There are quite a few 'composite literal uses unkeyed fields' errors that I have kept out of this patch.
And there's a couple where vet just seems confused. These are the easiest ones.
apiserver becomes kube-apiserver
controller-manager -> kube-controller-manager
scheduler and proxy similarly.
Only thing I promise is that right now hack/build-go.sh and
build/release.sh exit with 0. That's it. Who knows if any of this
actually works....
Allows us to define different watch versioning regimes in the future
as well as to encode information with the resource version.
This changes /watch/resources?resourceVersion=3 to start the watch at
4 instead of 3, which means clients can read a resource version and
then send it back to the server. Clients should no longer do math on
resource versions.
* Allows consumers to provide their own transports for common cases.
* Supports KUBE_API_VERSION on test cases for controlling which
api version they test against
* Provides a common flag registration method for CLIs that need
to connect to an API server (to avoid duplicating flags)
* Ensures errors are properly returned by the server
* Add a Context field to client.Config
Move a lot of common error logging into better buckets:
glog.Errorf() - Always an error
glog.Warningf() - Something unexpected, but probably not an error
glog.V(0) - Generally useful for this to ALWAYS be visible
to an operator
* Programmer errors
* Logging extra info about a panic
* CLI argument handling
glog.V(1) - A reasonable default log level if you don't want
verbosity
* Information about config (listening on X, watching Y)
* Errors that repeat frequently that relate to conditions
that can be corrected (pod detected as unhealthy)
glog.V(2) - Useful steady state information about the service
* Logging HTTP requests and their exit code
* System state changing (killing pod)
* Controller state change events (starting pods)
* Scheduler log messages
glog.V(3) - Extended information about changes
* More info about system state changes
glog.V(4) - Debug level verbosity (for now)
* Logging in particularly thorny parts of code where
you may want to come back later and check it
* Defaults to v1beta1
* apiserver takes -storage_version which controls etcd storage version
and the version of the client used to connect to other apiservers
* Changed signature of client.New to add version parameter
* All controller code and component code prefers the oldest (most common)
server version
* Make Codec separate from Scheme
* Move EncodeOrDie off Scheme to take a Codec
* Make Copy work without a Codec
* Create a "latest" package that imports all versions and
sets global defaults for "most recent encoding"
* v1beta1 is the current "latest", v1beta2 exists
* Kill DefaultCodec, replace it with "latest.Codec"
* This updates the client and etcd to store the latest known version
* EmbeddedObject is per schema and per package now
* Move runtime.DefaultScheme to api.Scheme
* Split out WatchEvent since it's not an API object today, treat it
like a special object in api
* Kill DefaultResourceVersioner, instead place it on "latest" (as the
package that understands all packages)
* Move objDiff to runtime.ObjectDiff
This avoids some conflict with the built-in `flag` module in Go. The
module was already being renamed to `verflag` on import anyways, so we
might as well just call it that.
Tested:
- hack/build-go.sh and ran the resulting binaries with -version args.
Signed-off-by: Filipe Brandenburger <filbranden@google.com>
Convert host:port and URLs passed to client.New() into the proper
values, and return an error if the value is invalid. Change CLI
to return an error if -master is invalid. Remove Client.rawRequest
which was not in use, and fix the involved tests. Add NewOrDie
Preserves the behavior of the client to not auth when a non-https
URL is passed (although in the future this should be corrected).