Commit Graph

12 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Derek Menteer 418bd62c44
Fix mesh gateway configuration with proxy-defaults (#15186)
* Fix mesh gateway proxy-defaults not affecting upstreams.

* Clarify distinction with upstream settings

Top-level mesh gateway mode in proxy-defaults and service-defaults gets
merged into NodeService.Proxy.MeshGateway, and only gets merged with
the mode attached to an an upstream in proxycfg/xds.

* Fix mgw mode usage for peered upstreams

There were a couple issues with how mgw mode was being handled for
peered upstreams.

For starters, mesh gateway mode from proxy-defaults
and the top-level of service-defaults gets stored in
NodeService.Proxy.MeshGateway, but the upstream watch for peered data
was only considering the mesh gateway config attached in
NodeService.Proxy.Upstreams[i]. This means that applying a mesh gateway
mode via global proxy-defaults or service-defaults on the downstream
would not have an effect.

Separately, transparent proxy watches for peered upstreams didn't
consider mesh gateway mode at all.

This commit addresses the first issue by ensuring that we overlay the
upstream config for peered upstreams as we do for non-peered. The second
issue is addressed by re-using setupWatchesForPeeredUpstream when
handling transparent proxy updates.

Note that for transparent proxies we do not yet support mesh gateway
mode per upstream, so the NodeService.Proxy.MeshGateway mode is used.

* Fix upstream mesh gateway mode handling in xds

This commit ensures that when determining the mesh gateway mode for
peered upstreams we consider the NodeService.Proxy.MeshGateway config as
a baseline.

In absense of this change, setting a mesh gateway mode via
proxy-defaults or the top-level of service-defaults will not have an
effect for peered upstreams.

* Merge service/proxy defaults in cfg resolver

Previously the mesh gateway mode for connect proxies would be
merged at three points:

1. On servers, in ComputeResolvedServiceConfig.
2. On clients, in MergeServiceConfig.
3. On clients, in proxycfg/xds.

The first merge returns a ServiceConfigResponse where there is a
top-level MeshGateway config from proxy/service-defaults, along with
per-upstream config.

The second merge combines per-upstream config specified at the service
instance with per-upstream config specified centrally.

The third merge combines the NodeService.Proxy.MeshGateway
config containing proxy/service-defaults data with the per-upstream
mode. This third merge is easy to miss, which led to peered upstreams
not considering the mesh gateway mode from proxy-defaults.

This commit removes the third merge, and ensures that all mesh gateway
config is available at the upstream. This way proxycfg/xds do not need
to do additional overlays.

* Ensure that proxy-defaults is considered in wc

Upstream defaults become a synthetic Upstream definition under a
wildcard key "*". Now that proxycfg/xds expect Upstream definitions to
have the final MeshGateway values, this commit ensures that values from
proxy-defaults/service-defaults are the default for this synthetic
upstream.

* Add changelog.

Co-authored-by: freddygv <freddy@hashicorp.com>
2022-11-09 10:14:29 -06:00
Dan Upton 7b2d08d461
chore: remove unused argument from MergeNodeServiceWithCentralConfig (#15024)
Previously, the MergeNodeServiceWithCentralConfig method accepted a
ServiceSpecificRequest argument, of which only the Datacenter and
QueryOptions fields were used.

Digging a little deeper, it turns out these fields were only passed
down to the ComputeResolvedServiceConfig method (through the
ServiceConfigRequest struct) which didn't actually use them.

As such, not all call-sites passed a valid ServiceSpecificRequest
so it's safer to remove the argument altogether to prevent future
changes from depending on it.
2022-11-09 14:54:57 +00:00
Derek Menteer 2d4b62be3c Add tests. 2022-10-31 08:45:00 -05:00
Derek Menteer 1483c94531 Fix peered service protocols using proxy-defaults. 2022-10-31 08:45:00 -05:00
Chris S. Kim bde57c0dd0 Regenerate files according to 1.19.2 formatter 2022-10-24 16:12:08 -04:00
Paul Glass c0c187f1c5
Merge central config for GetEnvoyBootstrapParams (#14869)
This fixes GetEnvoyBootstrapParams to merge in proxy-defaults and service-defaults.

Co-authored-by: Dan Upton <daniel@floppy.co>
2022-10-10 12:40:27 -05:00
Derek Menteer aa4709ab74
Add envoy connection balancing. (#14616)
Add envoy connection balancing config.
2022-09-26 11:29:06 -05:00
cskh f22685b969
Config-entry: Support proxy config in service-defaults (#14395)
* Config-entry: Support proxy config in service-defaults

* Update website/content/docs/connect/config-entries/service-defaults.mdx

Co-authored-by: Jeff Boruszak <104028618+boruszak@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-09-12 10:41:58 -04:00
Daniel Upton a31738f76f proxycfg-glue: server-local implementation of ResolvedServiceConfig
This is the OSS portion of enterprise PR 2460.

Introduces a server-local implementation of the proxycfg.ResolvedServiceConfig
interface that sources data from a blocking query against the server's state
store.

It moves the service config resolution logic into the agent/configentry package
so that it can be used in both the RPC handler and data source.

I've also done a little re-arranging and adding comments to call out data
sources for which there is to be no server-local equivalent.
2022-09-06 23:27:25 +01:00
Mark Anderson 98a2e282be Fixup acl.EnterpriseMeta
Signed-off-by: Mark Anderson <manderson@hashicorp.com>
2022-04-05 15:11:49 -07:00
R.B. Boyer 7b0548dd8d
server: suppress spurious blocking query returns where multiple config entries are involved (#12362)
Starting from and extending the mechanism introduced in #12110 we can specially handle the 3 main special Consul RPC endpoints that react to many config entries in a single blocking query in Connect:

- `DiscoveryChain.Get`
- `ConfigEntry.ResolveServiceConfig`
- `Intentions.Match`

All of these will internally watch for many config entries, and at least one of those will likely be not found in any given query. Because these are blends of multiple reads the exact solution from #12110 isn't perfectly aligned, but we can tweak the approach slightly and regain the utility of that mechanism.

### No Config Entries Found

In this case, despite looking for many config entries none may be found at all. Unlike #12110 in this scenario we do not return an empty reply to the caller, but instead synthesize a struct from default values to return. This can be handled nearly identically to #12110 with the first 1-2 replies being non-empty payloads followed by the standard spurious wakeup suppression mechanism from #12110.

### No Change Since Last Wakeup

Once a blocking query loop on the server has completed and slept at least once, there is a further optimization we can make here to detect if any of the config entries that were present at specific versions for the prior execution of the loop are identical for the loop we just woke up for. In that scenario we can return a slightly different internal sentinel error and basically externally handle it similar to #12110.

This would mean that even if 20 discovery chain read RPC handling goroutines wakeup due to the creation of an unrelated config entry, the only ones that will terminate and reply with a blob of data are those that genuinely have new data to report.

### Extra Endpoints

Since this pattern is pretty reusable, other key config-entry-adjacent endpoints used by `agent/proxycfg` also were updated:

- `ConfigEntry.List`
- `Internal.IntentionUpstreams` (tproxy)
2022-02-25 15:46:34 -06:00
R.B. Boyer 8b987a4d59
configentry: make a new package to hold shared config entry structs that aren't used for RPC or the FSM (#12384)
First two candidates are ConfigEntryKindName and DiscoveryChainConfigEntries.
2022-02-22 10:36:36 -06:00