- remove skip list from conformance-test.sh and filter by the new tag
- remove experimental api tests from conformance test suite
- remove all tests from conformance test suite which are either
restricted to e.g. gce, gke, aws or require SSH
them, not in the steady state once they've been created. This makes it
much less likely that users will run into static IP quota issues.
Also add slightly more parallelism to the deletion of load balancers
now that I realize the static IPs can be deleted in parallel with
forwarding rules :)
The current executor structure is too dependent on client.Request
and client.Config. In order to do an attach from the server, it needs
to be possible to create an Executor from crypto/tls#TLSConfig and to
bypassing having a client.Request.
Changes:
* remotecommand.spdyExecutor - handles upgrading a request to SPDY and getting a connection
* remotecommand.NewAttach / New - moved to exec / portforward / attach since they handle requests
* Remove request.Upgrade() - it's too coupled to SPDY, and can live with the spdyExecutor
* Add request.VersionedParams(runtime.Object, runtime.ObjectConvertor) to handle object -> query transform
Not all clients and systems can support SPDY protocols. This commit adds
support for two new websocket protocols, one to handle streaming of pod
logs from a pod, and the other to allow exec to be tunneled over
websocket.
Browser support for chunked encoding is still poor, and web consoles
that wish to show pod logs may need to make compromises to display the
output. The /pods/<name>/log endpoint now supports websocket upgrade to
the 'binary.k8s.io' subprotocol, which sends chunks of logs as binary to
the client. Messages are written as logs are streamed from the container
daemon, so flushing should be unaffected.
Browser support for raw communication over SDPY is not possible, and
some languages lack libraries for it and HTTP/2. The Kubelet supports
upgrade to WebSocket instead of SPDY, and will multiplex STDOUT/IN/ERR
over websockets by prepending each binary message with a single byte
representing the channel (0 for IN, 1 for OUT, and 2 for ERR). Because
framing on WebSockets suffers from head-of-line blocking, clients and
other server code should ensure that no particular stream blocks. An
alternative subprotocol 'base64.channel.k8s.io' base64 encodes the body
and uses '0'-'9' to represent the channel for ease of use in browsers.