The documentation you are viewing is for Dapr v1.8 which is an older version of Dapr. For up-to-date documentation, see the latest version.

Upgrade Dapr on a Kubernetes cluster

Follow these steps to upgrade Dapr on Kubernetes and ensure a smooth upgrade.

Prerequisites

Upgrade existing cluster to 1.8.4

There are two ways to upgrade the Dapr control plane on a Kubernetes cluster using either the Dapr CLI or Helm.

Dapr CLI

The example below shows how to upgrade to version 1.8.4:

dapr upgrade -k --runtime-version=1.8.4

You can provide all the available Helm chart configurations using the Dapr CLI. See here for more info.

Troubleshooting upgrade using the CLI

There is a known issue running upgrades on clusters that may have previously had a version prior to 1.0.0-rc.2 installed on a cluster.

Most users should not encounter this issue, but there are a few upgrade path edge cases that may leave an incompatible CustomResourceDefinition installed on your cluster. The error message for this case looks like this:

❌  Failed to upgrade Dapr: Warning: kubectl apply should be used on resource created by either kubectl create --save-config or kubectl apply
The CustomResourceDefinition "configurations.dapr.io" is invalid: spec.preserveUnknownFields: Invalid value: true: must be false in order to use defaults in the schema

To resolve this issue please run the follow command to upgrade the CustomResourceDefinition to a compatible version:

kubectl replace -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/dapr/dapr/5a15b3e0f093d2d0938b12f144c7047474a290fe/charts/dapr/crds/configuration.yaml

Then proceed with the dapr upgrade --runtime-version 1.8.4 -k command as above.

Helm

From version 1.0.0 onwards, upgrading Dapr using Helm is no longer a disruptive action since existing certificate values will automatically be re-used.

  1. Upgrade Dapr from 1.0.0 (or newer) to any [NEW VERSION] > 1.0.0:

    Helm does not handle upgrading CRDs, so you need to perform that manually. CRDs are backward-compatible and should only be installed forward.

    Note: The Dapr version is included in the commands below.

    For version 1.8.4:

    kubectl replace -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/dapr/dapr/v1.8.4/charts/dapr/crds/components.yaml
    kubectl replace -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/dapr/dapr/v1.8.4/charts/dapr/crds/configuration.yaml
    kubectl replace -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/dapr/dapr/v1.8.4/charts/dapr/crds/subscription.yaml
    kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/dapr/dapr/v1.8.4/charts/dapr/crds/resiliency.yaml
    
    helm repo update
    
    helm upgrade dapr dapr/dapr --version 1.8.4 --namespace dapr-system --wait
    

    If you’re using a values file, remember to add the --values option when running the upgrade command.

  2. Ensure all pods are running:

    kubectl get pods -n dapr-system -w
    
    NAME                                     READY   STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
    dapr-dashboard-69f5c5c867-mqhg4          1/1     Running   0          42s
    dapr-operator-5cdd6b7f9c-9sl7g           1/1     Running   0          41s
    dapr-placement-server-0                  1/1     Running   0          41s
    dapr-sentry-84565c747b-7bh8h             1/1     Running   0          35s
    dapr-sidecar-injector-68f868668f-6xnbt   1/1     Running   0          41s
    
  3. Restart your application deployments to update the Dapr runtime:

    kubectl rollout restart deploy/<DEPLOYMENT-NAME>
    
  4. All done!

Upgrading existing Dapr to enable high availability mode

Enabling HA mode in an existing Dapr deployment requires additional steps. Please refer to this paragraph for more details.

Next steps