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Rewrite service controller to apply best controller pattern
This PR is a long term solution for #21625:
We apply the same pattern like replication controller to service controller to avoid the potential process order messes in service controller, the change includes:
1. introduce informer controller to watch service changes from kube-apiserver, so that every changes on same service will be kept in serviceStore as the only element.
2. put the service name to be processed to working queue
3. when process service, always get info from serviceStore to ensure the info is up-to-date
4. keep the retry mechanism, sleep for certain interval and add it back to queue.
5. remote the logic of reading last service info from kube-apiserver before processing the LB info as we trust the info from serviceStore.
The UT has been passed, manual test passed after I hardcode the cloud provider as FakeCloud, however I am not able to boot a k8s cluster with any available cloudprovider, so e2e test is not done.
Submit this PR first for review and for triggering a e2e test.
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add configz.InstallHandler in controllermanager.go
I think it should add configz.InstallHandler for Run function in controllermanager.go.
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two optimization for StartControllers in controllermanager.go
The PR changed two places to optimise StartControllers function in controllermanager.go.
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controller-manager support number of garbage collector workers to be configurable
The number of garbage collector workers of controller-manager is a fixed value 5 now, make it configurable should more properly
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kube-controller-manager: Add configure-cloud-routes option
This allows kube-controller-manager to allocate CIDRs to nodes (with
allocate-node-cidrs=true), but will not try to configure them on the
cloud provider, even if the cloud provider supports Routes.
The default is configure-cloud-routes=true, and it will only try to
configure routes if allocate-node-cidrs is also configured, so the
default behaviour is unchanged.
This is useful because on AWS the cloud provider configures routes by
setting up VPC routing table entries, but there is a limit of 50
entries. So setting configure-cloud-routes on AWS would allow us to
continue to allocate node CIDRs as today, but replace the VPC
route-table mechanism with something not limited to 50 nodes.
We can't just turn off the cloud-provider entirely because it also
controls other things - node discovery, load balancer creation etc.
Fix#25602
This allows kube-controller-manager to allocate CIDRs to nodes (with
allocate-node-cidrs=true), but will not try to configure them on the
cloud provider, even if the cloud provider supports Routes.
The default is configure-cloud-routes=true, and it will only try to
configure routes if allocate-node-cidrs is also configured, so the
default behaviour is unchanged.
This is useful because on AWS the cloud provider configures routes by
setting up VPC routing table entries, but there is a limit of 50
entries. So setting configure-cloud-routes on AWS would allow us to
continue to allocate node CIDRs as today, but replace the VPC
route-table mechanism with something not limited to 50 nodes.
We can't just turn off the cloud-provider entirely because it also
controls other things - node discovery, load balancer creation etc.
Fix#25602