This commit wires together the graceful delete option for pods
on the Kubelet. When a pod is deleted on the API server, a
grace period is calculated that is based on the
Pod.Spec.TerminationGracePeriodInSeconds, the user's provided grace
period, or a default. The grace period can only shrink once set.
The value provided by the user (or the default) is set onto metadata
as DeletionGracePeriod.
When the Kubelet sees a pod with DeletionTimestamp set, it uses the
value of ObjectMeta.GracePeriodSeconds as the grace period
sent to Docker. When updating status, if the pod has DeletionTimestamp
set and all containers are terminated, the Kubelet will update the
status one last time and then invoke Delete(pod, grace: 0) to
clean up the pod immediately.
* Support configurable cleanup policies in RollingUpdater. Downstream
library consumers don't necessarily have the same rules for post
deployment cleanup; making the behavior policy driven is more flexible.
* Refactor RollingUpdater to accept a config object during Update instead
of a long argument list.
* Add test coverage for cleanup policy.
Use custom narrowly scoped interfaces for client access from the
RollingUpdater and Resizer. This allows for more flexible downstream
integration and unit testing without imposing a burden to implement
the entire client.Interface for just a handful of methods.
Standardize how our fakes are used so that a test case can use a
simpler mechanism for providing large, complex data sets, as well
as represent queries over time.
When kubectl does rolling updates of replication controllers, retry updates that
fail due to version mismatches (caused by concurrent updates by other clients).
These failed rolling updates were causing intermittent e2e test failures
(e.g. issue 5821)