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Troubleshooting Openshift

Troubleshoot OpenShift Logs

Learn practical troubleshoot openshift logs with oc commands, OpenShift manifests, verification steps, common mistakes, and production-focused guidance.

Troubleshoot OpenShift Logs

Introduction

OpenShift command workflows should start with status, then narrow to the failing object, namespace events, and logs. This avoids jumping between unrelated resources.

Symptoms

Typical symptoms include failed pods, route errors, denied requests, unhealthy operators, or command errors that repeat after retries.

Common Causes

  • Looking only at the final error and ignoring events.
  • Checking the wrong project with oc.
  • Changing several objects at once before confirming the current state.

Step 1: Check the Current Status

oc status -n app
oc get events -n app --sort-by=.lastTimestamp
oc logs deployment/web -n app --tail=100
oc describe deployment web -n app

Example output:

In project app on server https://api.ocp.example.com:6443

svc/web - 172.30.21.144:8080
  deployment/web deploys image-registry.openshift-image-registry.svc:5000/app/web:latest

Step 2: Inspect Logs and Events

oc status -n app
oc get all -n app
oc get events -n app --sort-by=.lastTimestamp

Step 3: Verify Configuration

Compare the object selectors, service account, image reference, route target, or operator status with the failing symptom. In OpenShift, events often show the exact admission, scheduling, pull, SCC, or route reason.

Step 4: Apply the Fix

Apply the smallest targeted fix: correct the selector, update the route or service port, link the pull secret, grant the specific RBAC or SCC permission, or repair the unhealthy operator dependency.

Step 5: Confirm the Problem Is Resolved

Run the verification commands again and confirm the status, events, and user-facing test all agree.

Common Mistakes

  • Looking only at the final error and ignoring events.
  • Checking the wrong project with oc.
  • Changing several objects at once before confirming the current state.

Quick Checklist

  • Confirm the active project.
  • Inspect the exact object named in the error.
  • Read recent events.
  • Apply one focused fix.
  • Verify status after the change.

Summary

Troubleshoot OpenShift Logs requires matching the symptom to the OpenShift object that owns it. Use oc status commands, events, logs, and focused verification so the fix is tied to evidence.