The warning message
```
[config] WARNING: Ignored YAML document with GroupVersionKind ...
```
is printed for all GVKs that are not part of the kubeadm core types.
This is wrong as the component config types are supported and successfully
parsed and used despite the fact that the warning is printed for them too.
Hence this simple fix first checks if the group of the GVK is a supported
component config group and the warning is printed only if it's not.
Signed-off-by: Rostislav M. Georgiev <rostislavg@vmware.com>
kubeadm's current implementation of component config support is "kind" centric.
This has its downsides. Namely:
- Kind names and numbers can change between config versions.
Newer kinds can be ignored. Therefore, detection of a version change is
considerably harder.
- A component config can have only one kind that is managed by kubeadm.
Thus a more appropriate way to identify component configs is required.
Probably the best solution identified so far is a config group.
A group name is unlikely to change between versions, while the kind names and
structure can.
Tracking component configs by group name allows us to:
- Spot more easily config version changes and manage alternate versions.
- Support more than one kind in a config group/version.
- Abstract component configs by hiding their exact structure.
Hence, this change rips off the old kind based support for component configs
and replaces it with a group name based one. This also has the following
extra benefits:
- More tests were added.
- kubeadm now errors out if an unsupported version of a known component group
is used.
Signed-off-by: Rostislav M. Georgiev <rostislavg@vmware.com>
MarshalClusterConfigurationToBytes has capabilities to output the component
configs, as separate YAML documents, besides the kubeadm ClusterConfiguration
kind. This is no longer necessary for the following reasons:
- All current use cases of this function require only the ClusterConfiguration.
- It will output component configs only if they are not the default ones. This
can produce undeterministic output and, thus, cause potential problems.
- There are only hacky ways to dump the ClusterConfiguration only (without the
component configs).
Hence, we simplify things by replacing the function with direct calls to the
underlaying MarshalToYamlForCodecs. Thus marshalling only ClusterConfiguration,
when needed.
Signed-off-by: Rostislav M. Georgiev <rostislavg@vmware.com>
Ever since v1alpha3, InitConfiguration is containing ClusterConfiguration
embedded in it. This was done to mimic the internal InitConfiguration, which in
turn is used throughout the kubeadm code base as if it is the old
MasterConfiguration of v1alpha2.
This, however, is confusing to users who vendor in kubeadm as the embedded
ClusterConfiguration inside InitConfiguration is not marshalled to YAML.
For this to happen, special care must be taken for the ClusterConfiguration
field to marshalled separately.
Thus, to make things smooth for users and to reduce third party exposure to
technical debt, this change removes ClusterConfiguration embedding from
InitConfiguration.
Signed-off-by: Rostislav M. Georgiev <rostislavg@vmware.com>
Currently kubeadm supports a couple of configuration versions - v1alpha3 and
v1beta1. The former is deprecated, but still supported.
To discourage users from using it and to speedup conversion to newer versions,
we disable the loading of deprecated configurations by all kubeadm
sub-commands, but "kubeadm config migrate".
v1alpha3 is still present and supported at source level, but cannot be used
directly with kubeadm and some of its internal APIs.
The added benefit to this is, that users won't need to lookup for an old
kubeadm binary after upgrade, just because they were stuck with a deprecated
config version for too long.
To achieve this, the following was done:
- ValidateSupportedVersion now has an allowDeprecated boolean parameter, that
controls if the function should return an error upon detecting deprecated
config version. Currently the only deprecated version is v1alpha3.
- ValidateSupportedVersion is made package private, because it's not used
outside of the package anyway.
- BytesToInitConfiguration and LoadJoinConfigurationFromFile are modified to
disallow loading of deprecated kubeadm config versions. An error message,
that points users to kubeadm config migrate is returned.
- MigrateOldConfig is still allowed to load deprecated kubeadm config versions.
- A bunch of tests were fixed to not expect success if v1alpha3 config is
supplied.
Signed-off-by: Rostislav M. Georgiev <rostislavg@vmware.com>
MigrateOldConfigFromFile is a function, whose purpose is to migrate one config
into another. It is working OK for now, but it has some issues:
- It is incredibly inefficient. It can reload and re-parse a single config file
for up to 3 times.
- Because of the reloads, it has to take a file containing the configuration
(not a byte slice as most of the rest config functions). However, it returns
the migrated config in a byte slice (rather asymmetric from the input
method).
- Due to the above points it's difficult to implement a proper interface for
deprecated kubeadm config versions.
To fix the issues of MigrateOldConfigFromFile, the following is done:
- Re-implement the function by removing the calls to file loading package
public APIs and replacing them with newly extracted package private APIs that
do the job with pre-provided input data in the form of
map[GroupVersionKind][]byte.
- Take a byte slice of the input configuration as an argument. This makes the
function input symmetric to its output. Also, it's now renamed to
MigrateOldConfig to represent the change from config file path as an input
to byte slice.
- As a bonus (actually forgotten from a previous change) BytesToInternalConfig
is renamed to the more descriptive BytesToInitConfiguration.
Signed-off-by: Rostislav M. Georgiev <rostislavg@vmware.com>
Currently ConfigFileAndDefaultsToInternalConfig and
FetchConfigFromFileOrCluster are used to default and load InitConfiguration
from file or cluster. These two APIs do a couple of completely separate things
depending on how they were invoked. In the case of
ConfigFileAndDefaultsToInternalConfig, an InitConfiguration could be either
defaulted with external override parameters, or loaded from file.
With FetchConfigFromFileOrCluster an InitConfiguration is either loaded from
file or from the config map in the cluster.
The two share both some functionality, but not enough code. They are also quite
difficult to use and sometimes even error prone.
To solve the issues, the following steps were taken:
- Introduce DefaultedInitConfiguration which returns defaulted version agnostic
InitConfiguration. The function takes InitConfiguration for overriding the
defaults.
- Introduce LoadInitConfigurationFromFile, which loads, converts, validates and
defaults an InitConfiguration from file.
- Introduce FetchInitConfigurationFromCluster that fetches InitConfiguration
from the config map.
- Reduce, when possible, the usage of ConfigFileAndDefaultsToInternalConfig by
replacing it with DefaultedInitConfiguration or LoadInitConfigurationFromFile
invocations.
- Replace all usages of FetchConfigFromFileOrCluster with calls to
LoadInitConfigurationFromFile or FetchInitConfigurationFromCluster.
- Delete FetchConfigFromFileOrCluster as it's no longer used.
- Rename ConfigFileAndDefaultsToInternalConfig to
LoadOrDefaultInitConfiguration in order to better describe what the function
is actually doing.
Signed-off-by: Rostislav M. Georgiev <rostislavg@vmware.com>
DetectUnsupportedVersion is somewhat uncomfortable, complex and inefficient
function to use. It takes an entire YAML document as bytes, splits it up to
byte slices of the different YAML sub-documents and group-version-kinds and
searches through those to detect an unsupported kubeadm config. If such config
is detected, the function returns an error, if it is not (i.e. the normal
function operation) everything done so far is discarded.
This could have been acceptable, if not the fact, that in all cases that this
function is called, the YAML document bytes are split up and an iteration on
GVK map is performed yet again. Hence, we don't need DetectUnsupportedVersion
in its current form as it's inefficient, complex and takes only YAML document
bytes.
This change replaces DetectUnsupportedVersion with ValidateSupportedVersion,
which takes a GroupVersion argument and checks if it is on the list of
unsupported config versions. In that case an error is returned.
ValidateSupportedVersion relies on the caller to read and split the YAML
document and then iterate on its GVK map checking if the particular
GroupVersion is supported or not.
Signed-off-by: Rostislav M. Georgiev <rostislavg@vmware.com>
In order to allow for a smoother UX with CRIs different than Docker, we have to
make the --cri-socket command line flag optional when just one CRI is
installed.
This change does that by doing the following:
- Introduce a new runtime function (DetectCRISocket) that will attempt to
detect a CRI socket, or return an appropriate error.
- Default to using the above function if --cri-socket is not specified and
CRISocket in NodeRegistrationOptions is empty.
- Stop static defaulting to DefaultCRISocket. And rename it to
DefaultDockerCRISocket. Its use is now narrowed to "Docker or not"
distinguishment and tests.
- Introduce AddCRISocketFlag function that adds --cri-socket flag to a flagSet.
Use that in all commands, that support --cri-socket.
- Remove the deprecated --cri-socket-path flag from kubeadm config images pull
and deprecate --cri-socket in kubeadm upgrade apply.
Signed-off-by: Rostislav M. Georgiev <rostislavg@vmware.com>
This is a minor cleanup which helps to make the code of kubeadm a bit
less error-prone by reducing the scope of local variables and
unexporting functions that are not meant to be used outside of their
respective modules.
When golint is run against kubeadm it reports severel warnings like
redundant if ...; err != nil check, just return error instead.
Fix the warnings by just returning error.
- 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
In v1alpha3's, control plane component config options were nested directly into
the ClusterConfiguration structure. This is cluttering the config structure and
makes it hard to maintain. Therefore the control plane config options must be
separated into different substructures in order to graduate the format to beta.
This change does the following:
- Introduces a new structure called ControlPlaneComponent, that contains fields
common to all control plane component types. These are currently extra args
and extra volumes.
- Introduce a new structure called APIServer that contains
ControlPlaneComponent and APIServerCertSANs field (from ClusterConfiguration)
- Replace all API Server, Scheduler and Controller Manager options in
ClusterConfiguration with APIServer, ControllerManager and Scheduler fields
of APIServer and ControlPlaneComponent types.
Signed-off-by: Rostislav M. Georgiev <rostislavg@vmware.com>