* Added cilium support
* Fix typo in debian test config
* Remove empty lines
* Changed cilium version from <latest> to <v1.0.0-rc3>
* Add missing changes for cilium
* Add cilium to CI pipeline
* Fix wrong file name
* Check kernel version for cilium
* fixed ci error
* fixed cilium-ds.j2 template
* added waiting for cilium pods to run
* Fixed missing EOF
* Fixed trailing spaces
* Fixed trailing spaces
* Fixed trailing spaces
* Fixed too many blank lines
* Updated tolerations,annotations in cilium DS template
* Set cilium_version to iptables-1.9 to see if bug is fixed in CI
* Update cilium image tag to v1.0.0-rc4
* Update Cilium test case CI vars filenames
* Add optional prometheus flag, adjust initial readiness delay
* Update README.md with cilium info
This allows `kube_apiserver_insecure_port` to be set to 0 (disabled).
Rework of #1937 with kubeadm support
Also, fixed an issue in `kubeadm-migrate-certs` where the old apiserver cert was copied as the kubeadm key
* Allow setting --bind-address for apiserver hyperkube
This is required if you wish to configure a loadbalancer (e.g haproxy)
running on the master nodes without choosing a different port for the
vip from that used by the API - in this case you need the API to bind to
a specific interface, then haproxy can bind the same port on the VIP:
root@overcloud-controller-0 ~]# netstat -taupen | grep 6443
tcp 0 0 192.168.24.6:6443 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 0 680613 134504/haproxy
tcp 0 0 192.168.24.16:6443 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 0 653329 131423/hyperkube
tcp 0 0 192.168.24.16:6443 192.168.24.16:58404 ESTABLISHED 0 652991 131423/hyperkube
tcp 0 0 192.168.24.16:58404 192.168.24.16:6443 ESTABLISHED 0 652986 131423/hyperkube
This can be achieved e.g via:
kube_apiserver_bind_address: 192.168.24.16
* Address code review feedback
* Update kube-apiserver.manifest.j2
This allows `kube_apiserver_insecure_port` to be set to 0 (disabled). It's working, but so far I have had to:
1. Make the `uri` module "Wait for apiserver up" checks use `kube_apiserver_port` (HTTPS)
2. Add apiserver client cert/key to the "Wait for apiserver up" checks
3. Update apiserver liveness probe to use HTTPS ports
4. Set `kube_api_anonymous_auth` to true to allow liveness probe to hit apiserver's /healthz over HTTPS (livenessProbes can't use client cert/key unfortunately)
5. RBAC has to be enabled. Anonymous requests are in the `system:unauthenticated` group which is granted access to /healthz by one of RBAC's default ClusterRoleBindings. An equivalent ABAC rule could allow this as well.
Changes 1 and 2 should work for everyone, but 3, 4, and 5 require new coupling of currently independent configuration settings. So I also added a new settings check.
Options:
1. The problem goes away if you have both anonymous-auth and RBAC enabled. This is how kubeadm does it. This may be the best way to go since RBAC is already on by default but anonymous auth is not.
2. Include conditional templates to set a different liveness probe for possible combinations of `kube_apiserver_insecure_port = 0`, RBAC, and `kube_api_anonymous_auth` (won't be possible to cover every case without a guaranteed authorizer for the secure port)
3. Use basic auth headers for the liveness probe (I really don't like this, it adds a new dependency on basic auth which I'd also like to leave independently configurable, and it requires encoded passwords in the apiserver manifest)
Option 1 seems like the clear winner to me, but is there a reason we wouldn't want anonymous-auth on by default? The apiserver binary defaults anonymous-auth to true, but kubespray's default was false.
* kubeadm support
* move k8s master to a subtask
* disable k8s secrets when using kubeadm
* fix etcd cert serial var
* move simple auth users to master role
* make a kubeadm-specific env file for kubelet
* add non-ha CI job
* change ci boolean vars to json format
* fixup
* Update create-gce.yml
* Update create-gce.yml
* Update create-gce.yml
* Updates Controller Manager/Kubelet with Flannel's required configuration for CNI
* Removes old Flannel installation
* Install CNI enabled Flannel DaemonSet/ConfigMap/CNI bins and config (with portmap plugin) on host
* Uses RBAC if enabled
* Fixed an issue that could occur if br_netfilter is not a module and net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-iptables sysctl was not set
According to code apiserver, scheduler, controller-manager, proxy don't
use resolution of objects they created. It's not harmful to change
policy to have external resolver.
Signed-off-by: Sergii Golovatiuk <sgolovatiuk@mirantis.com>
In kubernetes 1.6 ClusterFirstWithHostNet was added as an option. In
accordance to it kubelet will generate resolv.conf based on own
resolv.conf. However, this doesn't create 'options', thus the proper
solution requires some investigation.
This patch sets the same resolv.conf for kubelet as host
Signed-off-by: Sergii Golovatiuk <sgolovatiuk@mirantis.com>
Non-brekable space is 0xc2 0xa0 byte sequence in UTF-8.
To find one:
$ git grep -I -P '\xc2\xa0'
To replace with regular space:
$ git grep -l -I -P '\xc2\xa0' | xargs sed -i 's/\xc2\xa0/ /g'
This commit doesn't include changes that will overlap with commit f1c59a91a1.
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