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>
- Controller and aggregated API server are allowed to run
- Keep retrying to borrow the cluster signing key in case the failure
to get it was caused by a transient failure
- The CredentialRequest endpoint will always return an authentication
failure as long as the cluster signing key cannot be borrowed
- Update which integration tests are skipped to reflect what should
and should not work based on the cluster's capability under this
new behavior
- Move CreateOrUpdateCredentialIssuerConfig() and related methods
to their own file
- Update the CredentialIssuerConfig's Status every time we try to
refresh the cluster signing key
- Indicate the success or failure of the cluster signing key strategy
- Also introduce the concept of "capabilities" of an integration test
cluster to allow the integration tests to be run against clusters
that do or don't allow the borrowing of the cluster signing key
- Tests that are not expected to pass on clusters that lack the
borrowing of the signing key capability are now ignored by
calling the new library.SkipUnlessClusterHasCapability test helper
- Rename library.Getenv to library.GetEnv
- Add copyrights where they were missing
- It would sometimes fail with this error:
namespaces is forbidden: User "tanzu-user-authentication@groups.vmware.com"
cannot list resource "namespaces" in API group "" at the cluster scope
- Seems like it was because the RBAC rule added by the test needs a
moment before it starts to take effect, so change the test to retry
the API until it succeeds or fail after 3 seconds of trying.
- We want to follow the <noun>Request convention.
- The actual operation does not login a user, but it does retrieve a
credential with which they can login.
- This commit includes changes to all LoginRequest-related symbols and
constants to try to update their names to follow the new
CredentialRequest type.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>