This commit introduces a the Kilo website. It is generated with
Docusaurus and can be deployed with standard services like Netlify.
Signed-off-by: Lucas Servén Marín <lserven@gmail.com>
This commit allows DNS names to be used when specifying the endpoint
for a node in the WireGuard mesh. This is useful in many scenarios, in
particular when operating an IoT device whose public IP is dynamic. This
change allows the administrator to use a dynamic DNS name in the node's
endpoint.
One of the side-effects of this change is that the WireGuard port can
now be specified individually for each node in the mesh, if the
administrator wishes to do so.
*Note*: this commit introduces a breaking change; the
`force-external-ip` node annotation has been removed; its functionality
has been ported over to the `force-endpoint` annotation. This annotation
is documented in the annotations.md file. The expected content of this
annotation is no longer a CIDR but rather a host:port. The host can be
either a DNS name or an IP.
Signed-off-by: Lucas Servén Marín <lserven@gmail.com>
This commit updates the well-known label to determine the region of the
node to topology.kubernetes.io/region, which is the new standard as
defined by the Kubernetes documentation, now that
failure-domain.beta.kubernetes.io/region has been deprecated.
This commit adds basic support to run in compatibility mode with
Flannel. This allows clusters running Flannel as their principal
networking solution to leverage some advances Kilo features. In certain
Flannel setups, the clusters can even leverage muti-cloud. For this, the
cluster needs to either run in a full mesh, or Flannel needs to use the
API server's external IP address.
This commit enables Kilo to work as an independent networking provider.
This is done by leveraging CNI. Kilo brings the necessary CNI plugins to
operate and takes care of all networking.
Add-on compatibility for Calico, Flannel, etc, will be re-introduced
shortly.