This repository contains a controller to manage static IP address allocations in Cluster API Provider Metal3.
For more information about this controller and related repositories, see metal3.io.
| IPAM version | CAPM3 version | Cluster API version | IPAM Release |
|---|---|---|---|
| v1alpha1 (v1.1.X) | v1beta1 (v1.1.X) | v1beta1 (v1.1.X) | v1.1.X |
| v1alpha1 (v1.2.X) | v1beta1 (v1.2.X) | v1beta1 (v1.2.X) | v1.2.X |
| v1alpha1 (v1.3.X) | v1beta1 (v1.3.X) | v1beta1 (v1.3.X) | v1.3.X |
| v1alpha1 (v1.4.X) | v1beta1 (v1.4.X) | v1beta1 (v1.4.X) | v1.4.X |
| v1alpha1 (v1.5.X) | v1beta1 (v1.5.X) | v1beta1 (v1.5.X) | v1.5.X |
| v1alpha1 (v1.6.X) | v1beta1 (v1.6.X) | v1beta1 (v1.6.X) | v1.6.X |
| v1alpha1 (v1.7.X) | v1beta1 (v1.7.X) | v1beta1 (v1.7.X) | v1.7.X |
| v1alpha1 (v1.8.X) | v1beta1 (v1.8.X) | v1beta1 (v1.8.X) | v1.8.X |
| v1alpha1 (v1.9.X) | v1beta1 (v1.9.X) | v1beta1 (v1.9.X) | v1.9.X |
| v1alpha1 (v1.10.X) | v1beta1 (v1.10.X) | v1beta1 (v1.10.X) | v1.10.X |
| v1alpha1 (v1.11.X) | v1beta1 (v1.11.X) | v1beta1 (v1.11.X) | v1.11.X |
See metal3-dev-env for an end-to-end development and test environment for cluster-api-provider-metal3 and baremetal-operator.
See the API Documentation for details about the objects used with this controller. You can also see the cluster deployment workflow for the outline of the deployment process.
Deploys IPAM CRDs and deploys IPAM controllers
make deployRuns IPAM controller locally
kubectl scale -n metal3-ipam-system \
deployment.v1.apps/metal3-ipam-controller-manager --replicas 0
make run make deploy-examples make delete-examplesThere is a known limitation when kubectl apply and kubectl delete for an
IPClaim are executed in rapid succession (within the same second). In such
cases, the IPClaim may be deleted, but the associated IPAddress might not
be removed as expected, potentially leading to resource inconsistencies. This
is not a common or typical use case. In normal scenarios, the operations work
as expected. Since this issue occurs only under rare timing conditions, it has
been classified as a low-priority item. We plan to address it in a future and
it is currently documented as a known limitation.