Using the directory cmd/flux/manifests as a prerequisite causes a
problem: if the script that creates the files within fails, the next
invocation of make will see the directory and assume it
succeeded. Since the executable expects certain files to be present,
but they are not explicit prerequisites of the recipe for building the
binary, this results in a successful build but a broken `flux`
executable.
Instead, depend on a file that's explicitly updated when the script
has succeeded, and which itself depends on the inputs.
A couple of the CI workflows run
make cmd/flux/manifests
before doing other things, presumably as a way to avoid running the
whole test suite in a CI pipeline for some purpose other than testing,
so these needed changing as well.
Signed-off-by: Michael Bridgen <michael@weave.works>
This changes the name of the repository that is used for the GitHub
end-to-end tests to a name that is still traceable to the source
(repository) that created it, by using the format
`<ORIGIN_REPOSITORY_NAME>-<PSEUDO_RAND_SUFFIX>`.
The `PSEUDO_RAND_SUFFIX` is a SHA1 sum of the name of the branch and
commit SHA the tests run for, resulting in a 40 character suffix that
unlike the short commit SHA used before, should not result in collisions.
Signed-off-by: Hidde Beydals <hello@hidde.co>
This commit changes the way the build of manifests is triggered by
making smarter use of the capabilities of Make. The result should be
that the manifests are only regenerated if:
1. There is no `cmd/flux/manifests/` directory.
2. There have been made changes to the YAML files in the `manifests/`
directory that are newer than the files in `cmd/flux/manifests/`.
Signed-off-by: Hidde Beydals <hello@hidde.co>
- add make target for generating the install manifests using kustomize
- embed the generated manifests in flux binary
- the install and bootstrap commands default to using the embedded manifests
- download the install manifests from GitHub only if the install/bootstrap version arg is set
Signed-off-by: Stefan Prodan <stefan.prodan@gmail.com>
- deletes Flux components (deployments and services)
- deletes Flux RBAC (service accounts, cluster roles and cluster role bindings)
- removes the Kubernetes finalizers from Flux custom resources
- deletes Flux custom resource definitions and custom resources
- deletes the namespace where Flux was installed
- preserves the Kubernetes objects and Helm releases that were reconciled on the cluster by Flux
Signed-off-by: Stefan Prodan <stefan.prodan@gmail.com>