Use https://github.com/cozystack/cozyvalues-gen for three apps:
- apps/postgres
- apps/virtual-machine
- extra/monitoring
Changes:
- Add type and enum definitions to values.yaml.
- Update READMEs with new information.
- Update values.schema.json with definitions for children objects,
allowing precise UI customization. Add regexp for specific types
such as resources: CPU like `500m` and RAM like `4GiB`.
- Remove direct injections with `yq` from Makefiles where they're not
needed anymore.
Co-authored-by: Nick Volynkin <nick.volynkin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrei Kvapil <kvapss@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nick Volynkin <nick.volynkin@gmail.com>
- update cosi-driver
- add support exporting via nginx-ingress
- add support for whitelist
Signed-off-by: Andrei Kvapil <kvapss@gmail.com>
<!-- Thank you for making a contribution! Here are some tips for you:
- Start the PR title with the [label] of Cozystack component:
- For system components: [platform], [system], [linstor], [cilium],
[kube-ovn], [dashboard], [cluster-api], etc.
- For managed apps: [apps], [tenant], [kubernetes], [postgres],
[virtual-machine] etc.
- For development and maintenance: [tests], [ci], [docs], [maintenance].
- If it's a work in progress, consider creating this PR as a draft.
- Don't hesistate to ask for opinion and review in the community chats,
even if it's still a draft.
- Add the label `backport` if it's a bugfix that needs to be backported
to a previous version.
-->
## What this PR does
### Release note
<!-- Write a release note:
- Explain what has changed internally and for users.
- Start with the same [label] as in the PR title
- Follow the guidelines at
https://github.com/kubernetes/community/blob/master/contributors/guide/release-notes.md.
-->
```release-note
[seaweedfs] Client mode refactoring and fix issues
- update cosi-driver
- add support exporting via nginx-ingress
- add support for whitelist
```
Depends on https://github.com/cozystack/cozystack/pull/1173
Signed-off-by: Andrei Kvapil <kvapss@gmail.com>
<!-- Thank you for making a contribution! Here are some tips for you:
- Start the PR title with the [label] of Cozystack component:
- For system components: [platform], [system], [linstor], [cilium],
[kube-ovn], [dashboard], [cluster-api], etc.
- For managed apps: [apps], [tenant], [kubernetes], [postgres],
[virtual-machine] etc.
- For development and maintenance: [tests], [ci], [docs], [maintenance].
- If it's a work in progress, consider creating this PR as a draft.
- Don't hesistate to ask for opinion and review in the community chats,
even if it's still a draft.
- Add the label `backport` if it's a bugfix that needs to be backported
to a previous version.
-->
## What this PR does
### Release note
<!-- Write a release note:
- Explain what has changed internally and for users.
- Start with the same [label] as in the PR title
- Follow the guidelines at
https://github.com/kubernetes/community/blob/master/contributors/guide/release-notes.md.
-->
```release-note
[cozystack-api] Specify OpenAPI schema for apps
```
This patch introduces reusable library charts that provide
backward-compatibility for users that specify their resources as
explicit requests and limits for cpu, however this input is processed so
that limits are set equal to requests except for CPU which only gets
requests. Users can now embrace the new form by directly specifying
resources in the first level of nesting (e.g. resources.cpu=100m instead
of .resources.requests.cpu=100m). The order of precedence is top-level,
then requests, then limits, ensuring that nothing will break in terms of
scheduling, however workloads that specified limits much higher than
requests might get a performance hit, now that they cannot use all this
excess capacity. This should only affect memory-hungry workloads in
low-contention environments.
<!-- This is an auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai
-->
## Summary by CodeRabbit
- **New Features**
- Introduced a reusable Helm library chart, "cozy-lib", providing common
templates and resource helpers for other charts.
- Added resource preset and sanitization templates to standardize
Kubernetes resource configurations.
- ClickHouse chart now depends on "cozy-lib" for improved resource
handling.
- Added a new packaging script and streamlined Helm chart packaging
processes across multiple packages.
- **Bug Fixes**
- Resource configuration logic in the ClickHouse deployment was updated
to use the new library templates, ensuring more consistent resource
definitions.
- **Chores**
- Added new Makefiles and version mapping for streamlined Helm chart
packaging and validation.
- Updated ClickHouse chart version to 0.9.0 and reflected this in
version mapping files.
- Refactored Makefile targets to consolidate packaging logic and improve
maintainability.
<!-- end of auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai -->
This patch introduces reusable library charts that provide
backward-compatibility for users that specify their resources as
explicit requests and limits for cpu, however this input is processed so
that limits are set equal to requests except for CPU which only gets
requests. Users can now embrace the new form by directly specifying
resources in the first level of nesting (e.g. resources.cpu=100m instead
of .resources.requests.cpu=100m). The order of precedence is top-level,
then requests, then limits, ensuring that nothing will break in terms of
scheduling, however workloads that specified limits much higher than
requests might get a performance hit, now that they cannot use all this
excess capacity. This should only affect memory-hungry workloads in
low-contention environments.
Signed-off-by: Timofei Larkin <lllamnyp@gmail.com>