top | item 42254869

(no title)

karmarepellent | 1 year ago

I think it depends on the definition of "bricking the cluster". When you start to upgrade your control plane, your control plane pods restart one after one, and not only those on the specific control plane node. So at this point your control plane might not respond anymore if you happen to run into a bug or some other issue. You might call it "bricking the cluster", since it is not possible to interact with the control plane for some time. Personally I would not call it "bricked", since your production workloads on worker nodes continue to function.

Edit: And even when you "brick" it and cannot roll back, there is still a way to bring your control plane back by using an etcd backup, right?

discuss

order

No comments yet.