this is a two stage refactor when done there will be no init block in admission plugins.
Instead all plugins expose Register function which accept admission.Plugins instance.
The registration to global plugin registry happens inside Register func.
We are more liberal in what we accept as a volume id in k8s, and indeed
we ourselves generate names that look like `aws://<zone>/<id>` for
dynamic volumes.
This volume id (hereafter a KubernetesVolumeID) cannot directly be
compared to an AWS volume ID (hereafter an awsVolumeID).
We introduce types for each, to prevent accidental comparison or
confusion.
Issue #35746
We had a long-lasting bug which prevented creation of volumes in
non-master zones, because the cloudprovider in the volume label
admission controller is not initialized with the multizone setting
(issue #27656).
This implements a simple workaround: if the volume is created with the
failure-domain zone label, we look for the volume in that zone. This is
more efficient, avoids introducing a new semantic, and allows users (and
the dynamic provisioner) to create volumes in non-master zones.
Fixes#27657
This is a first-aid bandage to let admission controller ignore persistent
volumes that are being provisioned right now and thus may not exist in
external cloud infrastructure yet.
For AWS EBS, a volume can only be attached to a node in the same AZ.
The scheduler must therefore detect if a volume is being attached to a
pod, and ensure that the pod is scheduled on a node in the same AZ as
the volume.
So that the scheduler need not query the cloud provider every time, and
to support decoupled operation (e.g. bare metal) we tag the volume with
our placement labels. This is done automatically by means of an
admission controller on AWS when a PersistentVolume is created backed by
an EBS volume.
Support for tagging GCE PVs will follow.
Pods that specify a volume directly (i.e. without using a
PersistentVolumeClaim) will not currently be scheduled correctly (i.e.
they will be scheduled without zone-awareness).