Remove the dependency of login information on worker nodes for vsphere cloud provider:
1. VM Name is required to be set in the cloud provider configuration file.
2. Remove the requirement of login for Instance functions when querying local node information.
The url which is used for communicating with govmomi should not include
port number. A port number other than 443 will result in 404 error.
VCenterPort stays in VSphereConfig structure for backward compatibility.
Start looking up the virtual machine by it's UUID in vSphere again. Looking up by IP address is problematic and can either not return a VM entirely, or could return the wrong VM.
Retrieves the VM's UUID in one of two methods - either by a `vm-uuid` entry in the cloud config file on the VM, or via sysfs. The sysfs route requires root access, but restores the previous functionality.
Multiple VMs in a vCenter cluster can share an IP address - for example, if you have multiple VM networks, but they're all isolated and use the same address range. Additionally, flannel network address ranges can overlap.
vSphere seems to have a limitation of reporting no more than 16 interfaces from a virtual machine, so it's possible that the IP address list on a VM is completely untrustworthy anyhow - it can either be empty (because the 16 interfaces it found were veth interfaces with no IP address), or it can report the flannel IP.
This method has been unused by k8s for some time, and yet is the last
piece of the cloud provider API that encourages provider names to be
human-friendly strings (this method applies a regex to instance names).
Actually removing this deprecated method is part of a long effort to
migrate from instance names to instance IDs in at least the OpenStack
provider plugin.
We had another bug where we confused the hostname with the NodeName.
To avoid this happening again, and to make the code more
self-documenting, we use types.NodeName (a typedef alias for string)
whenever we are referring to the Node.Name.
A tedious but mechanical commit therefore, to change all uses of the
node name to use types.NodeName
Also clean up some of the (many) places where the NodeName is referred
to as a hostname (not true on AWS), or an instanceID (not true on GCE),
etc.
Addresses #33215.
When vCenter returns error vm not found, this is now being translated to
the appropriate error 'cloudprovider.InstanceNotFound' which indicates
to Kubernetes node controller that the VM is in fact not found.
* Currently the vSphere cloud provider treats Datacenter as the failure
Zone. This doesn't necessarily work since in the current implemention
Kubernetes nodes cannot span Datacenters.
* This change introduces Clusters as the failure zone, while treating
Datacenters as Regions
* Also updated tests for Zones
This allows the user the set "working-dir" in their vsphere.cfg file.
The value should be a path in the vSphere datastore in which the
provider will look for vms.
Hot attach of disk to a scsi controller will work only if the
controller type is lsilogic-sas or paravirtual.This patch filters
the existing controller for these types, if it doesn't find one it
creates a new scsi controller.
- replaces probeVolume with scsiHostRescan to scan hot attached disks
- fixes substring match of UUID returned from AttachDisk
- changes DetachDisk to take volumePath argument instead of diskID
- fixes delayed failure at mount rather than attach disk
- removes cloning of virtual disk in AttachDisk
This patch includes implementation for the following Instance object
interfaces:
* NodeAddresses
* ExternalID
* InstanceID
Also minor refactoring in overall Instance implementation.