* Add `is` and `test` helpers in a similar vein to `can`
Adds 2 new helpers in a similar vein to ember-cans can:
- `is` allows you to use vocab/phrases such as (is "something model") which calls isSomething() on the models ability.
- `test` allows you to use vocab/phrases such as (test "is something model") or (test "can something model")which calls isSomething() / canSomething() on the models ability. Mostly using the is helper and the can helper. It's basically the is/can helper combined.
* Adds TextInput component + related modifiers/helpers/machines/services (#11189)
Adds a few new components/modifiers/helpers to aid building forms.
- state-chart helper, used in lieu of a more generic approach for requiring our statecharts.
- A few modifications to our existing disabled modifier.
- A new 'validation' modifier, a super small form validation approach built to make use of state charts (optionally). Eventually we should be able to replace our current validation approach (ember-changeset-validations + extra deps) with this.
- A new TextInput component, which is the first of our new components specifically to make it easy to build forms with validations. This is still a WIP, I left some comments in pointing out where this one would be progressed, but as we don't need the planned functionality yet, I left it where it was. All of this will be fleshed out more at a later date.
Documentation is included for all of ^
* ui: Adds initial CRUD for partitions (#11190)
Adds basic CRUD support for partitions. Engineering-wise probably the biggest takeaway here is that we needed to write very little javascript code to add this entire feature, and the little javascript we did need to write was very straightforwards. Everything is pretty much just HTML. Another note to make is that both ember-changeset and ember-data (model layer things) are now completely abstracted away from the view layer of the application.
New components:
- Consul::Partition::Form
- Consul::Partition::List
- Consul::Partition::Notifications
- Consul::Partition::SearchBar
- Consul::Partition::Selector
See additional documentation here for more details
New Route templates:
- index.hbs partition listing/searching/filtering
- edit.hbs partition editing and creation
Additionally:
There is some additional debug work here for better observability and to prevent any errors regarding our href-to usage when a dc is not available in our documentation site.
Our softDelete functionality has been DRYed out a little to be used across two repos.
isLinkable was removed from our ListCollection component for lists like upstream and service listing, and instead use our new is helper from within the ListCollection, meaning we've added a few more lighterweight templateOnly components.
* ui: Exclude all debug-like files from the build (#11211)
This PR adds **/*-debug.* to our test/prod excluded files (realised I needed to add test-support.js also so added that here as its more or less the same thing). Conditionally juggling ES6 static imports (specifically debug ones) for this was also getting a little hairy, so I moved it all to use the same approach as our conditional routes. All in all it brings the vendor build back down to ~430kb gzipped.
From an engineers perspective, whenever specifying colors from now on we should use the form:
```
color: rgb(var(--tone-red-500));
```
Please note:
- Use rgb. This lets us do this like rgb(var(--tone-red-500) / 10%) so we can use a 10% opacity red-500 if we ever need to whilst still making use of our color tokens.
- Use --tone-colorName-000 (so the prefix tone). Previously we could use a mix of --gray-500: $gray-500 (note the left hand CSS prop and right hand SASS var) for the things we need to theme currently. As we no longer use SASS we can't do --gray-500: --gray-500, so we now do --tone-gray-500: --gray-500.
Just for clarity after that, whenever specifying a color anywhere, use rgb and --tone. There is only one reason where you might not use tone, and that is if you never want a color to be affected by a theme (for example a background shadow probably always should use --black)
There are a 2 or 3 left for the code editor, plus our custom-query values
> In the future, this should all be moved to each individual repository now, which will mean we can finally get rid of this service.
This PR moves reconciliation to 'each individual repository'. I stopped short of getting rid of the service, but its so small now we pretty much don't need it. I'd rather wait until I look at the equivalent DataSink service and see if we can get rid of both equivalent services together (this also currently dependant on work soon to be merged)
Reconciliation of models (basically doing the extra work to clean up the ember-data store and bring our frontend 'truth' into line with the actual backend truth) when blocking/long-polling on different views/filters of data is slightly more complicated due to figuring out what should be cleaned up and what should be left in the store. This is especially apparent for KVs.
I built in a such a way to hopefully make sure it will all make sense for the future. I also checked that this all worked nicely with all our models, even KV which has never supported blocking queries. I left all that work in so that if we want to enable blocking queries/live updates for KV it now just involves deleting a couple of lines of code.
There is a tonne of old stuff that we can clean up here now (our 'fake headers' that we pass around) and I've added that to my list of thing for a 'Big Cleanup PR' that will remove lots of code that we no longer require.
Add changelog to document what changed.
Add entry to telemetry section of the website to document what changed
Add docs to the usagemetric endpoint to help document the metrics in code
Our DataSource came in very iteratively, when we first started using it we specifically tried not to use it for things that would require portions of the @src="" attribute to be URL encoded (so things like service names couldn't be used, but dc etc would be fine). We then gradually added an easy way to url encode the @src="" attributes with a uri helper and began to use the DataSource component more and more. This meant that some DataSource usage continued to be used without our uri helper.
Recently we hit #10901 which was a direct result of us not encoding @src values/URIs (I didn't realise this was one of the places that required URL encoding) and not going back over things to finish things off once we had implemented our uri helper, resulting in ~half of the codebase using it and ~half of it not.
Now that almost all of the UI uses our DataSource component, this PR makes it even harder to not use the uri helper, by wrapping the string that it requires in a private URI class/object, that is then expected/asserted within the DataSource component/service. This means that as a result of this PR you cannot pass a plain string to the DataSource component without seeing an error in your JS console, which in turn means you have to use the uri helper, and it's very very hard to not URL encode any dynamic/user provided values, which otherwise could lead to bugs/errors similar to the one mentioned above.
The error that you see when you don't use the uri helper is currently a 'soft' dev time only error, but like our other functionality that produces a soft error when you mistakenly pass an undefined value to a uri, at some point soon we will make these hard failing "do not do this" errors.
Both of these 'soft error' DX features have been used this to great effect to implement our Admin Partition feature and these kind of things will minimize the amount of these types of bugs moving forwards in a preventative rather than curative manner. Hopefully these are the some of the kinds of things that get added to our codebase that prevent a multitude of problems and therefore are often never noticed/appreciated.
Additionally here we moved the remaining non-uri using DataSources to use uri (that were now super easy to find), and also fixed up a place where I noticed (due to the soft errors) where we were sometimes passing undefined values to a uri call.
The work here also led me to find another couple of non-important 'bugs' that I've PRed already separately, one of which is yet to be merged (#11105), hence the currently failing tests here. I'll rebase that once that PR is in and the tests here should then pass 🤞
Lastly, I didn't go the whole hog here to make DataSink also be this strict with its uri usage, there is a tiny bit more work on DataSink as a result of recently work, so I may (or may not) make DataSink equally as strict as part of that work in a separate PR.
This PR adds a check to policy, role and namespace list pages to make sure the user has can write those things before offering to create them via a button. (The create page/form would then be a read-only form)
* ui: Don't show the CRD menu for read-only intentions
The UI bug here manifests itself only when a user/token is configured to have read-only access to intentions. Instead of only letting folks click to see a read only page of the intention, we would show an additional message saying that the intention was read-only due to it being 'Managed by [a kubernetes] CRD'. Whilst the intention was still read only, this extra message was still confusing for users.
This PR fixes up the conditional logic and further moves the logic to use ember-can - looking at the history of the files in question, this bug snuck itself in partly due to it being 'permission-y type stuff' previous to using ember-can and when something being editable or not was nothing to do with ACLs. Then we moved to start using ember-can without completely realising what IsEditable previously meant. So overall the code here is a tiny bit clearer/cleaner by adding a proper can view CRD intention instead of overloading the idea of 'editability'.
* ui: Gracefully recover from non-existent DC errors
This PR fixes what happens in the UI if you try to navigate to a non-existing DC.
When we received a 500 error from an API response due to a non-existent DC, previously we would show a 404 error, which is what we were trying to convey. But in the spirit of the UI being a 'thin client', its probably best to just show the 500 error from the API response, which may help folks to debug any issues better.
* Automatically set the CONSUL_DATACENTER_LOCAL env var for testing
* ui: Ignore response from API for KV permissions
Currently there is no way for us to use our HTTP authorization API
endpoint to tell us whether a user has access to any KVs (including the
case where a user may not have access to the root KV store, but do have
access to a sub item)
This is a little weird still as in the above case the user would click
on this link and still get a 403 for the root, and then have to manually
type in the URL for the KV they do have access to.
Despite this we think this change makes sense as at least something about KV is
visible in the main navigation.
Once we have the ability to know if any KVs are accessible, we can add
this guard back in.
We'd initially just removed the logic around the button, but then
noticed there may be further related KV issues due to the nested nature
of KVs so we finally decided on simply ignoring the responses from the
HTTP API, essentially reverting the KV area back to being a thin client.
This means when things are revisited in the backend we can undo this
easily change in one place.
* Move acceptance tests to use ACLs perms instead of KV ones
This PR supersedes #10706 and fixes#10686 whilst making sure that saving intentions continues to work.
The original fix in #10706 ignored the change action configured for the change event on the menus, meaning that the selected source/destination namespace could not be set by the user when editing/creating intentions. This, coupled with the fact that using the later intention exact endpoint for API requests endpoint means that you could not use wildcard namespaces for saving intentions.
All in all this meant that intentions could no longer be saved using the UI (whilst using ENT)
This PR reverts #10706 to fix the intention saving issue, and adds a fix for the original visual issue of nspaces doubling up in the menu once clicked. This meant repeating the existing functionality for nspaces aswell as services. It did seem strange to me that the original issue was only apparent for the nspace menus and not the service menus which should all function exactly the same way.
There is potentially more to come here partly related to what the exact functionality should be, but I'm working with other folks to figure out what the best way forwards is longer term. In the meantime this brings us back to the original functionality with the visual issue fixed.
Squashed commits:
* Revert "ui: Fix dropdown option duplications (#10706)"
This reverts commit eb5512fb74.
* ui: Ensure additional nspaces are added to the unique list of nspaces
* Add some acceptance tests
Fixes#10563
The `resourceVersion` map was doing two jobs prior to this PR. The first job was
to track what version of every resource we know envoy currently has. The
second was to track subscriptions to those resources (by way of the empty
string for a version). This mostly works out fine, but occasionally leads to
consul removing a resource and accidentally (effectively) unsubscribing at the
same time.
The fix separates these two jobs. When all of the resources for a subscription
are removed we continue to track the subscription until envoy explicitly
unsubscribes
Signed-off-by: Jakub Sokołowski <jakub@status.im>
* agent: add failures_before_warning setting
The new setting allows users to specify the number of check failures
that have to happen before a service status us updated to be `warning`.
This allows for more visibility for detected issues without creating
alerts and pinging administrators. Unlike the previous behavior, which
caused the service status to not update until it reached the configured
`failures_before_critical` setting, now Consul updates the Web UI view
with the `warning` state and the output of the service check when
`failures_before_warning` is breached.
The default value of `FailuresBeforeWarning` is the same as the value of
`FailuresBeforeCritical`, which allows for retaining the previous default
behavior of not triggering a warning.
When `FailuresBeforeWarning` is set to a value higher than that of
`FailuresBeforeCritical it has no effect as `FailuresBeforeCritical`
takes precedence.
Resolves: https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/issues/10680
Signed-off-by: Jakub Sokołowski <jakub@status.im>
Co-authored-by: Jakub Sokołowski <jakub@status.im>
Licensing recently changed in Consul v1.10 and along with those changes
the client API was updated such that PutLicense and ResetLicense both
immediately return an error to avoid an unecessary round trip that will
inevitably fail.
For reference, see: 08eb600ee5
Unfortunately, this change broke forward compatibility such that a v1.10
client can no longer make these requests to a v1.9 server which is a
valid use case.
This commit reintroduces these requests to fix this compatibility
breakage but leaves the deprecation notices in tact.
This commit fixes a problem where parent Failovers where not showing (subset children were fine).
Seems to have been introduced with a move/glimmer upgrade here #9154 so I'm adding a 1.9.x backport.
This commit fixes 2 problems with our OIDC flow in the UI, the first is straightforwards, the second is relatively more in depth:
1: A typo (1.10.1 only)
During #10503 we injected our settings service into the our oidc-provider service, there are some comments in the PR as to the whys and wherefores for this change (https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/pull/10503/files#diff-aa2ffda6d0a966ba631c079fa3a5f60a2a1bdc7eed5b3a98ee7b5b682f1cb4c3R28)
Fixing the typo so it was no longer looking for an unknown service (repository/settings > settings)
fixed this.
2: URL encoding (1.9.x, 1.10.x)
TL;DR: /oidc/authorize/provider/with/slashes/code/with/slashes/status/with/slashes should be /oidc/authorize/provider%2Fwith%2Fslashes/code%2Fwith%2Fslashes/status%2Fwith%2Fslashes
When we receive our authorization response back from the OIDC 3rd party, we POST the code and status data from that response back to consul via acallback as part of the OIDC flow. From what I remember back when this feature was originally added, the method is a POST request to avoid folks putting secret-like things into API requests/URLs/query params that are more likely to be visible to the human eye, and POSTing is expected behaviour.
Additionally, in the UI we identify all external resources using unique resource identifiers. Our OIDC flow uses these resources and their identifiers to perform the OIDC flow using a declarative state machine. If any information in these identifiers uses non-URL-safe characters then these characters require URL encoding and we added a helper a while back to specifically help us to do this once we started using this for things that required URL encoding.
The final fix here make sure that we URL encode code and status before using them with one of our unique resource identifiers, just like we do with the majority of other places where we use these identifiers.
* deps: upgrade gogo-protobuf to v1.3.2
* go mod tidy using go 1.16
* proto: regen protobufs after upgrading gogo/protobuf
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
Missed the need to add support for unix domain socket config via
api/command line. This is a variant of the problems described in
it is easy to drop one.
Signed-off-by: Mark Anderson <manderson@hashicorp.com>
Consul 1.10 (PR #9792) introduced the ability to specify a prefix when
importing KV's. This however introduced a regression on Windows
systems which breaks `kv import`. The key name is joined with
specified`-prefix` using `filepath.Join()` which uses a forward slash
(/) to delimit values on Unix-based systems, and a backslash (\) to
delimit values on Windows – the latter of which is incompatible with
Consul KV paths.
This commit replaces filepath.Join() with path.Join() which uses a
forward slash as the delimiter, providing consistent key join behavior
across supported operating systems.
Fixes#10583
Replace call to /agent/self with /status/leader to verify agent
reachability before initializing a watch. This endpoint is not guarded
by ACLs, and as such can be queried by any API client regardless of
their permissions.
Fixes#9353
* defer setting the state before returning to avoid being stuck in `INITIALIZING` state
* add changelog
* move comment with the right if statement
* ca: report state transition error from setSTate
* update comment to reflect state transition
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
Add support for setting QueryOptions on the following agent API endpoints:
- /agent/health/service/name/:name
- /agent/health/service/id/:id
- /agent/service/maintenance/:id
This follows the same pattern used in #9903 to support query options
for other agent API endpoints.
Resolves#9710
Knowing that blocking queries are firing does not provide much
information on its own. If we know the correlation IDs we can
piece together which parts of the snapshot have been populated.
Some of these responses might be empty from the blocking
query timing out. But if they're returning quickly I think we
can reasonably assume they contain data.
* return an error when the index is not valid
* check response as bool when applying `CAOpSetConfig`
* remove check for bool response
* fix error message and add check to test
* fix comment
* add changelog
If multiple instances of a service are co-located on the same node then
their proxies will all share a cache entry for their resolved service
configuration. This is because the cache key contains the name of the
watched service but does not take into account the ID of the watching
proxies.
This means that there will be multiple agent service manager watches
that can wake up on the same cache update. These watchers then
concurrently modify the value in the cache when merging the resolved
config into the local proxy definitions.
To avoid this concurrent map write we will only delete the key from
opaque config in the local proxy definition after the merge, rather
than from the cached value before the merge.
This change adds a new `dns_config.recursor_strategy` option which
controls how Consul queries DNS resolvers listed in the `recursors`
config option. The supported options are `sequential` (default), and
`random`.
Closes#8807
Co-authored-by: Blake Covarrubias <blake@covarrubi.as>
Co-authored-by: Priyanka Sengupta <psengupta@flatiron.com>
Previously when namespaces were enabled, we weren't requesting permission for the actively selected namespace, and instead always checking the permissions for the default namespace.
This commit ensures we request permissions for the actively selected namespace.
This commit adds a bit of string wrangling to avoid the keys in our javascript source file also being transformed. Additionally, whilst looking at this we decided that Maps are a better dictionary than javascript objects, so we moved to use those here also (but this doesn't affect the issue)
Adds 'can access ACLs' which means one of two things
1. When ACLs are disabled I can access the 'please enable ACLs' page
2. When ACLs are enabled, its the same as canRead
When clicking to create a KV within folder name, would would be viewing a form that was a form for creating a KV in the root, which when the user clicked to save, saved the KV in the root.
For the moment at least I've removed the code that strips double slashes, and whilst this isn't ideal, it looks like we've picked up one of those bugs that turns into a 'feature', and completely reworking KV to not rely on the double slashes is not really an option right now.
The compatv2 integration tests were failing because they use an older CLI version with a newer
HTTP API. This commit restores the GRPCPort field to the DebugConfig output to allow older
CIs to continue to fetch the port.
* ca: move provider creation into CAManager
This further decouples the CAManager from Server. It reduces the interface between them and
removes the need for the SetLogger method on providers.
* ca: move SignCertificate to CAManager
To reduce the scope of Server, and keep all the CA logic together
* ca: move SignCertificate to the file where it is used
* auto-config: move autoConfigBackend impl off of Server
Most of these methods are used exclusively for the AutoConfig RPC
endpoint. This PR uses a pattern that we've used in other places as an
incremental step to reducing the scope of Server.
* fix linter issues
* check error when `raftApplyMsgpack`
* ca: move SignCertificate to CAManager
To reduce the scope of Server, and keep all the CA logic together
* check expiry date of the intermediate before using it to sign a leaf
* fix typo in comment
Co-authored-by: Kyle Havlovitz <kylehav@gmail.com>
* Fix test name
* do not check cert start date
* wrap error to mention it is the intermediate expired
* Fix failing test
* update comment
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
* use shim to avoid sleep in test
* add root cert validation
* remove duplicate code
* Revert "fix linter issues"
This reverts commit 6356302b54f06c8f2dee8e59740409d49e84ef24.
* fix import issue
* gofmt leader_connect_ca
* add changelog entry
* update error message
Co-authored-by: Freddy <freddygv@users.noreply.github.com>
* fix error message in test
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
Co-authored-by: Kyle Havlovitz <kylehav@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Freddy <freddygv@users.noreply.github.com>
* add intermediate ca metric routine
* add Gauge config for intermediate cert
* Stop metrics routine when stopping leader
* add changelog entry
* updage changelog
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
* use variables instead of a map
* go imports sort
* Add metrics for primary and secondary ca
* start metrics routine in the right DC
* add telemetry documentation
* update docs
* extract expiry fetching in a func
* merge metrics for primary and secondary into signing ca metric
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
The default namespace, and the tokens default namespace (or its origin namespace) is slightly more complicated than other things we deal with in the UI, there's plenty of info/docs on this that I've added in this PR.
Previously:
When a namespace was not specified in the URL, we used to default to the default namespace. When you logged in using a token we automatically forward you the namespace URL that your token originates from, so you are then using the namespace for your token by default. You can of course then edit the URL to remove the namespace portion, or perhaps revisit the UI at the root path with you token already set. In these latter cases we would show you information from the default namespace. So if you had no namespace segment/portion in the URL, we would assume default, perform actions against the default namespace and highlight the default namespace in the namespace selector menu. If you wanted to perform actions in your tokens origin namespace you would have to manually select it from the namespace selector menu.
This PR:
Now, when you have no namespace segment/portion in the URL, we use the token's origin namespace instead (and if you don't have a token, we then use the default namespace like it was previously)
Notes/thoughts:
I originally thought we were showing an incorrectly selected namespace in the namespace selector, but it also matched up with what we were doing with the API, so it was in fact correct. The issue was more that we weren't selecting the origin namespace of the token for the user when a namespace segment was omitted from the URL. Seeing as we automatically forward you to the tokens origin namespace when you log in, and we were correctly showing the namespace we were acting on when you had no namespace segment in the URL (in the previous case default), I'm not entirely sure how much of an issue this actually was.
This characteristic of namespace+token+namespace is a little weird and its easy to miss a subtlety or two so I tried to add some documentation in here for future me/someone else (including some in depth code comment around one of the API endpoints where this is very subtle and very hard to miss). I'm not the greatest at words, so would be great to get some edits there if it doesn't seem clear to folks.
The fact that we used to save your previous datacenter and namespace into local storage for reasons also meant the interaction here was slightly more complicated than it needed to be, so whilst we were here we rejigged things slightly to satisfy said reasons still but not use local storage (we try and grab the info from higher up). A lot of the related code here is from before we had our Routlets which I think could probably make all of this a lot less complicated, but I didn't want to do a wholesale replacement in this PR, we can save that for a separate PR on its own at some point.
* trim carriage return from certificates when inserting rootCA in the inMemDB
* format rootCA properly when returning the CA on the connect CA endpoint
* Fix linter warnings
* Fix providers to trim certs before returning it
* trim newlines on write when possible
* add changelog
* make sure all provider return a trailing newline after the root and intermediate certs
* Fix endpoint to return trailing new line
* Fix failing test with vault provider
* make test more robust
* make sure all provider return a trailing newline after the leaf certs
* Check for suffix before removing newline and use function
* Add comment to consul provider
* Update change log
Co-authored-by: R.B. Boyer <4903+rboyer@users.noreply.github.com>
* fix typo
* simplify code callflow
Co-authored-by: R.B. Boyer <4903+rboyer@users.noreply.github.com>
* extract requireNewLine as shared func
* remove dependency to testify in testing file
* remove extra newline in vault provider
* Add cert newline fix to envoy xds
* remove new line from mock provider
* Remove adding a new line from provider and fix it when the cert is read
* Add a comment to explain the fix
* Add missing for leaf certs
* fix missing new line
* fix missing new line in leaf certs
* remove extra new line in test
* updage changelog
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
* fix in vault provider and when reading cache (RPC call)
* fix AWS provider
* fix failing test in the provider
* remove comments and empty lines
* add check for empty cert in test
* fix linter warnings
* add new line for leaf and private key
* use string concat instead of Sprintf
* fix new lines for leaf signing
* preallocate slice and remove append
* Add new line to `SignIntermediate` and `CrossSignCA`
Co-authored-by: R.B. Boyer <4903+rboyer@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
sync/atomic must be used with 64-bit aligned fields, and that alignment is difficult to
ensure unless the field is the first one in the struct.
https://golang.org/pkg/sync/atomic/#pkg-note-BUG.
As part of this change, we ensure that the SAN extensions are marked as
critical when the subject is empty so that AWS PCA tolerates the loss of
common names well and continues to function as a Connect CA provider.
Parts of this currently hack around a bug in crypto/x509 and can be
removed after https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/329129 lands in
a Go release.
Note: the AWS PCA tests do not run automatically, but the following
passed locally for me:
ENABLE_AWS_PCA_TESTS=1 go test ./agent/connect/ca -run TestAWS
* return an invalid record when asked for an addr dns with type other then A and AAAA
* add changelog
* fix ANY use case and add a test for it
* update changelog type
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
* return empty response if the question record type do not match for addr
* set comment in the right place
* return A\AAAA record in extra section if record type is not A\AAAA for addr
* Fix failing test
* remove commented code
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
* use require for test validation
* use variable to init struct
* fix failing test
* Update agent/dns.go
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
* Update .changelog/10401.txt
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
* Update agent/dns.go
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
* Update agent/dns.go
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
* Update agent/dns.go
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
* fix compilation error
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
* ui: Move all our icons to use CSS custom properties
The good thing about SASS vars is, if you don't use them they get removed from the final build. Whereas with CSS we have no tree-shaking to get rid of unused CSS custom properties. We can mostly work around this and for some things like colors its no big deal if we have some hex-codes in the build that we don't use as hex-codes are relatively small.
We've been slowly but surely moving all of our colors (and other things) to use CSS custom properties instead of SASS vars now that we have them available.
This commit makes use of the 'tree-shaking' abilities of @extend to ensure that we only compile in the icons that we use.
This commit is mostly churn-less as we already use @extend for the majority of our icons, so generally there is zero change here for working on the UI, but I did spot one single place where we were using SASS vars instead of @extend. This now uses the new form (second commit)
Interestingly this reduces our CSS payload by ~2kb to ~53kb (around 25kb of that is these icons)
* remove flush for each write to http response in the agent monitor endpoint
* fix race condition when we stop and start monitor multiple times, the doneCh is closed and never recover.
* start log reading goroutine before adding the sink to avoid filling the log channel before getting a chance of reading from it
* flush every 500ms to optimize log writing in the http server side.
* add changelog file
* add issue url to changelog
* fix changelog url
* Update changelog
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
* use ticker to flush and avoid race condition when flushing in a different goroutine
* stop the ticker when done
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
* Revert "fix race condition when we stop and start monitor multiple times, the doneCh is closed and never recover."
This reverts commit 1eeddf7a
* wait for log consumer loop to start before registering the sink
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
Updates to a cluster will clear the associated endpoints, and updates to
a listener will clear the associated routes. Update the incremental xDS
logic to account for this implicit cleanup so that we can finish warming
the clusters and listeners.
Fixes#10379
Previously we would return an error if duplicate paths were specified.
This could lead to problems in cases where a user has the same path,
say /healthz, on two different ports.
This validation was added to signal a potential misconfiguration.
Instead we will only check for duplicate listener ports, since that is
what would lead to ambiguity issues when generating xDS config.
In the future we could look into using a single listener and creating
distinct filter chains for each path/port.
* debug: remove the CLI check for debug_enabled
The API allows collecting profiles even debug_enabled=false as long as
ACLs are enabled. Remove this check from the CLI so that users do not
need to set debug_enabled=true for no reason.
Also:
- fix the API client to return errors on non-200 status codes for debug
endpoints
- improve the failure messages when pprof data can not be collected
Co-Authored-By: Dhia Ayachi <dhia@hashicorp.com>
* remove parallel test runs
parallel runs create a race condition that fail the debug tests
* snapshot the timestamp at the beginning of the capture
- timestamp used to create the capture sub folder is snapshot only at the beginning of the capture and reused for subsequent captures
- capture append to the file if it already exist
* Revert "snapshot the timestamp at the beginning of the capture"
This reverts commit c2d03346
* Refactor captureDynamic to extract capture logic for each item in a different func
* snapshot the timestamp at the beginning of the capture
- timestamp used to create the capture sub folder is snapshot only at the beginning of the capture and reused for subsequent captures
- capture append to the file if it already exist
* Revert "snapshot the timestamp at the beginning of the capture"
This reverts commit c2d03346
* Refactor captureDynamic to extract capture logic for each item in a different func
* extract wait group outside the go routine to avoid a race condition
* capture pprof in a separate go routine
* perform a single capture for pprof data for the whole duration
* add missing vendor dependency
* add a change log and fix documentation to reflect the change
* create function for timestamp dir creation and simplify error handling
* use error groups and ticker to simplify interval capture loop
* Logs, profile and traces are captured for the full duration. Metrics, Heap and Go routines are captured every interval
* refactor Logs capture routine and add log capture specific test
* improve error reporting when log test fail
* change test duration to 1s
* make time parsing in log line more robust
* refactor log time format in a const
* test on log line empty the earliest possible and return
Co-authored-by: Freddy <freddygv@users.noreply.github.com>
* rename function to captureShortLived
* more specific changelog
Co-authored-by: Paul Banks <banks@banksco.de>
* update documentation to reflect current implementation
* add test for behavior when invalid param is passed to the command
* fix argument line in test
* a more detailed description of the new behaviour
Co-authored-by: Paul Banks <banks@banksco.de>
* print success right after the capture is done
* remove an unnecessary error check
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
* upgraded github.com/google/pprof v0.0.0-20181206194817-3ea8567a2e57 => v0.0.0-20210601050228-01bbb1931b22
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
Co-authored-by: Freddy <freddygv@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Paul Banks <banks@banksco.de>
This PR adds cluster members to the metrics API. The number of members per
segment are reported as well as the total number of members.
Tested by running a multi-node cluster locally and ensuring the numbers were
correct. Also added unit test coverage to add the new expected gauges to
existing test cases.
Normally the named pipe would buffer up to 64k, but in some cases when a
soft limit is reached, they will start only buffering up to 4k.
In either case, we should not deadlock.
This commit changes the pipe-bootstrap command to first buffer all of
stdin into the process, before trying to write it to the named pipe.
This allows the process memory to act as the buffer, instead of the
named pipe.
Also changed the order of operations in `makeBootstrapPipe`. The new
test added in this PR showed that simply buffering in the process memory
was not enough to fix the issue. We also need to ensure that the
`pipe-bootstrap` process is started before we try to write to its
stdin. Otherwise the write will still block.
Also set stdout/stderr on the subprocess, so that any errors are visible
to the user.
* debug: remove the CLI check for debug_enabled
The API allows collecting profiles even debug_enabled=false as long as
ACLs are enabled. Remove this check from the CLI so that users do not
need to set debug_enabled=true for no reason.
Also:
- fix the API client to return errors on non-200 status codes for debug
endpoints
- improve the failure messages when pprof data can not be collected
Co-Authored-By: Dhia Ayachi <dhia@hashicorp.com>
* remove parallel test runs
parallel runs create a race condition that fail the debug tests
* Add changelog
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>