By default Calico CNI does not create any network access policies
or profiles if 'policy' is enabled in CNI config. And without any
policies/profiles network access to/from PODs is blocked.
K8s related policies are created by calico-policy-controller in
such case. So we need to start it as soon as possible, before any
real workloads.
This patch also fixes kube-api port in calico-policy-controller
yaml template.
Closes#1132
Migrate older inline= syntax to pure yml syntax for module args as to be consistant with most of the rest of the tasks
Cleanup some spacing in various files
Rename some files named yaml to yml for consistancy
Also place in global vars and do not repeat the kube_*_config_dir
and kube_namespace vars for better code maintainability and UX.
Signed-off-by: Bogdan Dobrelya <bdobrelia@mirantis.com>
* Add an option to deploy K8s app to test e2e network connectivity
and cluster DNS resolve via Kubedns for nethost/simple pods
(defaults to false).
* Parametrize existing k8s apps templates with kube_namespace and
kube_config_dir instead of hardcode.
* For CoreOS, ensure nameservers from inventory to be put in the
first place to allow hostnet pods connectivity via short names
or FQDN and hostnet agents to pass as well, if netchecker
deployed.
Signed-off-by: Bogdan Dobrelya <bdobrelia@mirantis.com>
The requirements for network policy feature are described here [1]. In
order to enable it, appropriate configuration must be provided to the CNI
plug in and Calico policy controller must be set up. Beside that
corresponding extensions needed to be enabled in k8s API.
Now to turn on the feature user can define `enable_network_policy`
customization variable for Ansible.
[1] http://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/networkpolicies/