Quite a few images are only used a few times in a few tests. Thus,
the images are being centralized into the agnhost image, reducing
the number of images that have to be pulled and used.
This PR replaces the usage of the following images with agnhost:
- net
- netexec
- nettest
- webhook
Some of the tests cannot pass using Windows nodes due to various reasons:
- seLinuxOptions are not supported on Windows.
- Running as an UID / GID is not supported on Windows.
- file permissions work differently on Windows, and they cannot be set in
the same manner as on Linux.
- individual files cannot be mounted in Windows Containers.
- Cannot create container using Linux image (e.g.: alpine) on Windows.
Because of this, it has been decided to use the "[LinuxOnly]" tag for the
tests which cannot run on Windows because of the mentioned reasons. This way,
when running tests using Windows nodes, those tests can simply be skipped by
adding the "[LinuxOnly]" tag to the ginkgo.skip argument.
- Move from the old github.com/golang/glog to k8s.io/klog
- klog as explicit InitFlags() so we add them as necessary
- we update the other repositories that we vendor that made a similar
change from glog to klog
* github.com/kubernetes/repo-infra
* k8s.io/gengo/
* k8s.io/kube-openapi/
* github.com/google/cadvisor
- Entirely remove all references to glog
- Fix some tests by explicit InitFlags in their init() methods
Change-Id: I92db545ff36fcec83afe98f550c9e630098b3135
We have 2 scenarios where we copy /etc/hosts
- with host network (we just copy the /etc/hosts from node)
- without host network (create a fresh /etc/hosts from pod info)
We are having trouble figuring out whether a /etc/hosts in a
pod/container has been "fixed-up" or not. And whether we used
host network or a fresh /etc/hosts in the various ways we start
up the tests which are:
- VM/box against a remote cluster
- As a container inside the k8s cluster
- DIND scenario in CI where test runs inside a managed container
Please see previous mis-guided attempt to fix this problem at
ba20e63446 In this commit we revert
the code from there as well.
So we should make sure:
- we always add a header if we touched the file
- we add slightly different headers so we can figure out if we used the
host network or not.
Update the test case to inject /etc/hosts from node to another path
(/etc/hosts-original) as well and use that to compare.
"KubeletManagedEtcHosts should test kubelet managed /etc/hosts file"
conformance test fails in the CI's Docker-In-Docker environment.
This test mounts a /etc/hosts file and checks if "# Kubernetes-managed
hosts file." string is present or not under various conditions. The
specific failure with DIND happens when the /etc/hosts picked up
from the box where e2e test are running already has this string. This
happens because our CI runs on kubernetes and the e2e tests are running
in a container that was started on kubernetes (and hence already has
that string)
To avoid this situation, we create a new /etc/hosts file with known
contents (and does not have the "# Kubernetes-managed hosts file."
string)
Note: this still makes the test fail if a retry occurs, but
will give us more information regarding whether or not the
test flake could be occuring due to delay in mounting of
/etc/hosts.