testify is used throughout the codebase; this switches mocks from
gomock to testify with the help of mockery for code generation.
Handlers and mocks in test/utils/oidc are moved to a new package:
mockery operates package by package, and requires packages to build
correctly; test/utils/oidc/testserver.go relies on the mocks and fails
to build when they are removed. Moving the interface and mocks to a
different package allows mockery to process that package without
having to build testserver.go.
Signed-off-by: Stephen Kitt <skitt@redhat.com>
See https://github.com/golang/mock#gomock: golang/mock is no longer
maintained, and should be replaced by go.uber.org/mock.
This allows golang/mock to be dropped from the status and vendored
fields in unwanted-dependencies.json.
Signed-off-by: Stephen Kitt <skitt@redhat.com>
A number of race conditions exist when pods are terminated early in
their lifecycle because components in the kubelet need to know "no
running containers" or "containers can't be started from now on" but
were relying on outdated state.
Only the pod worker knows whether containers are being started for
a given pod, which is required to know when a pod is "terminated"
(no running containers, none coming). Move that responsibility and
podKiller function into the pod workers, and have everything that
was killing the pod go into the UpdatePod loop. Split syncPod into
three phases - setup, terminate containers, and cleanup pod - and
have transitions between those methods be visible to other
components. After this change, to kill a pod you tell the pod worker
to UpdatePod({UpdateType: SyncPodKill, Pod: pod}).
Several places in the kubelet were incorrect about whether they
were handling terminating (should stop running, might have
containers) or terminated (no running containers) pods. The pod worker
exposes methods that allow other loops to know when to set up or tear
down resources based on the state of the pod - these methods remove
the possibility of race conditions by ensuring a single component is
responsible for knowing each pod's allowed state and other components
simply delegate to checking whether they are in the window by UID.
Removing containers now no longer blocks final pod deletion in the
API server and are handled as background cleanup. Node shutdown
no longer marks pods as failed as they can be restarted in the
next step.
See https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Pic5TPntdJnYfIpBeZndDelM-AbS4FN9H2GTLFhoJ04/edit# for details