Files
kubernetes/staging
Sascha Grunert ff95ae0d3c Continue streaming kubelet logs when runtime is unavailable
Container runtimes are able to run existing containers even when their
main CRI server is not available for any reason. The call to the
container status RPC happens quite frequently during log parsing, means
that a single CRI interruption will also abort streaming the logs.

We now check that specific use case and continue following the log
streaming if the CRI is unavailable. We still abort the streaming
accordingly if the CRI comes back and the container status reports that
the workload has exited.

Signed-off-by: Sascha Grunert <sgrunert@redhat.com>
2024-06-11 09:10:02 +02:00
..
2023-05-11 16:43:38 +00:00

External Repository Staging Area

This directory is the staging area for packages that have been split to their own repository. The content here will be periodically published to respective top-level k8s.io repositories.

Repositories currently staged here:

The code in the staging/ directory is authoritative, i.e. the only copy of the code. You can directly modify such code.

Using staged repositories from Kubernetes code

Kubernetes code uses the repositories in this directory via a Go workspace and module replace statements. For example, when Kubernetes code imports a package from the k8s.io/client-go repository, that import is resolved to staging/src/k8s.io/client-go relative to the project root:

// pkg/example/some_code.go
package example

import (
  "k8s.io/client-go/dynamic" // resolves to staging/src/k8s.io/client-go/dynamic
)

Creating a new repository in staging

Adding the staging repository in kubernetes/kubernetes:

  1. Send an email to the SIG Architecture mailing list and the mailing list of the SIG which would own the repo requesting approval for creating the staging repository.

  2. Once approval has been granted, create the new staging repository.

  3. Update import-restrictions.yaml to add the list of other staging repos that this new repo can import.

  4. Add all mandatory template files to the staging repo as mentioned in https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes-template-project.

  5. Make sure that the .github/PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE.md and CONTRIBUTING.md files mention that PRs are not directly accepted to the repo.

  6. Ensure that docs.go file is added. Refer to #kubernetes/kubernetes#91354 for reference.

  7. NOTE: Do not edit go.mod or go.sum in the new repo (staging/src/k8s.io//) manually. Run the following instead:

  ./hack/update-vendor.sh
  1. Run ./hack/update-go-workspace.sh to add the module to the workspace.

Creating the published repository

  1. Create an issue in the kubernetes/org repo to request creation of the respective published repository in the Kubernetes org. The published repository must have an initial empty commit. It also needs specific access rules and branch settings. See #kubernetes/org#58 for an example.

  2. Setup branch protection and enable access to the stage-bots team by adding the repo in prow/config.yaml. See #kubernetes/test-infra#9292 for an example.

  3. Once the repository has been created in the Kubernetes org, update the publishing-bot to publish the staging repository by updating:

    • rules.yaml: Make sure that the list of dependencies reflects the staging repos in the Godeps.json file.

    • repos.sh: Add the staging repo in the list of repos to be published.

  4. Add the staging and published repositories as a subproject for the SIG that owns the repos in sigs.yaml.

  5. Add the repo to the list of staging repos in this README.md file.