Allow bootstrapping with kubeadm bootstrap token strings or existing
Kubelet certs. This allows agents to join the cluster using kubeadm
bootstrap tokens, as created with the `k3s token create` command.
When the token expires or is deleted, agents can successfully restart by
authenticating with their kubelet certificate via node authentication.
If the token is gone and the node is deleted from the cluster, node auth
will fail and they will be prevented from rejoining the cluster until
provided with a valid token.
Servers still must be bootstrapped with the static cluster token, as
they will need to know it to decrypt the bootstrap data.
Signed-off-by: Brad Davidson <brad.davidson@rancher.com>
Using the node external IP address for all CNI traffic is a breaking change from previous versions; we should make it an opt-in for distributed clusters instead of default behavior.
Signed-off-by: Brad Davidson <brad.davidson@rancher.com>
* Move startup hooks wg into a runtime pointer, check before notifying systemd
* Switch default systemd notification to server
* Add 1 sec delay to allow etcd to write to disk
Signed-off-by: Derek Nola <derek.nola@suse.com>
Reduces code complexity a bit and ensures we don't have to handle closed watch channels on our own
Signed-off-by: Brad Davidson <brad.davidson@rancher.com>
Before this change, kube-router was always assuming that IPv4 is
enabled, which is not the case in IPv6-only clusters. To enable network
policies in IPv6-only, we need to explicitly let kube-router know when
to disable IPv4.
Signed-off-by: Michal Rostecki <vadorovsky@gmail.com>
* Bump etcd to v3.5.4-k3s1
* Fix issue with datastore corruption on cluster-reset
* Disable unnecessary components during cluster reset
Disable control-plane components and the tunnel setup during
cluster-reset, even when not doing a restore. This reduces the amount of
log clutter during cluster reset/restore, making any errors encountered
more obvious.
Signed-off-by: Brad Davidson <brad.davidson@rancher.com>
Since we now start the server's agent sooner and in the background, we
may need to wait longer than 30 seconds for the apiserver to become
ready on downstream projects such as RKE2.
Since this essentially just serves as an analogue for the server's
apiReady channel, there's little danger in setting it to something
relatively high.
Signed-off-by: Brad Davidson <brad.davidson@rancher.com>
Updated the logic to handle if extra args are passed with existing hyphens in the arg. The test was updated to add the additional case of having pre-existing hyphens. The method name was also refactored based on previous feedback.
If the port wanted by the client load balancer is in TIME_WAIT, startup
will fail. Set SO_REUSEPORT so that it can be listened on again
immediately.
The configurable Listen call wants a context, so plumb that through as
well.
Signed-off-by: Brad Davidson <brad.davidson@rancher.com>
* Always use static ports for the load-balancers
This fixes an issue where RKE2 kube-proxy daemonset pods were failing to
communicate with the apiserver when RKE2 was restarted because the
load-balancer used a different port every time it started up.
This also changes the apiserver load-balancer port to be 1 below the
supervisor port instead of 1 above it. This makes the apiserver port
consistent at 6443 across servers and agents on RKE2.
Additional fixes below were required to successfully test and use this change
on etcd-only nodes.
* Actually add lb-server-port flag to CLI
* Fix nil pointer when starting server with --disable-etcd but no --server
* Don't try to use full URI as initial load-balancer endpoint
* Fix etcd load-balancer pool updates
* Update dynamiclistener to fix cert updates on etcd-only nodes
* Handle recursive initial server URL in load balancer
* Don't run the deploy controller on etcd-only nodes
It is possible that the apiserver may serve read requests but not allow
writes yet, in which case flannel will crash on startup when trying to
configure the subnet manager.
Fix this by waiting for the apiserver to become fully ready before
starting flannel and the network policy controller.
Signed-off-by: Brad Davidson <brad.davidson@rancher.com>