Prior to this commit, secondary datacenters could not be initialized
as peering acceptors if ACLs were enabled. This is due to the fact that
internal server-to-server API calls would fail because the management
token was not generated. This PR makes it so that both primary and
secondary datacenters generate their own management token whenever
a leader is elected in their respective clusters.
This endpoint shows total services, connect service instances and
billable service instances in the local datacenter or globally. Billable
instances = total service instances - connect services - consul server instances.
* remove legacy tokens
* remove lingering legacy token references from docs
* update language and naming for token secrets and accessor IDs
* updates all tokenID references to clarify accessorID
* remove token type references and lookup tokens by accessorID index
* remove unnecessary constants
* replace additional tokenID param names
* Add warning info for deprecated -id parameter
Co-authored-by: Paul Glass <pglass@hashicorp.com>
* Update field comment
Co-authored-by: Paul Glass <pglass@hashicorp.com>
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Co-authored-by: Paul Glass <pglass@hashicorp.com>
* Add Peer field to service-defaults upstream overrides.
* add api changes, compat mode for service default overrides
* Fixes based on testing
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Co-authored-by: DanStough <dan.stough@hashicorp.com>
Use only the agent token for deregistration during anti-entropy
The previous behavior had the agent attempt to use the "service" token
(i.e. from the `token` field in a service definition file), and if that
was not set then it would use the agent token.
The previous behavior was problematic because, if the service token had
been deleted, the deregistration request would fail. The agent would
retry the deregistration during each anti-entropy sync, and the
situation would never resolve.
The new behavior is to only/always use the agent token for service and
check deregistration during anti-entropy. This approach is:
* Simpler: No fallback logic to try different tokens
* Faster (slightly): No time spent attempting the service token
* Correct: The agent token is able to deregister services on that
agent's node, because:
* node:write permissions allow deregistration of services/checks on
that node.
* The agent token must have node:write permission, or else the agent
is not be able to (de)register itself into the catalog
Co-authored-by: Vesa Hagström <weeezes@gmail.com>
* remove legacy tokens
* Update test comment
Co-authored-by: Paul Glass <pglass@hashicorp.com>
* fix imports
* update docs for additional CLI changes
* add test case for anonymous token
* set deprecated api fields to json ignore and fix patch errors
* update changelog to breaking-change
* fix import
* update api docs to remove legacy reference
* fix docs nav data
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Co-authored-by: Paul Glass <pglass@hashicorp.com>
* Add support for envoy readiness flags
- add flags 'envoy-ready-bind-port` and `envoy-ready-bind-addr` on consul connect envoy to create a ready listener on that address.
Fix configuration merging for implicit tproxy upstreams.
Change the merging logic so that the wildcard upstream has correct proxy-defaults
and service-defaults values combined into it. It did not previously merge all fields,
and the wildcard upstream did not exist unless service-defaults existed (it ignored
proxy-defaults, essentially).
Change the way we fetch upstream configuration in the xDS layer so that it falls back
to the wildcard when no matching upstream is found. This is what allows implicit peer
upstreams to have the correct "merged" config.
Change proxycfg to always watch local mesh gateway endpoints whenever a peer upstream
is found. This simplifies the logic so that we do not have to inspect the "merged"
configuration on peer upstreams to extract the mesh gateway mode.
Previously, we'd begin a session with the xDS concurrency limiter
regardless of whether the proxy was registered in the catalog or in
the server's local agent state.
This caused problems for users who run `consul connect envoy` directly
against a server rather than a client agent, as the server's locally
registered proxies wouldn't be included in the limiter's capacity.
Now, the `ConfigSource` is responsible for beginning the session and we
only do so for services in the catalog.
Fixes: https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/issues/15753
Enforce lowercase peer names.
Prior to this change peer names could be mixed case.
This can cause issues, as peer names are used as DNS labels
in various locations. It also caused issues with envoy
configuration.
Co-authored-by: Jared Kirschner <85913323+jkirschner-hashicorp@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jeff Boruszak <104028618+boruszak@users.noreply.github.com>
Fix issue where TLS configuration was ignored for unix sockets in consul connect envoy.
Disable xds check on bootstrap mode and change check to warn only.
This is the OSS portion of enterprise PR 3822.
Adds a custom gRPC balancer that replicates the router's server cycling
behavior. Also enables automatic retries for RESOURCE_EXHAUSTED errors,
which we now get for free.
Previously, these endpoints required `service:write` permission on _any_
service as a sort of proxy for "is the caller allowed to participate in
the mesh?".
Now, they're called as part of the process of establishing a server
connection by any consumer of the consul-server-connection-manager
library, which will include non-mesh workloads (e.g. Consul KV as a
storage backend for Vault) as well as ancillary components such as
consul-k8s' acl-init process, which likely won't have `service:write`
permission.
So this commit relaxes those requirements to accept *any* valid ACL token
on the following gRPC endpoints:
- `hashicorp.consul.dataplane.DataplaneService/GetSupportedDataplaneFeatures`
- `hashicorp.consul.serverdiscovery.ServerDiscoveryService/WatchServers`
- `hashicorp.consul.connectca.ConnectCAService/WatchRoots`
Fix agent cache incorrectly notifying unchanged protobufs.
This change fixes a situation where the protobuf private fields
would be read by reflect.DeepEqual() and indicate data was modified.
This resulted in change notifications being fired every time, which
could cause performance problems in proxycfg.
* add functions for returning the max and min Envoy major versions
- added an UnsupportedEnvoyVersions list
- removed an unused error from TestDetermineSupportedProxyFeaturesFromString
- modified minSupportedVersion to use the function for getting the Min Envoy major version. Using just the major version without the patch is equivalent to using `.0`
* added a function for executing the envoy --version command
- added a new exec.go file to not be locked to unix system
* added envoy version check when using consul connect envoy
* added changelog entry
* added docs change
The new balancer is a patched version of gRPC's default pick_first balancer
which removes the behavior of preserving the active subconnection if
a list of new addresses contains the currently active address.
* feat(ingress-gateway): support outlier detection of upstream service for ingress gateway
* changelog
Co-authored-by: Eric Haberkorn <erichaberkorn@gmail.com>
Fix local mesh gateway with peering discovery chains.
Prior to this patch, discovery chains with peers would not
properly honor the mesh gateway mode for two reasons.
1. An incorrect target upstream ID was used to lookup the
mesh gateway mode. To fix this, the parent upstream uid is
now used instead of the discovery-chain-target-uid to find
the intended mesh gateway mode.
2. The watch for local mesh gateways was never initialized
for discovery chains. To fix this, the discovery chains are
now scanned, and a local GW watch is spawned if: the mesh
gateway mode is local and the target is a peering connection.