Automatic merge from submit-queue
bump log level on service status update
ref: https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/issues/38349
I tried to reproduce the problem in #38349 and failed. Not sure why service status update failed and service controller skip status update in the next round. What I have observed is that if service status update failed due to conflict, the next round of processServiceUpdate will correct it.
Bumping log level to get a better signal when it occurs.
Many providers need to do some sort of node name -> IP or instanceID
lookup before they can use the list of hostnames passed to
EnsureLoadBalancer/UpdateLoadBalancer.
This change just passes the full Node object instead of simply the node
name, allowing providers to use the node's provider ID and cached
addresses without additional lookups. Using `node.Name` reproduces the
old behaviour.
Automatic merge from submit-queue
controller/service: minor cleanup
1. always handle short case first for if statement
2. do not capitalize error message
3. put the mutex before the fields it protects
4. prefer switch over if elseif.
Automatic merge from submit-queue
Generated clients can return their RESTClients, RESTClient can return its RateLimiter
cc @lavalamp @krousey @wojtek-t @smarterclayton @timothysc
Ref. #22421
This is a better abstraction than passing in specific pieces of the
Service that each of the cloudproviders may or may not need. For
instance, many of the providers don't need a region, yet this is passed
in. Similarly many of the providers want a string IP for the load
balancer, but it passes in a converted net ip. Affinity is unused by
AWS. A provider change may also require adding a new parameter which has
an effect on all other cloud provider implementations.
Further, this will simplify adding provider specific load balancer
options, such as with labels or some other metadata. For example, we
could add labels for configuring the details of an AWS elastic load
balancer, such as idle timeout on connections, whether it is
internal or external, cross-zone load balancing, and so on.
Authors: @chbatey, @jsravn