              userSearch:
                baseDN: ou=People,dc=cgcs,dc=local
                filter: "(objectClass=posixAccount)"
                username: uid
                idAttr: DN
                emailAttr: uid
                nameAttr: gecos
              groupSearch:
                baseDN: ou=Group,dc=cgcs,dc=local
                filter: "(objectClass=posixGroup)"
                userMatchers:
                - userAttr: uid
                  groupAttr: memberUid
                nameAttr: cn
        volumeMounts:
        - mountPath: /etc/ssl/certs/adcert
          name: certdir
        - mountPath: /etc/dex/tls
          name: https-tls
        volumes:
        - name: certdir
          secret:
            secretName: local-ldap-ca-cert
        - name: https-tls
          secret:
            defaultMode: 420
            secretName: oidc-auth-apps-certificate

    .. end-local-ldap-connector-config

    If both |WAD| and Local |LDAP| servers are used at same time, use the
    examples above with the connectors from |WAD| and Local |LDAP| in the same
    ``connectors`` list while the ``volumes`` to be used is the one written
    below.

    .. begin-both-wad-and-local-ldap-volume-config

    .. code-block:: none

        volumes:
        - name: certdir
          projected:
            sources:
            - secret:
                name: wad-ca-cert
            - secret:
                name: local-ldap-ca-cert
        - name: https-tls
          secret:
            defaultMode: 420
            secretName: oidc-auth-apps-certificate

    .. end-both-wad-and-local-ldap-volume-config

    If more than one Windows Active Directory service is required for
    authenticating the different users of the |prod|, multiple ``ldap``
    type connectors can be configured; one for each Windows Active
    Directory service.

    If more than one ``userSearch`` plus ``groupSearch`` clauses are
    required for the same Windows Active Directory service, multiple
    ``ldap`` type connectors, with the same host information but
    different ``userSearch`` plus ``groupSearch`` clauses, should be used.

    Whenever you use multiple ``ldap`` type connectors, ensure you use
    unique ``name:`` and ``id:`` parameters for each connector.

#.  An override in the secrets in the dex helm chart must be accompanied by
    an override in the oidc-client helm chart.

    The following override is sufficient for changing the secret in the
    ``/home/sysadmin/oidc-client-overrides.yaml`` file.

    .. code-block:: none

        config:
          client_secret: BetterSecret

    Apply the oidc-client overrides using the following command:

    .. code-block:: none

        ~(keystone_admin)]$ system helm-override-update oidc-auth-apps oidc-client kube-system --values /home/sysadmin/oidc-client-overrides.yaml --reuse-values

    .. note::

        If you need to manually override the secrets, the ``client_secret`` in
        the oidc-client overrides must match the ``staticClients`` ``secret`` in
        the dex overrides, otherwise the oidc-auth |CLI| client will not
        function.

#.  Use the :command:`system application-apply` command to apply the
    configuration:

    .. code-block:: none

        ~(keystone_admin)]$ system application-apply oidc-auth-apps

Default helm overrides for oidc-auth-apps application
=====================================================

For backwards compatibility reasons, the default helm overrides for dex helm
are:

.. note::

    It is NOT recommended to use these; it is recommended to create
    certificates using ``cert-manager`` and explicitly refer to the resulting
    certificate secrets in user-specified helm overrides, as described on the
    procedure above.

.. code-block:: none

    image:
      repository: ghcr.io/dexidp/dex
      pullPolicy: IfNotPresent
      tag: v2.37.0
    imagePullSecrets:
      - name: default-registry-key
    env:
      name: KUBERNETES_POD_NAMESPACE
      value: kube-system
    config:
      issuer: https://<OAM_IP>:30556/dex
      staticClients:
      - id: stx-oidc-client-app
        name: STX OIDC Client app
        secret: St8rlingX
        redirectURIs:
        - https://<OAM_IP>:30555/callback
      enablePasswordDB: false
      web:
        tlsCert: /etc/dex/tls/tls.crt
        tlsKey: /etc/dex/tls/tls.key
      storage:
        type: kubernetes
        config:
          inCluster: true
      oauth2:
        skipApprovalScreen: true
      logger:
        level: debug
    service:
      type: NodePort
      ports:
        https:
          nodePort: 30556
    https:
      enabled: true
    grpc:
      enabled: false
    nodeSelector:
      node-role.kubernetes.io/control-plane: ""
    volumeMounts:
    - mountPath: /etc/dex/tls/
      name: https-tls
    volumes:
    - name: https-tls
      secret:
        defaultMode: 420
        secretName: local-dex.tls
    tolerations:
    - key: "node-role.kubernetes.io/master"
      operator: "Exists"
      effect: "NoSchedule"
    - key: "node-role.kubernetes.io/control-plane"
      operator: "Exists"
      effect: "NoSchedule"
    podLabels:
      app: dex
    affinity:
      podAntiAffinity:
        requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
        - labelSelector:
            matchExpressions:
            - key: app
              operator: In
              values:
              - dex
          topologyKey: kubernetes.io/hostname

The default helm overrides for oidc-client are:

.. code-block:: none

    config:
      client_id: stx-oidc-client-app
      client_secret: St8rlingX
      issuer: https://<OAM_IP>:30556/dex
      issuer_root_ca: /home/dex-ca.pem
      issuer_root_ca_secret: dex-client-secret
      listen: https://0.0.0.0:5555
      redirect_uri: https://<OAM_IP>:30555/callback
      tlsCert: /etc/dex/tls/https/server/tls.crt
      tlsKey: /etc/dex/tls/https/server/tls.key
    nodeSelector:
      node-role.kubernetes.io/control-plane: ""
    service:
      type: NodePort
      port: 5555
      nodePort: 30555
    replicas: <replicate count>
    tolerations:
    - key: "node-role.kubernetes.io/master"
      operator: "Exists"
      effect: "NoSchedule"
    - key: "node-role.kubernetes.io/control-plane"
      operator: "Exists"
      effect: "NoSchedule"
    affinity:
      podAntiAffinity:
        requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
        - labelSelector:
            matchExpressions:
            - key: app
              operator: In
              values:
              - stx-oidc-client
          topologyKey: kubernetes.io/hostname
    helmv3Compatible: true

The default helm overrides for secret-observer are:

.. code-block:: none

    namespace: "kube-system"
    observedSecrets:
      - secretName: "dex-client-secret"
        filename: "dex-ca.pem"
        deploymentToRestart: "stx-oidc-client"
      - secretName: "local-dex.tls"
        filename: "tls.crt"
        deploymentToRestart: "stx-oidc-client"
      - secretName: "local-dex.tls"
        filename: "tls.crt"
        deploymentToRestart: "oidc-dex"
    tolerations:
      - key: "node-role.kubernetes.io/master"
        operator: "Exists"
        effect: "NoSchedule"
      - key: "node-role.kubernetes.io/control-plane"
        operator: "Exists"
        effect: "NoSchedule"