Documented manualSelector field.
Documented that you do not need to provide a selector
or unique labels with batch/v1 Job.
Updated all Job examples to apiVersion: batch/v1
Updated all Job examples to use generated selectors.
Added selector generation to Job's
strategy.Validate, right before validation.
Can't do in defaulting since UID is not known.
Added a validation to Job to ensure that the generated
labels and selector are correct when generation was requested.
This happens right after generation, but validation is in a better
place to return an error.
Adds "manualSelector" field to batch/v1 Job to control selector generation.
Adds same field to extensions/__internal. Conversion between those two
is automatic.
Adds "autoSelector" field to extensions/v1beta1 Job. Used for storing batch/v1 Jobs
- Default for v1 is to do generation.
- Default for v1beta1 is to not do it.
- In both cases, unset == false == do the default thing.
Release notes:
Added batch/v1 group, which contains just Job, and which is the next
version of extensions/v1beta1 Job.
The changes from the previous version are:
- Users no longer need to ensure labels on their pod template are unique to the enclosing
job (but may add labels as needed for categorization).
- In v1beta1, job.spec.selector was defaulted from pod labels, with the user responsible for uniqueness.
In v1, a unique label is generated and added to the pod template, and used as the selector (other
labels added by user stay on pod template, but need not be used by selector).
- a new field called "manualSelector" field exists to control whether the new behavior is used,
versus a more error-prone but more flexible "manual" (not generated) seletor. Most users
will not need to use this field and should leave it unset.
Users who are creating extensions.Job go objects and then posting them using the go client
will see a change in the default behavior. They need to either stop providing a selector (relying on
selector generation) or else specify "spec.manualSelector" until they are ready to do the former.
Similar to #11543, the local hostname is not guaranteed to be the node
name, as the AWS cloud provider looks up node name using
`private-dns-name`. This value can be different such as when using a
private hosted zone.
The previous code uses GetHostName(), which fails in this case. Instead,
pass in an empty string so the aws cloud provider will use the cached
self instance to find the instance id.
Authors: @balooo, @dogan-sky, @jsravn
cleanupTerminatedPods is responsible for checking whether a pod has been
terminated and force a status update to trigger the pod deletion. However, this
function is called in the periodic clenup routine, which runs every 2 seconds.
In other words, it forces a status update for each non-running (and not yet
deleted in the apiserver) pod. When batch deleting tens of pods, the rate of
new updates surpasses what the status manager can handle, causing numerous
redundant requests (and the status channel to be full).
This change forces a status update only when detecting the DeletionTimestamp is
set for a terminated pod. Note that for other non-terminated pods, the pod
workers should be responsible for setting the correct status after killling all
the containers.