This had been left out unintentionally earlier. Because theoretically there
might now be existing objects with parameters that are larger than whatever
limit gets enforced now, the limit only gets checked when parameters get
created or modified.
This is similar to the validation of CEL expressions and for consistency, the
same 10 Ki limit as for those is chosen.
Because the limit is not enforced for stored parameters, it can be increased in
the future, with the caveat that users who need larger parameters then depend
on the newer Kubernetes release with a higher limit. Lowering the limit is
harder because creating deployments that worked in older Kubernetes will not
work anymore with newer Kubernetes.
The line coverage is now at 98.5% and several more corner cases are
covered. The remaining lines are hard or impossible to reach.
The actual validation is the same as before, with some small tweaks to the
generated errors.
When failures are not as expected, it is useful to show what the expected and
actual failures look like to a user. Perhaps even better would be to put the
expected texts into the test files instead of the error structs. That would
be easier to review and shorter.
This removes the DRAControlPlaneController feature gate, the fields controlled
by it (claim.spec.controller, claim.status.deallocationRequested,
claim.status.allocation.controller, class.spec.suitableNodes), the
PodSchedulingContext type, and all code related to the feature.
The feature gets removed because there is no path towards beta and GA and DRA
with "structured parameters" should be able to replace it.
This is a complete revamp of the original API. Some of the key
differences:
- refocused on structured parameters and allocating devices
- support for constraints across devices
- support for allocating "all" or a fixed amount
of similar devices in a single request
- no class for ResourceClaims, instead individual
device requests are associated with a mandatory
DeviceClass
For the sake of simplicity, optional basic types (ints, strings) where the null
value is the default are represented as values in the API types. This makes Go
code simpler because it doesn't have to check for nil (consumers) and values
can be set directly (producers). The effect is that in protobuf, these fields
always get encoded because `opt` only has an effect for pointers.
The roundtrip test data for v1.29.0 and v1.30.0 changes because of the new
"request" field. This is considered acceptable because the entire `claims`
field in the pod spec is still alpha.
The implementation is complete enough to bring up the apiserver.
Adapting other components follows.