$openshift_master_default_subdomain would be resolvable to your users in exactly the same way google.com would be. It’s a real domain. It’s not OpenShift specific.
You will manage this domain in your enterprise per usual, and create wildcard DNS A records for the subdomain which return the IPs of your router(s). On Fri, Jun 21, 2019 at 3:50 AM Robert Dahlem <robert.dah...@gmx.net> wrote: > Hello, > > I am totally new to OpenShift. I managed to setup a master and a node, > then tried: > oc login -u dev -p dev > oc new-project ... > oc new-app ... > oc expose ... > > After exposing my application it can be reached at > > http://$appname-$projectname.$openshift_master_default_subdomain > > I can reach that from my browser on another system if I add the IP > address of my master with this name to my local hosts file. > > My question is: in which DNS would this be resolveable? The masters DNS > does not know about it: > > os-master # dig @127.0.0.1 \ > $appname-$projectname.$openshift_master_default_subdomain +short > > comes back empty. > > Kind regards, > Robert > > > _______________________________________________ > users mailing list > users@lists.openshift.redhat.com > http://lists.openshift.redhat.com/openshiftmm/listinfo/users >
_______________________________________________ users mailing list users@lists.openshift.redhat.com http://lists.openshift.redhat.com/openshiftmm/listinfo/users