Automatic merge from submit-queue
rkt: Fix hostnetwork.
Mount hosts' /etc/hosts, /etc/resolv.conf, set host's hostname
when running the pod in the host's network.
Fix#24235
cc @kubernetes/sig-node
Automatic merge from submit-queue
rkt: Use rkt pod's uuid as the systemd service file's name.
Previously, the service file's name is 'k8s_${POD_UID}.service',
which means we need to `systemctl daemon-reload` if the we replace
the content of the service file (e.g. pod is restarted).
However this makes the journal in the previous pod get disconnected.
This PR solves the issue by using the unique rkt uuid as the service
file's name. After the change, the service file's name will be:
'k8s_${rkt_uuid}.service'.
Fix#23691
Automatic merge from submit-queue
rkt: Update the directory path for saving auth config.
Since #23308 is merged, now we have more stable way to determine where to store the auth configs.
cc @yujuhong @sjpotter
Automatic merge from submit-queue
Allow lazy binding in credential providers; don't use it in AWS yet
This is step one for cross-region ECR support and has no visible effects yet.
I'm not crazy about the name LazyProvide. Perhaps the interface method could
remain like that and the package method of the same name could become
LateBind(). I still don't understand why the credential provider has a
DockerConfigEntry that has the same fields but is distinct from
docker.AuthConfiguration. I had to write a converter now that we do that in
more than one place.
In step two, I'll add another intermediate, lazy provider for each AWS region,
whose empty LazyAuthConfiguration will have a refresh time of months or years.
Behind the scenes, it'll use an actual ecrProvider with the usual ~12 hour
credentials, that will get created (and later refreshed) only when kubelet is
attempting to pull an image. If we simply turned ecrProvider directly into a
lazy provider, we would bypass all the caching and get new credentials for
each image pulled.
Mount hosts' /etc/hosts, /etc/resolv.conf, set host's hostname
when running the pod in the host's network.
Besides, do not set the DNS flags when running in host's network.
Previously, the service file's name is 'k8s_${POD_UID}.service',
which means we need to `systemctl daemon-reload` if the we replace
the content of the service file (e.g. pod is restarted).
However this makes the journal in the previous pod get disconnected.
This PR solves the issue by using the unique rkt uuid as the service
file's name. After the change, the service file's name will be:
'k8s_${rkt_uuid}.service'.
This is step one for cross-region ECR support and has no visible effects yet.
I'm not crazy about the name LazyProvide. Perhaps the interface method could
remain like that and the package method of the same name could become
LateBind(). I still don't understand why the credential provider has a
DockerConfigEntry that has the same fields but is distinct from
docker.AuthConfiguration. I had to write a converter now that we do that in
more than one place.
In step two, I'll add another intermediate, lazy provider for each AWS region,
whose empty LazyAuthConfiguration will have a refresh time of months or years.
Behind the scenes, it'll use an actual ecrProvider with the usual ~12 hour
credentials, that will get created (and later refreshed) only when kubelet is
attempting to pull an image. If we simply turned ecrProvider directly into a
lazy provider, we would bypass all the caching and get new credentials for
each image pulled.
Add GeneratePodHostNameAndDomain() to RuntimeHelper to
get the hostname of the pod from kubelet.
Also update the logging flag to change the journal match from
_HOSTNAME to _MACHINE_ID.
Using json makes this robust to ENTRYPOINT/CMD that contains space.
Also removed 'RemainAfterExit' option, originally this option is
useful when we implement GetPods() by 'systemctl list-units'.
However since we are using rkt API service now, it's no longer needed.
This enables rkt runtime to setup versions during creation,
this fixes a kubelet nil pointer panic when kubelet tries to get the
rkt versions but it's not set.
Use an array to store the pod IDs and use that to build the pod array with consistent ordering,
instead of map ordering, which is random and causes test flakes.