Previously, we had to do blind timed requeues while waiting for
the tailscale hostname, because we looked up the hostname through
the API. But now the proxy container image writes back its hostname
to the k8s secret, so we get an event-triggered reconcile automatically
when the time is right.
Updates #502
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
As is convention in the k8s world, use zap for structured logging. For
development, OPERATOR_LOGGING=dev switches to a more human-readable output
than JSON.
Updates #502
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
Our reconcile loop gets triggered again when the StatefulSet object
finally disappears (in addition to when its deletion starts, as indicated
by DeletionTimestamp != 0). So, we don't need to queue additional
reconciliations to proceed with the remainder of the cleanup, that
happens organically.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
Tests cover configuring a proxy through an annotation rather than a
LoadBalancerClass, and converting between those two modes at runtime.
Updates #502.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
For other test cases, the operator is going to produce similar generated
objects in several codepaths, and those objects are large. Move them out
to helpers so that the main test code stays a bit more intelligible.
The top-level Service that we start and end with remains in the main test
body, because its shape at the start and end is one of the main things that
varies a lot between test cases.
Updates #502.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>