Expiration seconds is great for an unambiguous REST API. It it not
a great input for a command line meant to be used by humans.
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
Kubernetes-commit: 6b9d556c9dc1fca37349833d38f8921f436e1874
* kubectl debug: print container messages
This provides feedback to the user, for example that the server is
unable to pull the debug container image.
* Label debug container updates as warnings
Co-authored-by: Eddie Zaneski <eddiezane@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Eddie Zaneski <eddiezane@gmail.com>
Kubernetes-commit: 90956e6d3e9df02d932f9954911b89a3fd1619fb
This PR removes `DiscoveryClient` field in diff command. Because
it is not used anywhere in diff command.
Kubernetes-commit: 5fdf97ad8e3a9b7a16479a5ec4ebff3d38c55a18
This commit teaches the shell completion logic how to handle the
<type>/<name> form for resource specification.
It also teaches the 'exec' command how to complete its '--container/-c'
flag using container names.
Also, for commands that work on pods, kubectl will now also suggest
completion choices of the form <type>/<name> for resource types that
contain pods (see below for more details).
The following commands can now have completion of the <type>/<name>
form. Commands that accept any resource type:
annotate
apply edit-last-applied
apply view-last-applied
delete
describe
edit
get
label
patch
Commands that accept a subset of resource types:
autoscale
expose
rollout history
rollout pause
rollout restart
rollout resume
rollout status
rollout undo
scale
taint
Commands that apply to resource types that contain pods:
attach
exec
logs
port-foward
For these last four commands, the possible resource types are now
included in the completion choices. For example:
kubectl exec d<TAB>
will suggest
daemonsets/ deployments/
Signed-off-by: Marc Khouzam <marc.khouzam@montreal.ca>
Kubernetes-commit: cf66f5c3cbd0a0e2f223af438ee4c6bc7e4a907c
Bump client_golang to v1.12.1 to fix a concurrency issue in the Go
Collector that was introduced by the library in v1.12.0.
Signed-off-by: Damien Grisonnet <dgrisonn@redhat.com>
Kubernetes-commit: 7f3f8d25c856e3075d8526dc918ca0965bd4ffae
When it initially landed in kubernetes/kubernetes@c6e9ad066e (Initial
node drain implementation for #3885, 2015-08-30,
kubernetes/kubernetes#16698), the drain logic looked in a created-by
annotation for recognized kinds [1], so listing the set of recognized
kinds was a clear approach.
Sometime later, the source moved into ownerReferences, but the
hard-coded set of recognized controller kinds remained.
When kubernetes/kubernetes@2f1108451f (Remove hard-coded
pod-controller check, 2017-12-05, kubernetes/kubernetes#56864) removed
the hard-coded set of recognized controller kinds, it should have also
updated these messages to remove stale references to the previous
hard-coded values. This commit catches the message strings up with
that commit.
[1]: c6e9ad066e (diff-211259b8a8ec42f105264c10897dad48029badb538684e60e43eaead68c3d219R216)
Kubernetes-commit: 587f4f04cc5fc18f4e85ed6a4a06bbf1bfee0496
Some of these changes are cosmetic (repeatedly calling klog.V instead of
reusing the result), others address real issues:
- Logging a message only above a certain verbosity threshold without
recording that verbosity level (if klog.V().Enabled() { klog.Info... }):
this matters when using a logging backend which records the verbosity
level.
- Passing a format string with parameters to a logging function that
doesn't do string formatting.
All of these locations where found by the enhanced logcheck tool from
https://github.com/kubernetes/klog/pull/297.
In some cases it reports false positives, but those can be suppressed with
source code comments.
Kubernetes-commit: edffc700a43e610f641907290a5152ca593bad79