You can use an older version of K8s on your development workstation
by temporarily editing kind-up.sh to add the `--image` flag. By defining
both v1beta2 and v1beta3 you should continue to be able to use old
versions of K8s in this way with Kind v0.12.0.
It appears that kind completely ignores kubeadm.k8s.io/v1beta2 config
starting in Kind v0.12.0.
You can observe the config being ignored or used by adding `-v 10` to
the command-line arguments of `kind create cluster` in kind-up.sh.
- Note that v0.8.0 no longer supports the "trivialVersions=true"
command-line option, so remove that from update-codegen.sh.
It doesn't seem to impact the output (our generated CRD yaml files).
Also:
- Make our code generator script work with Go 1.17
- Make our update.sh script work on linux
- Update the patch versions of the old Kube versions that we were using
to generate code (see kube-versions.txt)
- Use our container images from ghcr instead of
projects.registry.vmware.com for codegen purposes
- Make it easier to debug in the future by passing "-v" to the Kube
codegen scripts
- Updated copyright years to make commit checks pass
This should make it easier for us to to notice if something is wrong
with our service (especially in any future kubectl tests we add).
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
- Rename the test/deploy/dex directory to test/deploy/tools
- Rename the dex namespace to tools
- Add a new ytt value called `pinny_ldap_password` for the tools
ytt templates
- This new value is not used on main at this time. We intend to use
it in the forthcoming ldap branch. We're defining it on main so
that the CI scripts can use it across all branches and PRs.
Signed-off-by: Ryan Richard <richardry@vmware.com>
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>
We need this in CI when we want to configure Dex with the redirect URI for both
primary and secondary deploys at one time (since we only stand up Dex once).
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
Previously, when triggering a Tilt reload via a *.go file change, a reload would
take ~13 seconds and we would see this error message in the Tilt logs for each
component.
Live Update failed with unexpected error:
command terminated with exit code 2
Falling back to a full image build + deploy
Now, Tilt should reload images a lot faster (~3 seconds) since we are running
the images as root.
Note! Reloading the Concierge component still takes ~13 seconds because there
are 2 containers running in the Concierge namespace that use the Concierge
image: the main Concierge app and the kube cert agent pod. Tilt can't live
reload both of these at once, so the reload takes longer and we see this error
message.
Will not perform Live Update because:
Error retrieving container info: can only get container info for a single pod; image target image:image/concierge has 2 pods
Falling back to a full image build + deploy
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
kubectl 1.20 prints "Kubernetes control plane" instead of "Kubernetes master".
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
Before, we did this in an init container, which meant if the Dex pod restarted we would have fresh certs, but our Tilt/bash setup didn't account for this.
Now, the certs are generated by a Job which runs once and saves the generated files into a Secret. This should be a bit more stable.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
These only really make sense for aggregated API types where we need `conversion-gen` to do version conversion.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
I tried to follow a principle of encapsulation here - we can still default to
peeps making connections to 80/443 on a Service object, but internally we will
use 8080/8443.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
This is the first of a few related changes that re-organize our API after the big recent changes that introduced the supervisor component.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
- TLS certificates can be configured on the OIDCProviderConfig using
the `secretName` field.
- When listening for incoming TLS connections, choose the TLS cert
based on the SNI hostname of the incoming request.
- Because SNI hostname information on incoming requests does not include
the port number of the request, we add a validation that
OIDCProviderConfigs where the issuer hostnames (not including port
number) are the same must use the same `secretName`.
- Note that this approach does not yet support requests made to an
IP address instead of a hostname. Also note that `localhost` is
considered a hostname by SNI.
- Add port 443 as a container port to the pod spec.
- A new controller watches for TLS secrets and caches them in memory.
That same in-memory cache is used while servicing incoming connections
on the TLS port.
- Make it easy to configure both port 443 and/or port 80 for various
Service types using our ytt templates for the supervisor.
- When deploying to kind, add another nodeport and forward it to the
host on another port to expose our new HTTPS supervisor port to the
host.
When using kind we forward the node's port to the host, so we only
really care about the `nodePort` value. For acceptance clusters,
we put an Ingress in front of a NodePort Service, so we only really
care about the `port` value.
- When using `local()` in the Tiltfile it will not know
to watch those files for changes, so each time we use
`local()` we now also use `watch_file()`
- As a result, editing a ytt template file now causes
an immediate `kubectl apply` of the results
- Tiltfile and prepare-for-integration-tests.sh both specify the
NodePort Service using `--data-value-yaml 'service_nodeport_port=31234'`
- Also rename the namespaces used by the Concierge and Supervisor apps
during integration tests running locally