In many cases clients may wish to view not ready addresses for endpoints
in order to do set membership prior to a pod being ready. For instance,
a pod that uses the service endpoints to connect to other pods under
the same service, but does not want to signal ready before it has
contacted at least a minimal number of other pods.
This is backwards compatible with old servers and clients. There is
an additional cost in size of endpoints before services ramp up, which
will add minor CPU and memory use for services that have a significant
number of pods which have not become ready.
1. Make reason field of StatusReport objects in kubelet in CamelCase format.
2. Add Message field for ContainerStateWaiting to describe detail about Reason.
3. Make reason field of Events in kubelet in CamelCase format.
4. Update swagger,deep-copy and so on.
Running reflect.ValueOf(X) where X is a nil interface will return
a zero Value. We cannot get the type (because no concrete type is
known) and cannot check if the Value is nil later on due to the way
reflect.Value works. So we should handle this case by immediately
returning nil. We cannot type-assert a nil interface to another
interface type (as no concrete type is assigned), so we must add
another check to see if the returned interface is nil.
This commit wires together the graceful delete option for pods
on the Kubelet. When a pod is deleted on the API server, a
grace period is calculated that is based on the
Pod.Spec.TerminationGracePeriodInSeconds, the user's provided grace
period, or a default. The grace period can only shrink once set.
The value provided by the user (or the default) is set onto metadata
as DeletionGracePeriod.
When the Kubelet sees a pod with DeletionTimestamp set, it uses the
value of ObjectMeta.GracePeriodSeconds as the grace period
sent to Docker. When updating status, if the pod has DeletionTimestamp
set and all containers are terminated, the Kubelet will update the
status one last time and then invoke Delete(pod, grace: 0) to
clean up the pod immediately.