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.
Automatic merge from submit-queue
openstack: Autodetect LBaaS v1 vs v2
```release-note
* openstack: autodetect LBaaS v1/v2 by querying for available extensions. For most installs, this effectively changes the default from v1 to v2. Existing installs can add "lb-version = v1" to the provider config file to continue to use v1.
```
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This change is [<img src="https://reviewable.kubernetes.io/review_button.svg" height="34" align="absmiddle" alt="Reviewable"/>](https://reviewable.kubernetes.io/reviews/kubernetes/kubernetes/29726)
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This removes the need to manually specify the version in all but unusual
cases.
For most installs this will effectively flip the default from
v1 (deprecated) to v2 so conservative existing installs may want to
manually configure "lb-version = v1" before upgrading.
This is a better abstraction than passing in specific pieces of the
Service that each of the cloudproviders may or may not need. For
instance, many of the providers don't need a region, yet this is passed
in. Similarly many of the providers want a string IP for the load
balancer, but it passes in a converted net ip. Affinity is unused by
AWS. A provider change may also require adding a new parameter which has
an effect on all other cloud provider implementations.
Further, this will simplify adding provider specific load balancer
options, such as with labels or some other metadata. For example, we
could add labels for configuring the details of an AWS elastic load
balancer, such as idle timeout on connections, whether it is
internal or external, cross-zone load balancing, and so on.
Authors: @chbatey, @jsravn
Had to move other things around too to avoid a weird api ->
cloudprovider dependency.
Also adding fixes per code reviews.
(This is a squash of the previously approved commits)
We return an error if the user specifies a non 0.0.0.0/0 load balancer
source restriction on OpenStack, where we can't enforce the restriction
(currently).
This refactors #21431 to pull a lot of the code into cloudprovider so it
can be reused by AWS.
It also changes the name of the annotation to be non-GCE specific:
service.beta.kubernetes.io/load-balancer-source-ranges
Fix#21651
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.
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).
Inverting code path on CreateTcploadBalancer to avoid branch divergence
Removing useless variable vipAddr as vip have information needed
Renaming 'error' variable on EnsureTCPLoadBalancerDeleted to be consistent
Previously the servicecontroller would do the delete, but by having the cloudprovider
take that task on, we can later remove it from the servicecontroller, and the
cloudprovider can do something more efficient.