- Overview
- Requirements
- Installation
- Q&A: Deployment templates
- Downloading the installation packages
- Install-uipath.sh Parameters
- Enabling Redis High Availability Add-On for the cluster
- Document Understanding configuration file
- Adding a dedicated agent node with GPU support
- Connecting Task Mining application
- Adding a dedicated agent Node for Task Mining
- Adding a Dedicated Agent Node for Automation Suite Robots
- Post-installation
- Accessing Automation Suite
- Managing the Certificates
- Resizing PVC
- Updating the SQL connection strings
- Cluster administration
- Monitoring and alerting
- Migration and upgrade
- Migration options
- Step 1: Moving the Identity organization data from standalone to Automation Suite
- Step 2: Restoring the standalone product database
- Step 3: Backing up the platform database in Automation Suite
- Step 4: Merging organizations in Automation Suite
- Step 5: Updating the migrated product connection strings
- Step 6: Migrating standalone Insights
- Step 7: Deleting the default tenant
- B) Single tenant migration
- Product-specific configuration
- Best practices and maintenance
- Troubleshooting
- How to troubleshoot services during installation
- How to uninstall the cluster
- How to clean up offline artifacts to improve disk space
- How to clear Redis data
- How to enable Istio logging
- How to manually clean up logs
- How to clean up old logs stored in the sf-logs bundle
- How to disable streaming logs for AI Center
- How to debug failed Automation Suite installations
- How to delete images from the old installer after upgrade
- How to automatically clean up Longhorn snapshots
- How to disable NIC checksum offloading
- Unable to run an offline installation on RHEL 8.4 OS
- Error in Downloading the Bundle
- Offline installation fails because of missing binary
- Certificate issue in offline installation
- First installation fails during Longhorn setup
- SQL connection string validation error
- Prerequisite check for selinux iscsid module fails
- Azure disk not marked as SSD
- Failure after certificate update
- Antivirus causes installation issues
- Automation Suite not working after OS upgrade
- Automation Suite requires backlog_wait_time to be set to 0
- Volume unable to mount due to not being ready for workloads
- Unable to launch Automation Hub and Apps with proxy setup
- Failure to upload or download data in objectstore
- PVC resize does not heal Ceph
- Failure to resize PVC
- Failure to resize objectstore PVC
- Rook Ceph or Looker pod stuck in Init state
- StatefulSet volume attachment error
- Failure to create persistent volumes
- Storage reclamation patch
- Backup failed due to TooManySnapshots error
- All Longhorn replicas are faulted
- Setting a timeout interval for the management portals
- Update the underlying directory connections
- Authentication not working after migration
- Kinit: Cannot find KDC for realm <AD Domain> while getting initial credentials
- Kinit: Keytab contains no suitable keys for *** while getting initial credentials
- GSSAPI operation failed due to invalid status code
- Alarm received for failed Kerberos-tgt-update job
- SSPI provider: Server not found in Kerberos database
- Login failed for AD user due to disabled account
- ArgoCD login failed
- Failure to get the sandbox image
- Pods not showing in ArgoCD UI
- Redis probe failure
- RKE2 server fails to start
- Secret not found in UiPath namespace
- ArgoCD goes into progressing state after first installation
- Unexpected inconsistency; run fsck manually
- MongoDB pods in CrashLoopBackOff or pending PVC provisioning after deletion
- MongoDB Pod Fails to Upgrade From 4.4.4-ent to 5.0.7-ent
- Unhealthy services after cluster restore or rollback
- Pods stuck in Init:0/X
- Prometheus in CrashloopBackoff state with out-of-memory (OOM) error
- Missing Ceph-rook metrics from monitoring dashboards
- Using the Automation Suite Diagnostics Tool
- Using the Automation Suite Support Bundle Tool
- Exploring Logs
Accessing Automation Suite
Before running any kubectl commands, make sure to enable kubectl. This allows you to run commands for retrieving passwords and configuration details for the cluster.
To enable kubectl, run the following command:
sudo su -
export KUBECONFIG="/etc/rancher/rke2/rke2.yaml" \
&& export PATH="$PATH:/usr/local/bin:/var/lib/rancher/rke2/bin"
sudo su -
export KUBECONFIG="/etc/rancher/rke2/rke2.yaml" \
&& export PATH="$PATH:/usr/local/bin:/var/lib/rancher/rke2/bin"
The installation process generates self-signed certificates on your behalf. These certificates will expire in 90 days, and you must replace them with certificates signed by a trusted Certificate Authority (CA) as soon as installation completes. If you do not update the certificates, the installation will stop working after 90 days.
For instructions, see Managing certificates.
If you try to access the cluster with a web browser, and the certificates are not from a trusted CA, then you will see a warning in the browser. You can rectify this by importing and trusting the cluster SSL certificate on the client computer running the browser.
To manage certificates, take the following steps:
The Cluster Administration portal is a centralized location where you can find all the resources required to complete an Automation Suite installation and perform common post-installation operations. For details, see Getting started with the Cluster Administration portal.
To access the Cluster Administration portal, take the following step:
https://${CONFIG_CLUSTER_FQDN}/uipath-management
.The general-use Automation Suite user interface serves as a portal for both organization administrators and organization users. It is a common organization-level resource from where everyone can access all of your Automation Suite areas: administration pages, platform-level pages, product-specific pages, and user-specific pages.
To access Automation Suite, take the following steps:
The host portal is for system administrators to configure the Automation Suite instance. The settings that you configure from this portal are inherited by all your organizations, and some can be overwritten at the organization level.
To access host administration, take the following steps:
You can use the ArgoCD console to manage installed products.
Depending on the operations you want to carry out in ArgoCD, you can use two types of accounts to access the console:
- the read-only account in basic scenarios;
- admin account in advanced scenarios.
For more details on ArgoCD and how you can access it, see Managing the cluster in ArgoCD.
Automation Suite uses Rancher to provide cluster management tools out of the box. This helps you manage the cluster and access monitoring and troubleshooting.
See Rancher documentation for more details.
See Using the monitoring stack for more on how to use Rancher monitoring in Automation Suite.
To access the Rancher console, take the following steps:
You can access the database connection strings for each service as follows:
kubectl -n uipath get secret aicenter-secrets -o jsonpath='{.data.sqlConnectionString}' | base64 --decode
kubectl -n uipath get secret orchestrator-secrets -o jsonpath='{.data.sqlConnectionString}' | base64 --decode
kubectl -n uipath get secret automation-hub-secrets -o jsonpath='{.data.sqlConnectionString}' | base64 --decode
kubectl -n uipath get secret automation-ops-secrets -o jsonpath='{.data.sqlConnectionString}' | base64 --decode
kubectl -n uipath get secret insights-secrets -o jsonpath='{.data.sqlConnectionString}' | base64 --decode
kubectl -n uipath get secret platform-service-secrets -o jsonpath='{.data.sqlConnectionString}' | base64 --decode
kubectl -n uipath get secret test-manager-secrets -o jsonpath='{.data.sqlConnectionString}' | base64 --decode
kubectl -n uipath get secret aicenter-secrets -o jsonpath='{.data.sqlConnectionString}' | base64 --decode
kubectl -n uipath get secret orchestrator-secrets -o jsonpath='{.data.sqlConnectionString}' | base64 --decode
kubectl -n uipath get secret automation-hub-secrets -o jsonpath='{.data.sqlConnectionString}' | base64 --decode
kubectl -n uipath get secret automation-ops-secrets -o jsonpath='{.data.sqlConnectionString}' | base64 --decode
kubectl -n uipath get secret insights-secrets -o jsonpath='{.data.sqlConnectionString}' | base64 --decode
kubectl -n uipath get secret platform-service-secrets -o jsonpath='{.data.sqlConnectionString}' | base64 --decode
kubectl -n uipath get secret test-manager-secrets -o jsonpath='{.data.sqlConnectionString}' | base64 --decode