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  1. Feb 07, 2018
  2. Feb 05, 2018
  3. Jan 23, 2018
  4. Jan 18, 2018
  5. Jan 12, 2018
  6. Dec 25, 2017
    • Matthew Mosesohn's avatar
      Update Kubernetes to v1.9.0 (#2100) · ad6fecef
      Matthew Mosesohn authored
      Update checksum for kubeadm
      Use v1.9.0 kubeadm params
      Include hash of ca.crt for kubeadm join
      Update tag for testing upgrades
      Add workaround for testing upgrades
      Remove scale CI scenarios because of slow inventory parsing
      in ansible 2.4.x.
      
      Change region for tests to us-central1 to
      improve ansible performance
      ad6fecef
  7. Dec 05, 2017
    • Chad Swenson's avatar
      Support for disabling apiserver insecure port · b8788421
      Chad Swenson authored
      This allows `kube_apiserver_insecure_port` to be set to 0 (disabled).
      
      Rework of #1937 with kubeadm support
      
      Also, fixed an issue in `kubeadm-migrate-certs` where the old apiserver cert was copied as the kubeadm key
      b8788421
  8. Nov 29, 2017
    • Steven Hardy's avatar
      Allow setting --bind-address for apiserver hyperkube (#1985) · d39a88d6
      Steven Hardy authored
      * Allow setting --bind-address for apiserver hyperkube
      
      This is required if you wish to configure a loadbalancer (e.g haproxy)
      running on the master nodes without choosing a different port for the
      vip from that used by the API - in this case you need the API to bind to
      a specific interface, then haproxy can bind the same port on the VIP:
      
      root@overcloud-controller-0 ~]# netstat -taupen | grep 6443
      tcp        0      0 192.168.24.6:6443       0.0.0.0:*               LISTEN      0          680613     134504/haproxy
      tcp        0      0 192.168.24.16:6443      0.0.0.0:*               LISTEN      0          653329     131423/hyperkube
      tcp        0      0 192.168.24.16:6443      192.168.24.16:58404     ESTABLISHED 0          652991     131423/hyperkube
      tcp        0      0 192.168.24.16:58404     192.168.24.16:6443      ESTABLISHED 0          652986     131423/hyperkube
      
      This can be achieved e.g via:
      
      kube_apiserver_bind_address: 192.168.24.16
      
      * Address code review feedback
      
      * Update kube-apiserver.manifest.j2
      d39a88d6
  9. Nov 23, 2017
  10. Nov 14, 2017
  11. Nov 07, 2017
    • Chad Swenson's avatar
      Support for disabling apiserver insecure port · 0c7e1889
      Chad Swenson authored
      This allows `kube_apiserver_insecure_port` to be set to 0 (disabled). It's working, but so far I have had to:
      
      1. Make the `uri` module "Wait for apiserver up" checks use `kube_apiserver_port` (HTTPS)
      2. Add apiserver client cert/key to the "Wait for apiserver up" checks
      3. Update apiserver liveness probe to use HTTPS ports
      4. Set `kube_api_anonymous_auth` to true to allow liveness probe to hit apiserver's /healthz over HTTPS (livenessProbes can't use client cert/key unfortunately)
      5. RBAC has to be enabled. Anonymous requests are in the `system:unauthenticated` group which is granted access to /healthz by one of RBAC's default ClusterRoleBindings. An equivalent ABAC rule could allow this as well.
      
      Changes 1 and 2 should work for everyone, but 3, 4, and 5 require new coupling of currently independent configuration settings. So I also added a new settings check.
      
      Options:
      
      1. The problem goes away if you have both anonymous-auth and RBAC enabled. This is how kubeadm does it. This may be the best way to go since RBAC is already on by default but anonymous auth is not.
      2. Include conditional templates to set a different liveness probe for possible combinations of `kube_apiserver_insecure_port = 0`, RBAC, and `kube_api_anonymous_auth` (won't be possible to cover every case without a guaranteed authorizer for the secure port)
      3. Use basic auth headers for the liveness probe (I really don't like this, it adds a new dependency on basic auth which I'd also like to leave independently configurable, and it requires encoded passwords in the apiserver manifest)
      
      Option 1 seems like the clear winner to me, but is there a reason we wouldn't want anonymous-auth on by default? The apiserver binary defaults anonymous-auth to true, but kubespray's default was false.
      0c7e1889
  12. Oct 31, 2017
  13. Oct 27, 2017
  14. Oct 26, 2017
  15. Oct 18, 2017
  16. Oct 15, 2017
  17. Oct 13, 2017
  18. Oct 05, 2017
  19. Oct 04, 2017
  20. Oct 03, 2017
  21. Oct 01, 2017
  22. Sep 26, 2017
    • Matthew Mosesohn's avatar
      Upgrade to kubeadm (#1667) · bd272e0b
      Matthew Mosesohn authored
      * Enable upgrade to kubeadm
      
      * fix kubedns upgrade
      
      * try upgrade route
      
      * use init/upgrade strategy for kubeadm and ignore kubedns svc
      
      * Use bin_dir for kubeadm
      
      * delete more secrets
      
      * fix waiting for terminating pods
      
      * Manually enforce kube-proxy for kubeadm deploy
      
      * remove proxy. update to kubeadm 1.8.0rc1
      bd272e0b
  23. Sep 16, 2017
  24. Sep 13, 2017
    • Matthew Mosesohn's avatar
      kubeadm support (#1631) · 67447260
      Matthew Mosesohn authored
      * kubeadm support
      
      * move k8s master to a subtask
      * disable k8s secrets when using kubeadm
      * fix etcd cert serial var
      * move simple auth users to master role
      * make a kubeadm-specific env file for kubelet
      * add non-ha CI job
      
      * change ci boolean vars to json format
      
      * fixup
      
      * Update create-gce.yml
      
      * Update create-gce.yml
      
      * Update create-gce.yml
      67447260
  25. Sep 01, 2017
  26. Aug 31, 2017
  27. Aug 25, 2017
  28. Jul 17, 2017
  29. Jun 16, 2017
  30. Jun 12, 2017
  31. May 31, 2017
  32. May 27, 2017
  33. Apr 20, 2017
  34. Apr 19, 2017
  35. Apr 17, 2017
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