CertificatesV1beta1 was removed in Kube 1.22, so the tests cannot
blindly rely on it anymore. Use CertificatesV1 whenever the server
reports that is available, and otherwise use the old
CertificatesV1beta1.
Note that CertificatesV1 was introduced in Kube 1.19.
Those images that are pulled from Dockerhub will cause pull failures
on some test clusters due to Dockerhub rate limiting.
Because we already have some images that we use for testing, and
because those images are already pre-loaded onto our CI clusters
to make the tests faster, use one of those images and always specify
PullIfNotPresent to avoid pulling the image again during the integration
test.
This new capability describes whether a cluster is expected to allow anonymous requests (most do since k8s 1.6.x, but AKS has it disabled).
This commit also contains new capability YAML files for AKS and EKS, mostly to document publicly how we expect our tests to function in those environments.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
Also make each t.Run use its own namespace to slight reduce the
interdependency between them.
Use t.Cleanup instead of defer in whoami_test.go just to be consistent
with other integration tests.
All controller unit tests were accidentally using a timeout context
for the informers, instead of a cancel context which stays alive until
each test is completely finished. There is no reason to risk
unpredictable behavior of a timeout being reached during an individual
test, even though with the previous 3 second timeout it could only be
reached on a machine which is running orders of magnitude slower than
usual, since each test usually runs in about 100-300 ms. Unfortunately,
sometimes our CI workers might get that slow.
This sparked a review of other usages of timeout contexts in other
tests, and all of them were increased to a minimum value of 1 minute,
under the rule of thumb that our tests will be more reliable on slow
machines if they "pass fast and fail slow".
This change adds a new virtual aggregated API that can be used by
any user to echo back who they are currently authenticated as. This
has general utility to end users and can be used in tests to
validate if authentication was successful.
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>