of service subnets.
Update DNS, Cert, dry-run logic to support list of Service CIDRs.
Added unit tests for GetKubernetesServiceCIDR and updated
GetDNSIP() unit test to inclue dual-sack cases.
Etcd v3.3.0 added the --listen-metrics-urls flag which allows specifying
addition URLs to the already present /health and /metrics endpoints.
While /health and /metrics are enabled for URLS defined with
--listen-client-urls (v3+ ?) they do require HTTPS.
Replace the present etcdctl based liveness probe with a standard HTTP
GET v1.Probe that connects to http://127.0.0.1:2381/health.
These endpoints are not reachable from the outside and only available
for localhost connections.
Bump MinimumControlPlaneVersion and MinimumKubeletVersion to v1.12 and update
any related tests.
Signed-off-by: Rostislav M. Georgiev <rostislavg@vmware.com>
Up until now UnifiedControlPlaneImage existed as a string value as part of the
ClusterConfiguration. This provided an override for the Kubernetes core
component images with a single custom image. It is mostly used to override the
control plane images with the hyperkube image. This saves both bandwith and
disk space on the control plane nodes.
Unfortunately, this specified an entire image string (complete with its prefix,
image name and tag). This disables upgrades of setups that use hyperkube.
Therefore, to enable upgrades on hyperkube setups and to make configuration
more convenient, the UnifiedControlPlaneImage option is replaced with a boolean
option, called UseHyperKubeImage. If set to true, this option replaces the
image name of any Kubernetes core components with hyperkube, thus allowing for
upgrades and respecting the image repository and version, specified in the
ClusterConfiguration.
Signed-off-by: Rostislav M. Georgiev <rostislavg@vmware.com>
Until now the control plane timeout was fixed to 4 minutes and users did not
have the ability to change it. This commit allows that timeout to be configured
via the new `timeoutForControlPlane` option in the API server config (itself a
member of the ClusterConfiguration).
The default timeout is still 4 minutes.
Signed-off-by: Rostislav M. Georgiev <rostislavg@vmware.com>