Unlike Bucket resources which are matched by key as presented by S3,
ignore rules for GitRepository objects do have a domain: the temporary
directory of the Git repository.
Signed-off-by: Hidde Beydals <hello@hidde.co>
This commit makes the filtering applied during the archiving
configurable by introducing an optional `ArchiveFileFilter`
callback argument and a `SourceIgnoreFilter` implementation.
`SourceIgnoreFilter` filters out files matching
sourceignore.VCSPatterns and any of the provided patterns.
If an empty gitignore.Pattern slice is given, the matcher is set to
sourceignore.NewDefaultMatcher.
The `GitRepository` now loads the ignore patterns before archiving
the repository contents by calling `sourceignore.LoadIgnorePatterns`
and other helpers. The loading behavior is **breaking** as
`.sourceignore` files in the (subdirectories of the) repository are
now still taken into account if `spec.ignore` for a resource is
defined, overwriting is still possible by creating an overwriting
rule in the `spec.ignore` of the resource.
This change also makes it possible for the `BucketReconciler` to not
configure a callback at all and prevent looking for ignore
matches twice. To finalize the bucket refactor, a change to the
reconciler has been made to look for a `.sourceignore` file in
the root of the bucket to provide an additional way of configuring
(global) exclusions.
Signed-off-by: Hidde Beydals <hello@hidde.co>
To include a bug fix to the `ReconcilateAtChangedPredicate`
and renaming to `ReconcileRequestedPredicate`.
Signed-off-by: Hidde Beydals <hello@hidde.co>
This commit upgrades the `controller-runtime` dependency to `v0.7.0`,
including all changes required to make all wiring work again.
- Upgrade `runtime` to v0.6.0 to include `controller-runtime` changes.
- Loggers have been removed from the reconcilers and are now retrieved
from the `context.Context` passed to the `Reconcile` method and
downwards functions.
- Logger configuration flags are now bound to the flag set using
`BindFlags` from `runtime/logger`, ensuring the same contract across
GitOps Toolkit controllers, and the `--log-json` flag has been
deprecated in favour of the `--log-encoding=json` default.
- The `ChangePredicate` from `runtime` has changed to a
`ReconcilateAtChangedPredicate`, and is now chained with the
`GenerationChangedPredicate` from `controller-runtime` using
`predicate.Or`.
- Signatures that made use of `runtime.Object` have changed to
`client.Object`, removing the requirement to e.g. call
`runtime.Object#Object`.
- The `client.MatchingField` function was deprecated, and has been
replaced with `client.MatchingFields{}`.
- The `leader-election-role` was changed, as leader election now works
via the `coordination/v1` API.
Other notable changes:
- `util.ObjectKey` was added to easily construct a `client.ObjectKey` /
`types.NamespacedName` from a `metav1.Object`.
- The `SourceIndexKey` constant has been split out into
`{GitRepository,HelmRepository,Bucket}IndexKey` constants.
Signed-off-by: Hidde Beydals <hello@hidde.co>
We had a hardcoded assumption that the SSH user for a Git repository is
always "git". This is however not true in all scenarios, for example
when one is making use of Gerrit for team code collaboration, as users
there have their own username for (SSH) Git operations.
This commit changes the logic of the auth strategy helpers to:
1. Select the auth strategy based on the protocol of the parsed URL,
instead of a simple rely on a correct prefix.
2. Use the user information from the parsed URL to configure the user
for the public key authentication strategy, with a fallback to `git`
if none is defined.
Signed-off-by: Hidde Beydals <hello@hidde.co>
Use SetResourceCondition as a generic method to set conditions for CRs,
implmeneting the ObjectWithStatusConditions interface used as input
type.
Signed-off-by: Aurel Canciu <aurelcanciu@gmail.com>
Updates to use metav1.Condition type and removes references for
deprecated corev1.Condition* constants and uses the new k8s api/meta
helpers in place of the old pkg/apis/meta types.
Signed-off-by: Aurel Canciu <aurelcanciu@gmail.com>
This commit ensures that resources will only return early if they are
already in a `Ready==True` state. If not, but the status object somehow
still reports that it has an artifact, the reconciliation will continue
to ensure and/or guarantee state, and to prevent a deadlock from
happening.
During high custom resource count / low interval tests, I was greated
with a `cannot patch resource "events"` message. This happened due to
event compaction, where it will perform a patch instead of a create.
By giving the role the permission to do so this should no longer pose
a problem.
When a delete of a resource is requested a `deletionTimestamp` is set
on the resource by the requester, this also results in a generation
change of the resource.
If the resource is under reconciliation while this timestamp is set, and
had not produced an artifact earlier on, this becomes a problem as the
artifact metadata is used to determine what should be garbage collected
on a deletion, resulting in stray files for resources that are no longer
present.
To resolve this for now, we always create a new artifact object for the
resource when `all==true` on the GC method call, and no longer rely on
the presence of the artifact object on the resource itself.
This includes a change to how the revision for HelmRepository sources is
recorded, as this will now equal to the generated timestamp from the index
in RFC3339Nano format.
Due to required domain changes for the helm-controller so that it
can co-exist in a cluster with the Helm Operator, other Toolkit
components are moving to a *.toolklit.fluxcd.io domain too.
- return reconciliation error so that controller runtime metrics record failures
- change structure logging labels to match the controller runtime format
- log the reconciliation duration for all kinds
- normalise log messages and labels across all controllers
This commit changes the file excludes for tarballs generated for
Git repository artifacts from a fixed set of strings to include
exclusion files files. It currently takes `.sourceignore` and
in the root of the given directory into account.
In addition to this the Git VCS related files that are ignored have
been extended to not only include the .git/ directory, but also the
.gitignore, .gitmodules and .gitattributes files. Mimicking part of
the --exclude-vcs flag not available on all tar versions.