264 lines
7.7 KiB
Markdown
264 lines
7.7 KiB
Markdown
## Intro
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See [minikube installation guide](https://github.com/kubernetes/minikube/releases)
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Make sure you use the latest version of Minikube.
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After the installation, issue
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```bash
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$ minikube start
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```
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Note: if you are running on a Mac, you may also use Docker for Mac Kubernetes instead of a docker-machine.
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Once you have it started successfully, use [the quickstart
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guide](https://github.com/kubernetes/minikube#quickstart) in order to test your
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that your setup is working.
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Note: if you use multiple Kubernetes clusters, you can switch to Minikube with
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`kubectl config use-context minikube`
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## Create ConfigMap
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ConfigMap is used to store the configuration of the operator
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```bash
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$ kubectl --context minikube create -f manifests/configmap.yaml
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```
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## Deploying the operator
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First you need to install the service account definition in your Minikube cluster.
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```bash
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$ kubectl --context minikube create -f manifests/operator-service-account-rbac.yaml
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```
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Next deploy the postgres-operator from the docker image Zalando is using:
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```bash
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$ kubectl --context minikube create -f manifests/postgres-operator.yaml
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```
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If you prefer to build the image yourself follow up down below.
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## Check if CustomResourceDefinition has been registered
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```bash
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$ kubectl --context minikube get crd
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NAME KIND
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postgresqls.acid.zalan.do CustomResourceDefinition.v1beta1.apiextensions.k8s.io
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```
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## Create a new Spilo cluster
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```bash
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$ kubectl --context minikube create -f manifests/minimal-postgres-manifest.yaml
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```
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## Watch pods being created
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```bash
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$ kubectl --context minikube get pods -w --show-labels
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```
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## Connect to PostgreSQL
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We can use the generated secret of the `postgres` robot user to connect to our `acid-minimal-cluster` master running in Minikube:
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```bash
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$ export HOST_PORT=$(minikube service acid-minimal-cluster --url | sed 's,.*/,,')
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$ export PGHOST=$(echo $HOST_PORT | cut -d: -f 1)
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$ export PGPORT=$(echo $HOST_PORT | cut -d: -f 2)
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$ export PGPASSWORD=$(kubectl --context minikube get secret postgres.acid-minimal-cluster.credentials -o 'jsonpath={.data.password}' | base64 -d)
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$ psql -U postgres
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```
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# Setup development environment
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The following steps guide you through the setup to work on the operator itself.
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## Setting up Go
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Postgres operator is written in Go. Use the [installation
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instructions](https://golang.org/doc/install#install) if you don't have Go on
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your system. You won't be able to compile the operator with Go older than 1.7.
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We recommend installing [the latest one](https://golang.org/dl/).
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Go projects expect their source code and all the dependencies to be located
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under the [GOPATH](https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/GOPATH). Normally, one
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would create a directory for the GOPATH (i.e. ~/go) and place the source code
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under the ~/go/src subdirectories.
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Given the schema above, the postgres operator source code located at
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`github.com/zalando-incubator/postgres-operator` should be put at
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-`~/go/src/github.com/zalando-incubator/postgres-operator`.
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```bash
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$ export GOPATH=~/go
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$ mkdir -p ${GOPATH}/src/github.com/zalando-incubator/
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$ cd ${GOPATH}/src/github.com/zalando-incubator/
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$ git clone https://github.com/zalando-incubator/postgres-operator.git
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```
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## Building the operator
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You need Glide to fetch all dependencies. Install it with:
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```bash
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$ make tools
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```
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Next, install dependencies with glide by issuing:
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```bash
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$ make deps
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```
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This would take a while to complete. You have to redo `make deps` every time
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you dependencies list changes, i.e. after adding a new library dependency.
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Build the operator docker image and pushing it to Pier One:
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```bash
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$ make docker push
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```
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You may define the TAG variable to assign an explicit tag to your docker image
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and the IMAGE to set the image name. By default, the tag is computed with
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`git describe --tags --always --dirty` and the image is
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`pierone.stups.zalan.do/acid/postgres-operator`
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Building the operator binary (for testing the out-of-cluster option):
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```bash
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$ make
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```
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The binary will be placed into the build directory.
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## Deploying self build image
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The fastest way to run your docker image locally is to reuse the docker from
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minikube. The following steps will get you the docker image built and deployed.
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```bash
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$ eval $(minikube docker-env)
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$ export TAG=$(git describe --tags --always --dirty)
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$ make docker
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$ sed -e "s/\(image\:.*\:\).*$/\1$TAG/" manifests/postgres-operator.yaml|kubectl --context minikube create -f -
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```
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# Debugging the operator
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There is a web interface in the operator to observe its internal state. The
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operator listens on port 8080. It is possible to expose it to the
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localhost:8080 by doing:
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$ kubectl --context minikube port-forward $(kubectl --context minikube get pod -l name=postgres-operator -o jsonpath={.items..metadata.name}) 8080:8080
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The inner 'query' gets the name of the postgres operator pod, and the outer
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enables port forwarding. Afterwards, you can access the operator API with:
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$ curl http://127.0.0.1:8080/$endpoint| jq .
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The available endpoints are listed below. Note that the worker ID is an integer
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from 0 up to 'workers' - 1 (value configured in the operator configuration and
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defaults to 4)
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* /databases - all databases per cluster
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* /workers/all/queue - state of the workers queue (cluster events to process)
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* /workers/$id/queue - state of the queue for the worker $id
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* /workers/$id/logs - log of the operations performed by a given worker
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* /clusters/ - list of teams and clusters known to the operator
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* /clusters/$team - list of clusters for the given team
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* /cluster/$team/$clustername - detailed status of the cluster, including the
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specifications for CRD, master and replica services, endpoints and
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statefulsets, as well as any errors and the worker that cluster is assigned
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to.
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* /cluster/$team/$clustername/logs/ - logs of all operations performed to the
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cluster so far.
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* /cluster/$team/$clustername/history/ - history of cluster changes triggered
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by the changes of the manifest (shows the somewhat obscure diff and what
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exactly has triggered the change)
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The operator also supports pprof endpoints listed at the
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[pprof package](https://golang.org/pkg/net/http/pprof/), such as:
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* /debug/pprof/
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* /debug/pprof/cmdline
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* /debug/pprof/profile
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* /debug/pprof/symbol
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* /debug/pprof/trace
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It's possible to attach a debugger to troubleshoot postgres-operator inside a
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docker container. It's possible with gdb and
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[delve](https://github.com/derekparker/delve). Since the latter one is a
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specialized debugger for golang, we will use it as an example. To use it you
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need:
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* Install delve locally
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```
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go get -u github.com/derekparker/delve/cmd/dlv
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```
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* Add following dependencies to the `Dockerfile`
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```
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RUN apk --no-cache add go git musl-dev
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RUN go get github.com/derekparker/delve/cmd/dlv
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```
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* Update the `Makefile` to build the project with debugging symbols. For that
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you need to add `gcflags` to a build target for corresponding OS (e.g. linux)
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```
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-gcflags "-N -l"
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```
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* Run `postgres-operator` under the delve. For that you need to replace
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`ENTRYPOINT` with the following `CMD`:
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```
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CMD ["/root/go/bin/dlv", "--listen=:DLV_PORT", "--headless=true", "--api-version=2", "exec", "/postgres-operator"]
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```
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* Forward the listening port
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```
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kubectl port-forward POD_NAME DLV_PORT:DLV_PORT
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```
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* Attach to it
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```
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$ dlv connect 127.0.0.1:DLV_PORT
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```
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## Unit tests
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To run all unit tests, you can simply do:
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```
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$ go test ./...
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```
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For go 1.9 `vendor` directory would be excluded automatically. For previous
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versions you can exclude it manually:
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```
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$ go test $(glide novendor)
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```
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In case if you need to debug your unit test, it's possible to use delve:
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```
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$ dlv test ./pkg/util/retryutil/
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Type 'help' for list of commands.
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(dlv) c
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PASS
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```
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