This allows kube-controller-manager to allocate CIDRs to nodes (with
allocate-node-cidrs=true), but will not try to configure them on the
cloud provider, even if the cloud provider supports Routes.
The default is configure-cloud-routes=true, and it will only try to
configure routes if allocate-node-cidrs is also configured, so the
default behaviour is unchanged.
This is useful because on AWS the cloud provider configures routes by
setting up VPC routing table entries, but there is a limit of 50
entries. So setting configure-cloud-routes on AWS would allow us to
continue to allocate node CIDRs as today, but replace the VPC
route-table mechanism with something not limited to 50 nodes.
We can't just turn off the cloud-provider entirely because it also
controls other things - node discovery, load balancer creation etc.
Fix#25602
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.
I can't revert with github which says "Sorry, this pull request couldn’t be
reverted automatically. It may have already been reverted, or the content may
have changed since it was merged."
Reverts commit: 0c191e787b
Recycle controller tries to recycle or delete a PV several times.
It stores count of failed attempts and timestamp of the last attempt in
annotations of the PV.
By default, the controller tries to recycle/delete a PV 3 times in
10 minutes interval. These values are configurable by
kube-controller-manager --pv-recycler-maximum-retry=X --pvclaimbinder-sync-period=Y
arguments.