Documentation ¶
Overview ¶
Package types implements various generic types used throughout kubernetes.
Index ¶
Constants ¶
const (
Separator = '/'
)
Variables ¶
This section is empty.
Functions ¶
This section is empty.
Types ¶
type NamespacedName ¶
func NewNamespacedNameFromString ¶
func NewNamespacedNameFromString(s string) NamespacedName
NewNamespacedNameFromString parses the provided string and returns a NamespacedName. The expected format is as per String() above. If the input string is invalid, the returned NamespacedName has all empty string field values. This allows a single-value return from this function, while still allowing error checks in the caller. Note that an input string which does not include exactly one Separator is not a valid input (as it could never have neem returned by String() )
func (NamespacedName) String ¶
func (n NamespacedName) String() string
String returns the general purpose string representation
type NodeName ¶
type NodeName string
NodeName is a type that holds a api.Node's Name identifier. Being a type captures intent and helps make sure that the node name is not confused with similar concepts (the hostname, the cloud provider id, the cloud provider name etc)
To clarify the various types:
- Node.Name is the Name field of the Node in the API. This should be stored in a NodeName. Unfortunately, because Name is part of ObjectMeta, we can't store it as a NodeName at the API level.
- Hostname is the hostname of the local machine (from uname -n). However, some components allow the user to pass in a --hostname-override flag, which will override this in most places. In the absence of anything more meaningful, kubelet will use Hostname as the Node.Name when it creates the Node.
* The cloudproviders have the own names: GCE has InstanceName, AWS has InstanceId.
For GCE, InstanceName is the Name of an Instance object in the GCE API. On GCE, Instance.Name becomes the Hostname, and thus it makes sense also to use it as the Node.Name. But that is GCE specific, and it is up to the cloudprovider how to do this mapping. For AWS, the InstanceID is not yet suitable for use as a Node.Name, so we actually use the PrivateDnsName for the Node.Name. And this is _not_ always the same as the hostname: if we are using a custom DHCP domain it won't be.