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Upgrade Arc resource bridge

This article describes how Arc resource bridge is upgraded, and the two ways upgrade can be performed: cloud-managed upgrade or manual upgrade. Currently, some private cloud providers differ in how they handle Arc resource bridge upgrades.

Private cloud providers

Currently, private cloud providers differ in how they perform Arc resource bridge upgrades. Review the following information to see how to upgrade your Arc resource bridge for a specific provider.

For Arc-enabled VMware vSphere, manual upgrade and cloud-managed upgrade are available. Appliances on version 1.0.15 and higher are automatically opted-in to cloud-managed upgrade. Cloud-managed upgrade helps ensure the appliance VM is kept within n-3 supported versions but not the latest version. If you would like to be on the latest version, you need to manual upgrade. In order for either upgrade option to work, the upgrade prerequisites must be met. Microsoft may attempt to perform a cloud-managed upgrade of your Arc resource bridge at any time if your appliance will soon be out of support. While Microsoft offers cloud-managed upgrade, you’re still responsible for ensuring that your Arc resource bridge is within the supported n-3 versions. Disruptions could cause cloud-managed upgrade to fail and you may need to manual upgrade the Arc resource bridge. If your Arc resource bridge is close to being out of support, we recommend a manual upgrade to make sure you maintain a supported version, rather than waiting for cloud-managed upgrade.

For Azure Arc VM management (preview) on Azure Stack HCI, appliance version 1.0.15 or higher is only available on Azure Stack HCI build 23H2. In HCI 23H2, the LCM tool manages upgrades across all HCI, Arc resource bridge, and extension components as a "validated recipe" package. Any preview version of Arc resource bridge must be removed before updating from 22H2 to 23H2. Attempting to upgrade Arc resource bridge independent of other HCI environment components may cause problems in your environment that could result in a disaster recovery scenario. For more information, see About updates for Azure Stack HCI.

For Arc-enabled System Center Virtual Machine Manager (SCVMM), the manual upgrade feature is available for appliance version 1.0.15 and higher. Appliances running a version lower than 1.0.15 need to perform the recovery option to get to version 1.0.15 or higher. Review the steps for performing the recovery operation. This deploys a new resource bridge and reconnects pre-existing Azure resources.

Prerequisites

Before an Arc resource bridge can be upgraded, the following prerequisites must be met:

  • The appliance VM must be on a General Availability version (1.0.15 or higher). If not, the Arc resource bridge VM needs to be redeployed. If you're using Arc-enabled VMware/AVS, you can perform disaster recovery. If you're using Arc-enabled SCVMM, follow this disaster recovery guide.

  • The appliance VM must be online and healthy with a status of Running. You can check the Azure resource of your Arc resource bridge to verify.

  • The credentials in the appliance VM must be up to date. To test that the credentials within the Arc resource bridge VM are valid, perform an operation on an Arc-enabled VM from Azure. You can also update the credentials to be certain.

  • There must be sufficient space on the management machine (~3.5 GB) and appliance VM (35 GB) to download required images.

  • For Arc-enabled VMware, upgrading the resource bridge requires 200 GB of free space on the datastore. A new template is also created.

  • The outbound connection from the Appliance VM IPs (k8snodeippoolstart/end, VM IP 1/2) to msk8s.sb.tlu.dl.delivery.mp.microsoft.com, port 443 must be enabled. Be sure the full list of required endpoints for Arc resource bridge are also enabled.

  • When performing a manual upgrade, run the upgrade command from the management machine used to initially deploy the Arc resource bridge, which should still contain the appliance configuration files. You can also run the upgrade command from a different machine that meets the management machine requirements and also contains the appliance configuration files.

  • Arc resource bridge configured with DHCP can't be upgraded and aren't supported in a production environment. Instead, a new Arc resource bridge should be deployed using static IP configuration.

Overview

The upgrade process deploys a new resource bridge using the reserved appliance VM IP (k8snodeippoolend IP, VM IP 2). Once the new resource bridge is up, it becomes the active resource bridge. The old resource bridge is deleted, and its appliance VM IP (k8dsnodeippoolstart, VM IP 1) becomes the new reserved appliance VM IP that will be used in the next upgrade.

Deploying a new resource bridge is a process consisting of several steps: downloading the appliance image (~3.5 GB) from the cloud, using the image to deploy a new appliance VM, verifying the new resource bridge is running, connecting it to Azure, deleting the old appliance VM, and reserving the old IP to be used for a future upgrade.

Overall, the upgrade generally takes at least 30 minutes, depending on network speeds. A short intermittent downtime might happen during the handoff between the old Arc resource bridge to the new Arc resource bridge. Additional downtime can occur if prerequisites aren't met, or if a change in the network (DNS, firewall, proxy, etc.) impacts the Arc resource bridge's network connectivity.

There are two ways to upgrade Arc resource bridge: cloud-managed upgrades managed by Microsoft, or manual upgrades where Azure CLI commands are performed by an admin.

Cloud-managed upgrade

Arc resource bridges on a supported private cloud provider with an appliance version 1.0.15 or higher are automatically opted into cloud-managed upgrade. With cloud-managed upgrade, Microsoft may attempt to upgrade your Arc resource bridge at any time if it is on an appliance version that will soon be out of support. The upgrade prerequisites must be met for cloud-managed upgrade to work. While Microsoft offers cloud-managed upgrade, you’re still responsible for checking that your resource bridge is healthy, online, in a "Running" status, and within the supported n-3 versions. Disruptions could cause cloud-managed upgrades to fail. If your Arc resource bridge is close to being out of support, we recommend a manual upgrade to make sure you maintain a supported version, rather than waiting for cloud-managed upgrade.

To check your resource bridge status and the appliance version, run the az arcappliance show command from your management machine or check the Azure resource of your Arc resource bridge. If your appliance VM isn't in a healthy, Running state, cloud-managed upgrade might fail.

Cloud-managed upgrades are handled through Azure. A notification is pushed to Azure to reflect the state of the appliance VM as it upgrades. As the resource bridge progresses through the upgrade, its status might switch back and forth between different upgrade steps. Upgrade is complete when the appliance VM status is Running and provisioningState is Succeeded.

To check the status of a cloud-managed upgrade, check the Azure resource in ARM, or run the following Azure CLI command from the management machine:

az arcappliance show --resource-group [REQUIRED] --name [REQUIRED] 

Manual upgrade

Arc resource bridge can be manually upgraded from the management machine. You must meet all upgrade prerequisites before attempting to upgrade. The management machine must have the kubeconfig and appliance configuration files stored locally, or you won't be able to run the upgrade.

Manual upgrade generally takes between 30-90 minutes, depending on network speeds. The upgrade command takes your Arc resource bridge to the next appliance version, which might not be the latest available appliance version. Multiple upgrades could be needed to reach a supported version. You can check your appliance version by checking the Azure resource of your Arc resource bridge.

Before upgrading, you need the latest Azure CLI extension for arcappliance:

az extension add --upgrade --name arcappliance 

To manually upgrade your resource bridge, use the following command:

az arcappliance upgrade <private cloud> --config-file <file path to ARBname-appliance.yaml> 

For example, to upgrade a resource bridge on VMware, run: az arcappliance upgrade vmware --config-file c:\contosoARB01-appliance.yaml

To upgrade a resource bridge on SCVMM, run: az arcappliance upgrade scvmm --config-file c:\contosoARB01-appliance.yaml

To upgrade a resource bridge on Azure Stack HCI, transition to 23H2 and use the built-in upgrade management tool. For more information, see About updates for Azure Stack HCI, version 23H2.

Version releases

The Arc resource bridge version is tied to the versions of underlying components used in the appliance image, such as the Kubernetes version. When there's a change in the appliance image, the Arc resource bridge version gets incremented. This generally happens when a new az arcappliance CLI extension version is released. A new extension is typically released on a monthly cadence at the end of the month or early in the month. For detailed release info, see the Arc resource bridge release notes.

Supported versions

Generally, the latest released version and the previous three versions (n-3) of Arc resource bridge are supported. An Arc resource bridge on an unsupported version must be upgraded or redeployed to be in a production support window.

For example, if the current version is 1.0.18, then the typical n-3 supported versions are:

  • Current version: 1.0.18
  • n-1 version: 1.0.17
  • n-2 version: 1.0.16
  • n-3 version: 1.0.15

There might be instances where supported versions aren't sequential. For example, version 1.0.18 is released and later found to contain a bug. A hot fix is released in version 1.0.19 and version 1.0.18 is removed. In this scenario, n-3 supported versions become 1.0.19, 1.0.17, 1.0.16, 1.0.15.

Arc resource bridge typically releases a new version on a monthly cadence, at the end of the month, although it's possible that delays could push the release date further out. Regardless of when a new release comes out, if you're within n-3 supported versions, then your Arc resource bridge version is supported. To stay updated on releases, visit the Arc resource bridge release notes.

If a resource bridge isn't upgraded to one of the supported versions (n-3), it falls outside the support window and will be unsupported. It might not always be possible to upgrade an unsupported resource bridge to a newer version, as component services used by Arc resource bridge may no longer be compatible. In addition, the unsupported resource bridge might not be able to provide reliable monitoring and health metrics.

If an Arc resource bridge can't be upgraded to a supported version, you must delete it and deploy a new resource bridge. Depending on which private cloud product you're using, there might be other steps required to reconnect the resource bridge to existing resources. For details, check the partner product's Arc resource bridge recovery documentation.

Notification and upgrade availability

If your Arc resource bridge is at version n-3, you might receive an email notification letting you know that your resource bridge will be out of support once the next version is released. If you receive this notification, upgrade the resource bridge as soon as possible to allow debug time for any issues with manual upgrade, or submit a support ticket if cloud-managed upgrade was unable to upgrade your resource bridge.

To check if your Arc resource bridge has an upgrade available, run the command:

az arcappliance get-upgrades --resource-group [REQUIRED] --name [REQUIRED] 

To see the current version of an Arc resource bridge appliance, run az arcappliance show or check the Azure resource of your Arc resource bridge.

Next steps