Commit Graph

8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Eric Haberkorn ebd5513d4b
Refactor failover code to use Envoy's aggregate clusters (#14178) 2022-08-12 14:30:46 -04:00
Dan Upton ebf74d08fd
test: run Envoy integration tests against both servers and clients (#13610) 2022-06-28 13:15:45 +01:00
R.B. Boyer 71d45a3460
Support Incremental xDS mode (#9855)
This adds support for the Incremental xDS protocol when using xDS v3. This is best reviewed commit-by-commit and will not be squashed when merged.

Union of all commit messages follows to give an overarching summary:

xds: exclusively support incremental xDS when using xDS v3

Attempts to use SoTW via v3 will fail, much like attempts to use incremental via v2 will fail.
Work around a strange older envoy behavior involving empty CDS responses over incremental xDS.
xds: various cleanups and refactors that don't strictly concern the addition of incremental xDS support

Dissolve the connectionInfo struct in favor of per-connection ResourceGenerators instead.
Do a better job of ensuring the xds code uses a well configured logger that accurately describes the connected client.
xds: pull out checkStreamACLs method in advance of a later commit

xds: rewrite SoTW xDS protocol tests to use protobufs rather than hand-rolled json strings

In the test we very lightly reuse some of the more boring protobuf construction helper code that is also technically under test. The important thing of the protocol tests is testing the protocol. The actual inputs and outputs are largely already handled by the xds golden output tests now so these protocol tests don't have to do double-duty.

This also updates the SoTW protocol test to exclusively use xDS v2 which is the only variant of SoTW that will be supported in Consul 1.10.

xds: default xds.Server.AuthCheckFrequency at use-time instead of construction-time
2021-04-29 13:54:05 -05:00
R.B. Boyer 5afd04897c
test: use direct service registration in envoy integration tests (#9138)
This has the biggest impact on enterprise test cases that use namespaced
registrations, which prior to this change sometimes failed the initial
registration because the namespace was not yet created.
2020-11-09 13:59:46 -06:00
R.B. Boyer 9801ef8eb1
agent: enable enable_central_service_config by default (#8746) 2020-10-01 09:19:14 -05:00
Matt Keeler 0041102e29
Change where the envoy snapshots get put when a test fails (#7298)
This will allow us to capture them in CI
2020-03-05 16:01:10 -05:00
R.B. Boyer 2cd5a7e542
tests: make envoy integration tests more tolerant of internal retries that may inflate counters (#6539)
This should remove false positives that look like:

    cluster.s2.default.primary.*cx_total - expected count: 2, actual count: 3
2019-09-25 09:08:42 -05:00
R.B. Boyer 8e22d80e35
connect: fix failover through a mesh gateway to a remote datacenter (#6259)
Failover is pushed entirely down to the data plane by creating envoy
clusters and putting each successive destination in a different load
assignment priority band. For example this shows that normally requests
go to 1.2.3.4:8080 but when that fails they go to 6.7.8.9:8080:

- name: foo
  load_assignment:
    cluster_name: foo
    policy:
      overprovisioning_factor: 100000
    endpoints:
    - priority: 0
      lb_endpoints:
      - endpoint:
          address:
            socket_address:
              address: 1.2.3.4
              port_value: 8080
    - priority: 1
      lb_endpoints:
      - endpoint:
          address:
            socket_address:
              address: 6.7.8.9
              port_value: 8080

Mesh gateways route requests based solely on the SNI header tacked onto
the TLS layer. Envoy currently only lets you configure the outbound SNI
header at the cluster layer.

If you try to failover through a mesh gateway you ideally would
configure the SNI value per endpoint, but that's not possible in envoy
today.

This PR introduces a simpler way around the problem for now:

1. We identify any target of failover that will use mesh gateway mode local or
   remote and then further isolate any resolver node in the compiled discovery
   chain that has a failover destination set to one of those targets.

2. For each of these resolvers we will perform a small measurement of
   comparative healths of the endpoints that come back from the health API for the
   set of primary target and serial failover targets. We walk the list of targets
   in order and if any endpoint is healthy we return that target, otherwise we
   move on to the next target.

3. The CDS and EDS endpoints both perform the measurements in (2) for the
   affected resolver nodes.

4. For CDS this measurement selects which TLS SNI field to use for the cluster
   (note the cluster is always going to be named for the primary target)

5. For EDS this measurement selects which set of endpoints will populate the
   cluster. Priority tiered failover is ignored.

One of the big downsides to this approach to failover is that the failover
detection and correction is going to be controlled by consul rather than
deferring that entirely to the data plane as with the prior version. This also
means that we are bound to only failover using official health signals and
cannot make use of data plane signals like outlier detection to affect
failover.

In this specific scenario the lack of data plane signals is ok because the
effectiveness is already muted by the fact that the ultimate destination
endpoints will have their data plane signals scrambled when they pass through
the mesh gateway wrapper anyway so we're not losing much.

Another related fix is that we now use the endpoint health from the
underlying service, not the health of the gateway (regardless of
failover mode).
2019-08-05 13:30:35 -05:00