Follow up to https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/pull/10737#discussion_r680134445
Move the check for the Intention.DestinationName into the Authorizer to remove the
need to check what kind of Authorizer is being used.
It sounds like this check is only for legacy ACLs, so is probably just a safeguard
.
CatalogDestinationsOnly is a passthrough that would enable dialing
addresses outside of Consul's catalog. However, when this flag is set to
true only _connect_ endpoints for services can be dialed.
This flag is being renamed to signal that non-Connect endpoints can't be
dialed by transparent proxies when the value is set to true.
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.
The prior solution to call reply.Reset() aged poorly since newer fields
were added to the reply, but not added to Reset() leading serial
blocking query loops on the server to blend replies.
This could manifest as a service-defaults protocol change from
default=>http not reverting back to default after the config entry
reponsible was deleted.
* Save exposed HTTP or GRPC ports to the agent's store
* Add those the health checks API so we can retrieve them from the API
* Change redirect-traffic command to also exclude those ports from inbound traffic redirection when expose.checks is set to true.
Also fixes a bug with listing kind=mesh config entries. ValidateConfigEntryKind was only being used by
the List endpoint, and was yet another place where we have to enumerate all the kinds.
This commit removes ValidateConfigEntryKind and uses MakeConfigEntry instead. This change removes
the need to maintain two separate functions at the cost of creating an instance of the config entry which will be thrown away immediately.
Co-authored-by: R.B. Boyer <4903+rboyer@users.noreply.github.com>
Previously we would associate the address of a discovery chain target
with the discovery chain's filter chain. This was broken for a few reasons:
- If the upstream is a virtual service, the client proxy has no way of
dialing it because virtual services are not targets of their discovery
chains. The targets are distinct services. This is addressed by watching
the endpoints of all upstream services, not just their discovery chain
targets.
- If multiple discovery chains resolve to the same target, that would
lead to multiple filter chains attempting to match on the target's
virtual IP. This is addressed by only matching on the upstream's virtual
IP.
NOTE: this implementation requires an intention to the redirecting
virtual service and not just to the final destination. This is how
we can know that the virtual service is an upstream to watch.
A later PR will look into traversing discovery chains when computing
upstreams so that intentions are only required to the discovery chain
targets.
No config entry needs a Kind field. It is only used to determine the Go type to
target. As we introduce new config entries (like this one) we can remove the kind field
and have the GetKind method return the single supported value.
In this case (similar to proxy-defaults) the Name field is also unnecessary. We always
use the same value. So we can omit the name field entirely.
This config entry is being renamed primarily because in k8s the name
cluster could be confusing given that the config entry applies across
federated datacenters.
Additionally, this config entry will only apply to Consul as a service
mesh, so the more generic "cluster" name is not needed.
This way we avoid serializing these when empty. Otherwise users of the
latest version of the api submodule cannot interact with older versions
of Consul, because a new api client would send keys that the older Consul
doesn't recognize yet.
The zero value of these flags was already being excluded in the xDS
generation of circuit breaker/outlier detection config.
See: makeThresholdsIfNeeded and ToOutlierDetection.
This PR replaces the original boolean used to configure transparent
proxy mode. It was replaced with a string mode that can be set to:
- "": Empty string is the default for when the setting should be
defaulted from other configuration like config entries.
- "direct": Direct mode is how applications originally opted into the
mesh. Proxy listeners need to be dialed directly.
- "transparent": Transparent mode enables configuring Envoy as a
transparent proxy. Traffic must be captured and redirected to the
inbound and outbound listeners.
This PR also adds a struct for transparent proxy specific configuration.
Initially this is not stored as a pointer. Will revisit that decision
before GA.
* add http2 ping checks
* fix test issue
* add h2ping check to config resources
* add new test and docs for h2ping
* fix grammatical inconsistency in H2PING documentation
* resolve rebase conflicts, add test for h2ping tls verification failure
* api documentation for h2ping
* update test config data with H2PING
* add H2PING to protocol buffers and update changelog
* fix typo in changelog entry
This is needed in case the client proxy is in TransparentProxy mode.
Typically they won't have explicit configuration for every upstream, so
this ensures the settings can be applied to all of them when generating
xDS config.
Some TLS servers require SNI, but the Golang HTTP client doesn't
include it in the ClientHello when connecting to an IP address. This
change adds a new TLSServerName field to health check definitions to
optionally set it. This fixes#9473.
ResolveServiceConfig is called by service manager before the proxy
registration is in the catalog. Therefore we should pass proxy
registration flags in the request rather than trying to fetch
them from the state store (where they may not exist yet).
This is done because after removing ID and NodeName from
ServiceConfigRequest we will no longer know whether a request coming in
is for a Consul client earlier than v1.10.