See issue #33128
We can't rely on the device name provided by Cinder, and thus must perform
detection based on the drive serial number (aka It's cinder ID) on the
kubelet itself.
This patch re-works the cinder volume attacher to ignore the supplied
deviceName, and instead defer to the pre-existing GetDevicePath method to
discover the device path based on it's serial number and /dev/disk/by-id
mapping.
This new behavior is controller by a config option, as falling back
to the cinder value when we can't discover a device would risk devices
not showing up, falling back to cinder's guess, and detecting the wrong
disk as attached.
This has been unused since 542f2dc7, and relies on deviceName, which
can no longer be relied upon (see issue #33128).
This needs to be removed now, as part of #33128, as the code can't be
updated to attempt device detection and fallback through to the Cinder
provided deviceName, as detection "fails" when the device is gone, and
if cinder has reported a deviceName that another volume has used in
relaity, then this will block forever (or until the other, unreleated,
volume has been detached)
At master volume reconciler, the information about which volumes are
attached to nodes is cached in actual state of world. However, this
information might be out of date in case that node is terminated (volume
is detached automatically). In this situation, reconciler assume volume
is still attached and will not issue attach operation when node comes
back. Pods created on those nodes will fail to mount.
This PR adds the logic to periodically sync up the truth for attached volumes kept in the actual state cache. If the volume is no longer attached to the node, the actual state will be updated to reflect the truth. In turn, reconciler will take actions if needed.
To avoid issuing many concurrent operations on cloud provider, this PR
tries to add batch operation to check whether a list of volumes are
attached to the node instead of one request per volume.
More details are explained in PR #33760
Gluster provisioner is interested in pvc.Namespace and I don't want to add
at as a new field in VolumeOptions - it would contain almost whole PVC.
Let's pass direct reference to PVC instead and let the provisioner to pick
information it is interested in.
We had another bug where we confused the hostname with the NodeName.
To avoid this happening again, and to make the code more
self-documenting, we use types.NodeName (a typedef alias for string)
whenever we are referring to the Node.Name.
A tedious but mechanical commit therefore, to change all uses of the
node name to use types.NodeName
Also clean up some of the (many) places where the NodeName is referred
to as a hostname (not true on AWS), or an instanceID (not true on GCE),
etc.
Currently kubelet volume management works on the concept of desired
and actual world of states. The volume manager periodically compares the
two worlds and perform volume mount/unmount and/or attach/detach
operations. When kubelet restarts, the cache of those two worlds are
gone. Although desired world can be recovered through apiserver, actual
world can not be recovered which may cause some volumes cannot be cleaned
up if their information is deleted by apiserver. This change adds the
reconstruction of the actual world by reading the pod directories from
disk. The reconstructed volume information is added to both desired
world and actual world if it cannot be found in either world. The rest
logic would be as same as before, desired world populator may clean up
the volume entry if it is no longer in apiserver, and then volume
manager should invoke unmount to clean it up.
Modify attach/detach controller to keep track of volumes to report
attached in Node VolumeToAttach status.
Modify kubelet volume manager to wait for volume to show up in Node
VolumeToAttach status.
Implement exponential backoff for errors in volume manager and attach
detach controller
This commit adds a new volume manager in kubelet that synchronizes
volume mount/unmount (and attach/detach, if attach/detach controller
is not enabled).
This eliminates the race conditions between the pod creation loop
and the orphaned volumes loops. It also removes the unmount/detach
from the `syncPod()` path so volume clean up never blocks the
`syncPod` loop.
This is a first-aid bandage to let admission controller ignore persistent
volumes that are being provisioned right now and thus may not exist in
external cloud infrastructure yet.
Volume names have now format <cluster-name>-dynamic-<pv-name>.
pv-name is guaranteed to be unique in Kubernetes cluster, adding
<cluster-name> ensures we don't conflict with any running cluster
in the cloud project (kube-controller-manager --cluster-name=XXX).
'kubernetes' is the default cluster name.
Add a mutex to guard SetUpAt() and TearDownAt() calls - they should not
run in parallel. There is a race in these calls when there are two pods
using the same volume, one of them is dying and the other one starting.
TearDownAt() checks that a volume is not needed by any pods and detaches the
volume. It does so by counting how many times is the volume mounted
(GetMountRefs() call below).
When SetUpAt() of the starting pod already attached the volume and did not mount
it yet, TearDownAt() of the dying pod will detach it - GetMountRefs() does not
count with this volume.
These two threads run in parallel:
dying pod.TearDownAt("myVolume") starting pod.SetUpAt("myVolume")
| |
| AttachDisk("myVolume")
refs, err := mount.GetMountRefs() |
Unmount("myDir") |
if refs == 1 { |
| | Mount("myVolume", "myDir")
| | |
| DetachDisk("myVolume") |
| start containers - OOPS! The volume is detached!
|
finish the pod cleanup
Also, add some logs to cinder plugin for easier debugging in the future, add
a test and update the fake mounter to know about bind mounts.
This synchronizes Cinder with AWS EBS code, where we already tag volumes with
claim.Namespace and claim.Name (and pv.Name, as suggested in separate PR).
- Add volume.MetricsProvider function to Volume interface.
- Add volume.MetricsDu for providing metrics via executing "du".
- Add volulme.MetricsNil for unsupported Volumes.