Commit Graph

4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Filip Grzadkowski
98115facfd Revert "Gracefully delete pods from the Kubelet" 2015-06-02 23:40:05 +02:00
Clayton Coleman
72ee028cab Gracefully delete pods from the Kubelet
This commit wires together the graceful delete option for pods
on the Kubelet.  When a pod is deleted on the API server, a
grace period is calculated that is based on the
Pod.Spec.TerminationGracePeriodInSeconds, the user's provided grace
period, or a default.  The grace period can only shrink once set.
The value provided by the user (or the default) is set onto metadata
as DeletionGracePeriod.

When the Kubelet sees a pod with DeletionTimestamp set, it uses the
value of ObjectMeta.GracePeriodSeconds as the grace period
sent to Docker.  When updating status, if the pod has DeletionTimestamp
set and all containers are terminated, the Kubelet will update the
status one last time and then invoke Delete(pod, grace: 0) to
clean up the pod immediately.
2015-06-01 19:23:59 -04:00
Eric Paris
6b3a6e6b98 Make copyright ownership statement generic
Instead of saying "Google Inc." (which is not always correct) say "The
Kubernetes Authors", which is generic.
2015-05-01 17:49:56 -04:00
Clayton Coleman
428d2263e5 Graceful deletion of resources
This commit adds support to core resources to enable deferred deletion
of resources.  Clients may optionally specify a time period after which
resources must be deleted via an object sent with their DELETE. That
object may define an optional grace period in seconds, or allow the
default "preferred" value for a resource to be used. Once the object
is marked as pending deletion, the deletionTimestamp field will be set
and an etcd TTL will be in place.

Clients should assume resources that have deletionTimestamp set will
be deleted at some point in the future.  Other changes will come later
to enable graceful deletion on a per resource basis.
2015-03-19 15:33:32 -04:00