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".
These controllers were a bit inconsistent. There were cases where the controllers ran out of the expected order and the custom labels might not have been applied.
We should still plan to remove this label handling or move responsibility into the middleware layer, but this avoids any regression.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This prevents unnecessary sync loop runs when the controller is
running with a single worker. When the controller is running with
more than one worker, it prevents subtle bugs that can cause the
controller to go "back in time."
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
And delete the agent pod when it needs its custom labels to be
updated, so that the creator controller will notice that it is missing
and immediately create it with the new custom labels.
This should fix integration tests running on clusters that don't have
visible controller manager pods (e.g., GKE). Pinniped should boot, not
find any controller manager pods, but still post a status in the CIC.
I also updated a test helper so that we could tell the difference
between when an event was not added and when an event was added with
an empty key.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
Right now in the YTT templates we assume that the agent pods are gonna use
the same image as the main Pinniped deployment, so we can use the same logic
for the image pull secrets.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@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
I think we want to reconcile on these pod template fields so that if
someone were to redeploy Pinniped with a new image for the agent, the
agent would get updated immediately. Before this change, the agent image
wouldn't get updated until the agent pod was deleted.
3 main reasons:
- The cert and key that we store in this object are not always used for TLS.
- The package name "provider" was a little too generic.
- dynamiccert.Provider reads more go-ish than provider.DynamicCertProvider.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
- 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>
- All of the `kubecertagent` controllers now take two informers
- This is moving in the direction of creating the agent pods in the
Pinniped installation namespace, but that will come in a future
commit