The voting in https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/issues/117288 led to
one check that got rejected ("ifElseChain: rewrite if-else to switch
statement") and several that are "nice to know".
golangci-lint's support for issue "severity" is too limited to identify "nice
to know" issues in the output (filtering is only by linter without considering
the issue text; not part of text output). Therefore a third configuration gets
added which emits all issues (must fix and nits). The intention is to use
the "strict" configuration in pull-kubernetes-verify and the "hints"
configuration in a new non-blocking pull-kubernetes-linter-hints.
That way, "must fix" issues will block merging while issues that may be useful
will show up in a failed optional job. However, that job then also contains
"must fix" issues, partly because filtering out those would make the
configuration a lot larger and is likely to be unreliably (all "must fix"
issues would need to be identified and listed), partly because it may be useful
to have all issues in one place.
The previous approach of manually keeping two configs in sync with special
comments didn't scale to three configs. Now a single golangci.yaml.in with
text/template constructs contains the source for all three configs. A new
simple CLI frontend for text/template (cmd/gotemplate) is used by
hack/update-golangci-lint-config.sh to generate the three flavors.
In all places map[string]string compounds were used directly
for extra args. Modify said locations to use []Arg
and the new utilities Get/SetArgValue(), ArgumentsTo/FromCommand().
Use []kubeadm.Arg instead of map[string]string when
validating ExtraArgs in the API.
Add new GetArgValue() and SetArgValue() utilities
and tests in apis/kubeadm.
Add new utils for constucting commands from and to
a []kubeadm.Arg slice.
Add a new type Arg that holds a dedicated Name and Value.
Instead of using map[string]string for ExtraArgs in the
API use []Arg.
Adapt v1beta3 conversion to convert to/from the
legacy map[string]string.
When parsing a config file, all settings derived from command line flags are
discarded because only the config settings are used. That has been the
traditional behavior for non-logging flags.
But `--config ... -v=4` used to work until
71ef0dafa7 added logging to the configuration.
To restore the original behavior, kube-proxy now:
- parses flags
- reads the config file
- applies logging settings from the flags to the config loaded from file
- uses that merged config
This implements a drop-in configuration directory for the kubelet
by introducing a "--config-dir" flag. Users can provide individual
kubelet config snippets in separate files, formatted similarly to
kubelet.conf. The kubelet will process the files in alphanumeric order,
appending configurations if subfield(s) doesn't exist, overwriting them if
they do, and handling lists by overwriting instead of merging.
Co-authored-by: Yu Qi Zhang <jerzhang@redhat.com>