This commit adds the framework for the new local detection
modes BridgeInterface and InterfaceNamePrefix to work.
Signed-off-by: Surya Seetharaman <suryaseetharaman.9@gmail.com>
We were detecting the IP family that kube-proxy should use
based on the bind address, however, this is not valid when
using an unspecified address, because on those cases
kube-proxy adopts the IP family of the address reported
in the Node API object.
The IP family will be determined by the nodeIP used by the proxier
The order of precedence is:
1. config.bindAddress if bindAddress is not 0.0.0.0 or ::
2. the primary IP from the Node object, if set
3. if no IP is found it defaults to 127.0.0.1 and IPv4
Signed-off-by: Antonio Ojea <antonio.ojea.garcia@gmail.com>
This builds on previous work but only sets the sysctlConnReuse value
if the kernel is known to be above 4.19. To avoid calling GetKernelVersion
twice, I store the value from the CanUseIPVS method and then check the version
constraint at time of expected sysctl call.
Signed-off-by: Christopher M. Luciano <cmluciano@us.ibm.com>
This creates a new EndpointSliceProxying feature gate to cover EndpointSlice
consumption (kube-proxy) and allow the existing EndpointSlice feature gate to
focus on EndpointSlice production only. Along with that addition, this enables
the EndpointSlice feature gate by default, now only affecting the controller.
The rationale here is that it's really difficult to guarantee all EndpointSlices
are created in a cluster upgrade process before kube-proxy attempts to consume
them. Although masters are generally upgraded before nodes, and in most cases,
the controller would have enough time to create EndpointSlices before a new node
with kube-proxy spun up, there are plenty of edge cases where that might not be
the case. The primary limitation on EndpointSlice creation is the API rate limit
of 20QPS. In clusters with a lot of endpoints and/or with a lot of other API
requests, it could be difficult to create all the EndpointSlices before a new
node with kube-proxy targeting EndpointSlices spun up.
Separating this into 2 feature gates allows for a more gradual rollout with the
EndpointSlice controller being enabled by default in 1.18, and EndpointSlices
for kube-proxy being enabled by default in the next release.
Kube-proxy runs two different health servers; one for monitoring the
health of kube-proxy itself, and one for monitoring the health of
specific services. Rename them to "ProxierHealthServer" and
"ServiceHealthServer" to make this clearer, and do a bit of API
cleanup too.
The firewalld monitoring code was not well tested (and not easily
testable), would never be triggered on most platforms, and was only
being taken advantage of from one place (kube-proxy), which didn't
need it anyway since it already has its own resync loop.
Since the firewalld monitoring was the only consumer of pkg/util/dbus,
we can also now delete that.
Modify the warning log of kube-proxy when we run kube-proxy server
with --proxy-mode, but in the config file, we omit it. Then it logs
like ""{"log":"W0905 09:14:40.321571 1 server_others.go:249]
Flag proxy-mode=\"\" unknown, assuming iptables proxy\n","stream":"stderr",
"time":"2019-09-05T09:14:40.321858964Z"} This may lead to confusion. I
think it should me modefied.