* [docs] Remove ingress-nginx references in docs and scripts jinja
Signed-off-by: Meza <meza-xyz@proton.me>
* Remove ingress-nginx doc and remove references in readme and sidebar
Signed-off-by: Meza <meza-xyz@proton.me>
* Delete ingress-nginx dir from kubernetes-apps
Signed-off-by: Meza <meza-xyz@proton.me>
* Delete ingress-nginx from inventory addons
Signed-off-by: Meza <meza-xyz@proton.me>
* Delete ingress_nginx_enabled from default main
Signed-off-by: Meza <meza-xyz@proton.me>
* Delete ingress_nginx from download
Signed-off-by: Meza <meza-xyz@proton.me>
* Delete ingress_nginx from dependencies
Signed-off-by: Meza <meza-xyz@proton.me>
* Remove ingress_nginx from registry task
Signed-off-by: Meza <meza-xyz@proton.me>
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Signed-off-by: Meza <meza-xyz@proton.me>
* Fix: check expiraty before renew
Since certificate renewal and container restarts involve higher risks,
they should be executed with extra caution.
* squash to Fix: check expiraty before renew
* squash to Fix: address more comments from VannTen
Signed-off-by: Peter Pan <Peter.Pan@daocloud.io>
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Signed-off-by: Peter Pan <Peter.Pan@daocloud.io>
The recommended usage of kubespray is to use the default versions.
So putting them in inventory/sample is not really very helpful, and
causes:
- churn (keeping the inventory/sample up to date)
- support issues (mismatch between defaults and sample inventory)
Remove all concrete versions from the inventory sample.
* Remove krew installation support
Krew is fundamentally to install kubectl plugins, which are eminently a
client side things.
It's also not difficult to install on a client machine.
* Remove krew cleanup
Adds the ability to configure the Kubernetes API server with a structured authorization configuration file.
Structured AuthorizationConfiguration is a new feature in Kubernetes v1.29+ (GA in v1.32) that configures the API server's authorization modes with a structured configuration file.
AuthorizationConfiguration files offer features not available with the `--authorization-mode` flag, although Kubespray supports both methods and authorization-mode remains the default for now.
Note: Because the `--authorization-config` and `--authorization-mode` flags are mutually exclusive, the `authorization_modes` ansible variable is ignored when `kube_apiserver_use_authorization_config_file` is set to true. The two features cannot be used at the same time.
Docs: https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/access-authn-authz/authorization/#configuring-the-api-server-using-an-authorization-config-file
Blog + Examples: https://kubernetes.io/blog/2024/04/26/multi-webhook-and-modular-authorization-made-much-easier/
KEP: https://github.com/kubernetes/enhancements/tree/master/keps/sig-auth/3221-structured-authorization-configuration
I tested this all the way back to k8s v1.29 when AuthorizationConfiguration was first introduced as an alpha feature, although v1.29 required some additional workarounds with `kubeadm_patches`, which I included in example comments.
I also included some example comments with CEL expressions that allowed me to configure webhook authorizers without hitting kubeadm 1.29+ issues that block cluster creation and upgrades such as this one: https://github.com/kubernetes/cloud-provider-openstack/issues/2575.
My workaround configures the webhook to ignore requests from kubeadm and system components, which prevents fatal errors from webhooks that are not available yet, and should be authorized by Node or RBAC anyway.
* Add vars for configuring cilium IP load balancer pools and bgp peer policies
* Cilium 1.16+ Support - Add vars for configuring cilium bgpv2 api & handle cilium_kube_proxy_replacement unsupported values