conflict.
Adding unit test verify that deleteValidation is retried.
adding e2e test verifying the webhook can intercept configmap and custom
resource deletion, and the existing object is sent via the
admissionreview.OldObject.
update the admission integration test to verify that the existing object
is passed to the deletion admission webhook as oldObject, in case of an
immediate deletion and in case of an update-on-delete.
- 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
The registry abstraction is unnecessary and adds direct coupling to the
core types. By using a wrapper, we carry through the default
implementations of the non-mutating operations. The DeleteCollection
method is explicitly patched out since it cannot be correctly
implemented on the storage currently.
As a result, TableConvertor is now exposed.
A few other minor refactorings
* Corrected the case of some variables
* Used functions instead of methods for several helper methods
* Removed the legacy Deleter - service was the only remaining consumer
Currently setting watch cache size for a given resource does not disable
the watch cache. This commit adds a new `default-watch-cache-size` flag
to map to the existing field, and refactors how watch cache sizes are
calculated to bring all of the code into one place. It also adds debug
logging to startup to allow us to verify watch cache enablement in
production.
All Stores in Kubernetes follow the same logic for determining the name
of an object. This change makes it so that CompleteWithOptions defaults
the ObjectNameFunc if it is not specified. Thus a user does not need to
remember to use ObjectMeta.Name. Using the wrong field as the name can
lead to an object which has a name that bypasses normal object name
validation.
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mkhan@redhat.com>