Wow fun times with symlinks. We *think* this script should work in CI
now...but we'll see.
Previously we were seeing a false positive where even though the generated
code was out of date, the CI step did not report failure.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
- Add integration test for serving cert auto-generation and rotation
- Add unit test for `WithInitialEvent` of the cert manager controller
- Move UpdateAPIService() into the `apicerts` package, since that is
the only user of the function.
- Add a unit test for each cert controller
- Make DynamicTLSServingCertProvider an interface and use a mutex
internally
- Create a shared ToPEM function instead of having two very similar
functions
- Move the ObservableWithInformerOption test helper to testutils
- Rename some variables and imports
- Refactors the existing cert generation code into controllers
which read and write a Secret containing the certs
- Does not add any new functionality yet, e.g. no new handling
for cert expiration, and no leader election to allow for
multiple servers running simultaneously
- This commit also doesn't add new tests for the cert generation
code, but it should be more unit testable now as controllers
- No functional changes
- Move all the stuff about clients and controllers into the controller
package
- Add more comments and organize the code more into more helper
functions to make each function smaller
I suppose we could solve this other ways, but this utility was
only used in one place right now, so it is easiest to copy it over.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
- Not strictly necessary at the moment because both our build layer
and our run layer are based on alpine, but static linking our binary
will help us later when we want to base our run image on something
closer to scratch
Instead, make the integration tests a separate module. You can't run
these tests by accident because they will not run at all when you
`go test` from the top-level directory. You will need to `cd test`
before using `go test` in order to run the integration tests.
Signed-off-by: Ryan Richard <richardry@vmware.com>
- Previously the golang code would create a Service and an APIService.
The APIService would be given an owner reference which pointed to
the namespace in which the app was installed.
- This prevented the app from being uninstalled. The namespace would
refuse to delete, so `kapp delete` or `kubectl delete` would fail.
- The new approach is to statically define the Service and an APIService
in the deployment.yaml, except for the caBundle of the APIService.
Then the golang code will perform an update to add the caBundle at
runtime.
- When the user uses `kapp deploy` or `kubectl apply` either tool will
notice that the caBundle is not declared in the yaml and will
therefore avoid editing that field.
- When the user uses `kapp delete` or `kubectl delete` either tool will
destroy the objects because they are statically declared with names
in the yaml, just like all of the other objects. There are no
ownerReferences used, so nothing should prevent the namespace from
being deleted.
- This approach also allows us to have less golang code to maintain.
- In the future, if our golang controllers want to dynamically add
an Ingress or other objects, they can still do that. An Ingress
would point to our statically defined Service as its backend.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
- We are temporarily adding this change on the main branch so that CI works
with the main branch and we can iterate on our changes on our PR branch.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>