diff options
author | Sylvain Desbureaux <sylvain.desbureaux@orange.com> | 2020-11-21 22:50:06 +0100 |
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committer | Sylvain Desbureaux <sylvain.desbureaux@orange.com> | 2020-11-30 21:05:41 +0000 |
commit | fd2f8b8d029ea7e83da16d40cd023cebe4b2f75e (patch) | |
tree | 75b45c3ea6bb8ee6ce6e5658da37546ca11de78d /kubernetes/msb/charts/msb-consul/resources | |
parent | dd99d982adf86279d73d0db7cde0a728e422133d (diff) |
[MSB] Uses new tpls for repos / images
This commit makes MSB chart to use the new generator for repositories and
images.
As new templates doesn't work well with "sub charts", we move also
subcharts to components folder.
Issue-ID: OOM-2364
Signed-off-by: Sylvain Desbureaux <sylvain.desbureaux@orange.com>
Change-Id: I97de4e13d077a6b7139d98dcd855f93645489035
Diffstat (limited to 'kubernetes/msb/charts/msb-consul/resources')
-rwxr-xr-x | kubernetes/msb/charts/msb-consul/resources/docker-entrypoint.sh | 100 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 100 deletions
diff --git a/kubernetes/msb/charts/msb-consul/resources/docker-entrypoint.sh b/kubernetes/msb/charts/msb-consul/resources/docker-entrypoint.sh deleted file mode 100755 index 0cd46167e4..0000000000 --- a/kubernetes/msb/charts/msb-consul/resources/docker-entrypoint.sh +++ /dev/null @@ -1,100 +0,0 @@ -#!/usr/bin/dumb-init /bin/sh -set -e -set -x - -# Note above that we run dumb-init as PID 1 in order to reap zombie processes -# as well as forward signals to all processes in its session. Normally, sh -# wouldn't do either of these functions so we'd leak zombies as well as do -# unclean termination of all our sub-processes. -# As of docker 1.13, using docker run --init achieves the same outcome. - -# You can set CONSUL_BIND_INTERFACE to the name of the interface you'd like to -# bind to and this will look up the IP and pass the proper -bind= option along -# to Consul. -CONSUL_BIND= -if [ -n "$CONSUL_BIND_INTERFACE" ]; then - CONSUL_BIND_ADDRESS=$(ip -o -4 addr list $CONSUL_BIND_INTERFACE | head -n1 | awk '{print $4}' | cut -d/ -f1) - if [ -z "$CONSUL_BIND_ADDRESS" ]; then - echo "Could not find IP for interface '$CONSUL_BIND_INTERFACE', exiting" - exit 1 - fi - - CONSUL_BIND="-bind=$CONSUL_BIND_ADDRESS" - echo "==> Found address '$CONSUL_BIND_ADDRESS' for interface '$CONSUL_BIND_INTERFACE', setting bind option..." -fi - -# You can set CONSUL_CLIENT_INTERFACE to the name of the interface you'd like to -# bind client intefaces (HTTP, DNS, and RPC) to and this will look up the IP and -# pass the proper -client= option along to Consul. -CONSUL_CLIENT= -if [ -n "$CONSUL_CLIENT_INTERFACE" ]; then - CONSUL_CLIENT_ADDRESS=$(ip -o -4 addr list $CONSUL_CLIENT_INTERFACE | head -n1 | awk '{print $4}' | cut -d/ -f1) - if [ -z "$CONSUL_CLIENT_ADDRESS" ]; then - echo "Could not find IP for interface '$CONSUL_CLIENT_INTERFACE', exiting" - exit 1 - fi - - CONSUL_CLIENT="-client=$CONSUL_CLIENT_ADDRESS" - echo "==> Found address '$CONSUL_CLIENT_ADDRESS' for interface '$CONSUL_CLIENT_INTERFACE', setting client option..." -fi - -# CONSUL_DATA_DIR is exposed as a volume for possible persistent storage. The -# CONSUL_CONFIG_DIR isn't exposed as a volume but you can compose additional -# config files in there if you use this image as a base, or use CONSUL_LOCAL_CONFIG -# below. -CONSUL_DATA_DIR=/consul/data -CONSUL_CONFIG_DIR=/consul/config - -# You can also set the CONSUL_LOCAL_CONFIG environemnt variable to pass some -# Consul configuration JSON without having to bind any volumes. -if [ -n "$CONSUL_LOCAL_CONFIG" ]; then - echo "$CONSUL_LOCAL_CONFIG" > "$CONSUL_CONFIG_DIR/local.json" -fi - -# If the user is trying to run Consul directly with some arguments, then -# pass them to Consul. -if [ "${1:0:1}" = '-' ]; then - set -- consul "$@" -fi - -# Look for Consul subcommands. -if [ "$1" = 'agent' ]; then - shift - set -- consul agent \ - -data-dir="$CONSUL_DATA_DIR" \ - -config-dir="$CONSUL_CONFIG_DIR" \ - $CONSUL_BIND \ - $CONSUL_CLIENT \ - "$@" -elif [ "$1" = 'version' ]; then - # This needs a special case because there's no help output. - set -- consul "$@" -elif consul --help "$1" 2>&1 | grep -q "consul $1"; then - # We can't use the return code to check for the existence of a subcommand, so - # we have to use grep to look for a pattern in the help output. - set -- consul "$@" -fi - -# If we are running Consul, make sure it executes as the proper user. -if [ "$1" = 'consul' ]; then - # If the data or config dirs are bind mounted then chown them. - # Note: This checks for root ownership as that's the most common case. - if [ "$(stat -c %u /consul/data)" != "$(id -u consul)" ]; then - chown consul:consul /consul/data - fi - if [ "$(stat -c %u /consul/config)" != "$(id -u consul)" ]; then - chown consul:consul /consul/config - fi - - # If requested, set the capability to bind to privileged ports before - # we drop to the non-root user. Note that this doesn't work with all - # storage drivers (it won't work with AUFS). - if [ ! -z ${CONSUL_ALLOW_PRIVILEGED_PORTS+x} ]; then - setcap "cap_net_bind_service=+ep" /bin/consul - fi - -# Instead of using this we run our pod as a non-root user. -# set -- su-exec consul:consul "$@" -fi - -exec "$@" |