How to troubleshoot errors in Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS (ROSA)

Learn how to fix some common errors that may occur when building a cluster and deploying an application on Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS (ROSA). 

You can also watch this interactive demonstration on how to install ROSA, from creating an account to deploying applications.

How to troubleshoot errors in Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS (ROSA)

Red Hat® OpenShift® Service on AWS (ROSA) is a fully-managed, turnkey platform that allows you to focus on building and deploying applications. Red Hat and AWS site reliability engineering (SRE) experts manage the underlying platform so you don’t have to worry about the complexity of infrastructure management.

ROSA provides seamless integration with a wide range of AWS compute, database, analytics, machine learning, networking, mobile, and other services to further accelerate the building and delivering of differentiating experiences to your customers.

As you build your first cluster and deploy your first application on ROSA, you may encounter a variety of errors. This learning path guides you through some simple troubleshooting steps and workarounds for the most common ROSA errors.

What do you need before starting?

Where to go for (more) help

If the resources in this learning path don’t help solve the issue you’re facing, there are a few things you can do to make sure you’re accessing all possible resources.

Documentation


ROSA is an integrated platform between Red Hat OpenShift and AWS, which means that you are likely to encounter multiple sets of docs hosted on different websites. You can easily get confused as to where you’re supposed to be looking for documentation, so here are a few tips:

Getting support


There are a variety of ways to get support with setting up, managing, and deploying applications on your Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS (ROSA) cluster. 

Before contacting Red Hat directly, make sure you understand what actions Red Hat is responsible for, what you are responsible for, and what are shared responsibilities. You can view the policy definitions here and the responsibility matrix here.

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