- lock the FG to true by default
- cleanup wrappers and logic related to versioned vs unversioned
naming of API objects (CMs and RBAC)
- update unit tests
- Modify VerifyUnmarshalStrict to use serializer/json instead
of sigs.k8s.io/yaml. In strict mode, the serializers
in serializer/json use the new sigs.k8s.io/json library
that also catches case sensitive errors for field names -
e.g. foo vs Foo. Include test case for that in strict/testdata.
- Move the hardcoded schemes to check to the side of the
caller - i.e. accept a slice of runtime.Scheme.
- Move the klog warnings outside of VerifyUnmarshalStrict
and make them the responsibility of the caller.
- Call VerifyUnmarshalStrict when downloading the configuration
from kubeadm-config or the kube-proxy or kubelet-config CMs.
This validation is useful if the user has manually patched the CMs.
Compare with two pointers will always show that they are different value,
so it will always print the warning message.
Signed-off-by: Dave Chen <dave.chen@arm.com>
Before this commit when setting bindAddress to 1.2.3.4 the warning was:
The recommended value for "bindAddress" in "KubeProxyConfiguration" is: 1.2.3.4; the provided value is: 0.0.0.0
Signed-off-by: Etienne Champetier <e.champetier@ateme.com>
Add the UnversionedKubeletConfigMap feature gate that can
be used to control legacy vs new behavior for naming the
default configmap used to store the KubeletConfiguration.
Update related unit tests.
Ideally this should be part of dockershim/CRI and not on the
side of kubeadm.
Remove the detection during:
- During preflight
- During kubelet config defaulting
Kubeadm no longer supports kube-dns and CoreDNS is the only
supported DNS server. Remove ClusterConfiguration.DNS.Type
from v1beta3 that is used to set the DNS server type.
- scheme: switch to:
utilruntime.Must(scheme.SetVersionPriority(v1beta3.SchemeGroupVersion))
- change all imports in the code base from v1beta2 to v1beta3
- rename all import aliases for kubeadmapiv1beta2 to "kubeadmapiv".
this allows smaller diffs when changing the default public API.
The kubeadm documentation instructs users to set the container
runtime driver to "systemd", since kubeadm manages a kubelet via
the systemd init system. The kubelet default however is "cgroupfs".
For new clusters set the driver to "systemd" unless the user
is explicit about it. The same defaulting would not happen
during "upgrade".
Over the course of recent development of the `componentconfigs` package,
it became evident that most of the tests in this package cannot be implemented without
using a component config. As all of the currently supported component configs are
external to the kubeadm project (kubelet and kube-proxy), practically all of the tests
in this package are now dependent on external code.
This is not desirable, because other component's configs may change frequently and
without much of a notice. In particular many configs add new fields without bumping their
versions. In addition to that, some components may be deprecated in the future and many
tests may use their configs as a place holder of a component config just to test some
common functionality.
To top that, there are many tests that test the same common functionality several times
(for each different component config).
Thus a kubeadm managed replacement and a fake test environment are introduced.
The new test environment uses kubeadm's very own `ClusterConfiguration`.
ClusterConfiguration is normally not managed by the `componentconfigs` package.
It's only used, because of the following:
- It's a versioned API that is under the control of kubeadm maintainers. This enables us to test
the componentconfigs package more thoroughly without having to have full and always up to date
knowledge about the config of another component.
- Other components often introduce new fields in their configs without bumping up the config version.
This, often times, requires that the PR that introduces such new fields to touch kubeadm test code.
Doing so, requires more work on the part of developers and reviewers. When kubeadm moves out of k/k
this would allow for more sporadic breaks in kubeadm tests as PRs that merge in k/k and introduce
new fields won't be able to fix the tests in kubeadm.
- If we implement tests for all common functionality using the config of another component and it gets
deprecated and/or we stop supporting it in production, we'll have to focus on a massive test refactoring
or just continue importing this config just for test use.
Thus, to reduce maintenance costs without sacrificing test coverage, we introduce this mini-framework
and set of tests here which replace the normal component configs with a single one (`ClusterConfiguration`)
and test the component config independent logic of this package.
As a result of this, many of the older test cases are refactored and greatly simplified to reflect
on the new change as well. The old tests that are strictly tied to specific component configs
(like the defaulting tests) are left unchanged.
Signed-off-by: Rostislav M. Georgiev <rostislavg@vmware.com>
This change enables kubeadm upgrade plan to print a state table with
information regarding known component config API groups. Most importantly this
information includes current and preferred version for each group and an
indication if a manual user upgrade is required.
Signed-off-by: Rostislav M. Georgiev <rostislavg@vmware.com>
Currently, kubeadm would refuse to perfom an upgrade (or even planing for one)
if it detects a user supplied unsupported component config version. Hence,
users are required to manually upgrade their component configs and store them
in the config maps prior to executing `kubeadm upgrade plan` or
`kubeadm upgrade apply`.
This change introduces the ability to use the `--config` option of the
`kubeadm upgrade plan` and `kubeadm upgrade apply` commands to supply a YAML
file containing component configs to be used in place of the existing ones in
the cluster upon upgrade.
The old behavior where `--config` is used to reconfigure a cluster is still
supported. kubeadm automatically detects which behavior to use based on the
presence (or absense) of kubeadm config types (API group
`kubeadm.kubernetes.io`).
Signed-off-by: Rostislav M. Georgiev <rostislavg@vmware.com>
Until now, users were always asked to manually convert a component config to a
version supported by kubeadm, if kubeadm is not supporting its version.
This is true even for configs generated with older kubeadm versions, hence
getting users to make manual conversions on kubeadm generated configs.
This is not appropriate and user friendly, although, it tends to be the most
common case. Hence, we sign kubeadm generated component configs stored in
config maps with a SHA256 checksum. If a configs is loaded by kubeadm from a
config map and has a valid signature it's considered "kubeadm generated" and if
a version migration is required, this config is automatically discarded and a
new one is generated.
If there is no checksum or the checksum is not matching, the config is
considered as "user supplied" and, if a version migration is required, kubeadm
will bail out with an error, requiring manual config migration (as it's today).
The behavior when supplying component configs on the kubeadm command line
does not change. Kubeadm would still bail out with an error requiring migration
if it can recognize their groups but not versions.
Signed-off-by: Rostislav M. Georgiev <rostislavg@vmware.com>
kubeadm is setting the IPv6DualStack feature gate in the command line of the kubelet.
However, the kubelet is gradually moving away from command line flags towards component config use.
Hence, we should set the IPv6DualStack feature gate in the component config instead.
Signed-off-by: Rostislav M. Georgiev <rostislavg@vmware.com>