The spaces are redundant because Ginkgo will add them itself when concatenating
the different test name components. Upcoming change in the framework will
enforce that there are no such redundant spaces.
Using StartRecordingToSinkWithContext instead of StartRecordingToSink and
StartLogging instead of StartStructuredLogging has several advantages:
- Spawned goroutines no longer get stuck for extended periods of
time during shutdown when passing in a context that gets canceled.
- Log output can be directed towards a specific logger instead of the global
default, for example one which writes to a testing.T instance.
- The new methods return an error when something went wrong instead of
merely recording the error.
That last point is the reason for deprecating the old methods instead of merely
adding new alternatives.
Setting a context when constructing an EventBroadcaster makes calling Shutdown
optional. It can also be used to specify the logger.
Both EventRecorder interfaces in tools/events and tools/record now have a
WithLogger helper. Using that method is optional, but recommended to support
contextual logging properly. Without it, errors that occur while emitting an
event are not associated with the caller.
for now:
- shim FORCE_HOST_GO to GOTOOLCHAIN=local
- treat GOTOOLCHAIN set and !=auto like FORCE_HOST_GO
- otherwise set GOTOOLCHAIN=go${GO_VERSION} and fallback to gimme if necessary
TODO: set toolchain statements in go.mod files and keep them in sync
This particualar warning didn't make it into
https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/issues/117288. Discussion on Slack
concluded that "it's hard to have a universal policy for all functions marked
deprecated" and thus this can only be a hint which must be considered on a
case-by-case basis.
For example, APIs like sets.String are very unlikely to ever go away, therefore
it is entirely up to developers whether they switch to sets.Set even though
sets.String is marked as deprecated.
Ideally, the deprecation message should explain this. It doesn't for sets ("use
generic Set instead"), so a better message in that case would have been
"consider using generic Set instead".
The voting in https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/issues/117288 led to
one check that got rejected ("ifElseChain: rewrite if-else to switch
statement") and several that are "nice to know".
golangci-lint's support for issue "severity" is too limited to identify "nice
to know" issues in the output (filtering is only by linter without considering
the issue text; not part of text output). Therefore a third configuration gets
added which emits all issues (must fix and nits). The intention is to use
the "strict" configuration in pull-kubernetes-verify and the "hints"
configuration in a new non-blocking pull-kubernetes-linter-hints.
That way, "must fix" issues will block merging while issues that may be useful
will show up in a failed optional job. However, that job then also contains
"must fix" issues, partly because filtering out those would make the
configuration a lot larger and is likely to be unreliably (all "must fix"
issues would need to be identified and listed), partly because it may be useful
to have all issues in one place.
The previous approach of manually keeping two configs in sync with special
comments didn't scale to three configs. Now a single golangci.yaml.in with
text/template constructs contains the source for all three configs. A new
simple CLI frontend for text/template (cmd/gotemplate) is used by
hack/update-golangci-lint-config.sh to generate the three flavors.
Several verify scripts used the same pattern of "check for clean working tree,
generated files, check for diffs". The code for that is now in
kube::verify::generated, defined in hack/lib/verify-generated.sh, and those
scripts just source that.
For some reason, in go1.21, go list does not allow
importing main packages anymore, even if it is for
the sake of tracking dependencies (which is a valid
use case).
A suggestion to work around this is to use -e flag to
permit processing of erroneous packages. However, this
doesn't seem prudent.
Signed-off-by: Madhav Jivrajani <madhav.jiv@gmail.com>
That release is the first one with official support for Go 1.21. go-ruleguard
must be >= 0.3.20 because of
https://github.com/quasilyte/go-ruleguard/issues/449 with Go
1.21. golangci-lint itself doesn't depend on a recent enough release yet, so
this was done manually.
Client-side extract calls depend on `managedFields`, which might not be
available. Therefore they should not be used in production code.
They are okay in test files (because the API has to be tested), in the
generated code (because the various type specific APIs still need to be
provided) and in unstructured.go (same reason).