This change replaces our previous test helpers for checking cluster capabilities and passing external test parameters. Prior to this change, we always used `$PINNIPED_*` environment variables and these variables were accessed throughout the test code.
The new code introduces a more strongly-typed `TestEnv` structure and helpers which load and expose the parameters. Tests can now call `env := library.IntegrationEnv(t)`, then access parameters such as `env.Namespace` or `env.TestUser.Token`. This should make this data dependency easier to manage and refactor in the future. In many ways this is just an extended version of the previous cluster capabilities YAML.
Tests can also check for cluster capabilities easily by using `env := library.IntegrationEnv(t).WithCapability(xyz)`.
The actual parameters are still loaded from OS environment variables by default (for compatibility), but the code now also tries to load the data from a Kubernetes Secret (`integration/pinniped-test-env` by default). I'm hoping this will be a more convenient way to pass data between various scripts than the local `/tmp` directory. I hope to remove the OS environment code in a future commit.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This seems to fail on CI when the Concourse workers get slow and
kind stops working reliably. It would be interesting to see the
error message in that case to figure out if there's anything we
could do to make the test more resilient.
Simplifies the implementation, makes it more consistent with other
updaters of the cic (CredentialIssuerConfig), and also retries on
update conflicts
Signed-off-by: Ryan Richard <richardry@vmware.com>
- Only inject things through the constructor that the controller
will need
- Use pkg private constants when possible for things that are not
actually configurable by the user
- Make the agent pod template private to the pkg
- Introduce a test helper to reduce some duplicated test code
- Remove some `it.Focus` lines that were accidentally committed, and
repair the broken tests that they were hiding
- Lots of TODOs added that need to be resolved to finish this WIP
- execer_test.go seems like it should be passing, but it fails (sigh)
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
Annotations do not have this restriction, so we can put it there instead. This only currently occurs on clusters without the cluster signing capability (GKE).
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
New resource naming conventions:
- Do not repeat the Kind in the name,
e.g. do not call it foo-cluster-role-binding, just call it foo
- Names will generally start with a prefix to identify our component,
so when a user lists all objects of that kind, they can tell to which
component it is related,
e.g. `kubectl get configmaps` would list one named "pinniped-config"
- It should be possible for an operator to make the word "pinniped"
mostly disappear if they choose, by specifying the app_name in
values.yaml, to the extent that is practical (but not from APIService
names because those are hardcoded in golang)
- Each role/clusterrole and its corresponding binding have the same name
- Pinniped resource names that must be known by the server golang code
are passed to the code at run time via ConfigMap, rather than
hardcoded in the golang code. This also allows them to be prepended
with the app_name from values.yaml while creating the ConfigMap.
- Since the CLI `get-kubeconfig` command cannot guess the name of the
CredentialIssuerConfig resource in advance anymore, it lists all
CredentialIssuerConfig in the app's namespace and returns an error
if there is not exactly one found, and then uses that one regardless
of its name
I also started updating the script to deploy the test-webhook instead of
doing TMC stuff. I think the script should live in this repo so that
Pinniped contributors only need to worry about one repo for running
integration tests.
There are a bunch of TODOs in the script, but I figured this was a good
checkpoint. The script successfully runs on my machine and sets up the
test-webhook and pinniped on a local kind cluster. The integration tests
are failing because of some issue with pinniped talking to the test-webhook,
but this is step in the right direction.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
It looks like requests to our aggregated API service on GKE vacillate
between success and failure until they reach a converged successful
state. I think this has to do with our pods updating the API serving
cert at different times. If only one pod updates its serving cert to
the correct value, then it should respond with success. However, the
other pod would respond with failure. Depending on the load balancing
algorithm that GKE uses to send traffic to pods in a service, we could
end up with a success that we interpret as "all pods have rotated
their certs" when it really just means "at least one pod has rotated
its certs."
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
This should simplify our build/test setup quite a bit, since it means we have only a single module (at the top level) with all hand-written code. I'll leave `module.sh` alone for now but we may be able to simplify that a bit more.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
We were using this at one point to control which tests ran with `go test ./...`, but now we're also using the `-short` flag to differentiate unit vs. integration tests.
Hopefully this will simplify things a bit.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
kubectl pulls these in in their main package...I wonder if we should do
the same for our main packages?
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>