This change is prerequisite for implementing iSCSI attacher
and detacher.
In order to use chap authentication at iSCSI plugin after
implementing attacher and detacher, secret is needed at
AttachDisk() which is called from WaitForAttach().
To obtain secret, pod information is required, but
WaitForAttach() doesn't pass pod information inside.
This patch adds 'pod' as an argument of WaitForAttach()
and adds changes to drivers who implements WaitForAttach().
Fixes#48953
Automatic merge from submit-queue
Remove unused WaitForDetach from Detacher interface and plugins
See issue #33128 and PR #33270
We can't rely on the device name provided by OpenStack Cinder, and thus
must perform detection based on the drive serial number (aka It's cinder ID)
on the kubelet itself.
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)
We are more liberal in what we accept as a volume id in k8s, and indeed
we ourselves generate names that look like `aws://<zone>/<id>` for
dynamic volumes.
This volume id (hereafter a KubernetesVolumeID) cannot directly be
compared to an AWS volume ID (hereafter an awsVolumeID).
We introduce types for each, to prevent accidental comparison or
confusion.
Issue #35746
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information might be out of date in case that node is terminated (volume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
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 PR contains Kubelet changes to enable attach/detach controller control.
* It introduces a new "enable-controller-attach-detach" kubelet flag to
enable control by controller. Default enabled.
* It removes all references "SafeToDetach" annoation from controller.
* It adds the new VolumesInUse field to the Node Status API object.
* It modifies the controller to use VolumesInUse instead of SafeToDetach
annotation to gate detachment.
* There is a bug in node-problem-detector that causes VolumesInUse to
get reset every 30 seconds. Issue https://github.com/kubernetes/node-problem-detector/issues/9
opened to fix that.
Split controller cache into actual and desired state of world.
Controller will only operate on volumes scheduled to nodes that
have the "volumes.kubernetes.io/controller-managed-attach" annotation.