Before, the one CSIJournal type was handling both configuration and
providing methods to make changes to the journal. This created the
temptation to modify the state of the global configuration object to
enact changes through the method calls.
This change creates a new type `journal.Connection` that takes the
monitors and credentials to create a short(er)-lived object to actually
read and make changes on the journal. This also avoid mixing the
arguments needed to connect to the cluster with the arguments needed
for the various journal read & update calls.
Signed-off-by: John Mulligan <jmulligan@redhat.com>
The SetNamespace setter function was called only once, immediately after
the creation of a volume journal object in cephfs only.
Remove this function so that it is no longer implied that this field can
be mutated after the journal is created. In it's place, use an extended
"constructor" NewCSIVolumeJournalWithNamespace that takes a namespace
value at create-time only.
Signed-off-by: John Mulligan <jmulligan@redhat.com>
The function SetCSIDirectorySuffix was used only one per (long-lived,
gloabl) journal object. It is simpler to construct the journal objects
with this needed parameter:
1. As it is required to function and non-optional AFAICT
2. Removes the temptation to mutate global object
3. Reduces LOC with exact same functionality
4. SetCSIDirectorySuffix would not behave correctly if called a 2nd time
anyway.
Point 4. means that if you called the function twice to change the
suffix when you previously had "csi.volumes.alice", you'd get
"csi.volumes.alice.bob" instead of "csi.volumes.bob" what one would
expect.
Signed-off-by: John Mulligan <jmulligan@redhat.com>
This new journal package isolates journal logic from the rest of util
and helps draw bright lines between what is a generic utility function
and what is csi journal logic.
Done partly as preparation for making use of go-ceph in journal.
No functional changes are made except to update references to allow the
code to compile.
Signed-off-by: John Mulligan <jmulligan@redhat.com>