Fix issue where agentless endpoints would fail to populate after snapshot restore.
Fixes an issue that was introduced in #17775. This issue happens because
a long-lived pointer to the state store is held, which is unsafe to do.
Snapshot restorations will swap out this state store, meaning that the
proxycfg watches would break for agentless.
* Adding explicit MPL license for sub-package
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* Adding explicit MPL license for sub-package
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* Updating the license from MPL to Business Source License
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* add missing license headers
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* Update copyright file headers to BUSL-1.1
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* Update copyright file headers to BUSL-1.1
* Update copyright file headers to BUSL-1.1
* Update copyright file headers to BUSL-1.1
* Update copyright file headers to BUSL-1.1
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* agent: remove agent cache dependency from service mesh leaf certificate management
This extracts the leaf cert management from within the agent cache.
This code was produced by the following process:
1. All tests in agent/cache, agent/cache-types, agent/auto-config,
agent/consul/servercert were run at each stage.
- The tests in agent matching .*Leaf were run at each stage.
- The tests in agent/leafcert were run at each stage after they
existed.
2. The former leaf cert Fetch implementation was extracted into a new
package behind a "fake RPC" endpoint to make it look almost like all
other cache type internals.
3. The old cache type was shimmed to use the fake RPC endpoint and
generally cleaned up.
4. I selectively duplicated all of Get/Notify/NotifyCallback/Prepopulate
from the agent/cache.Cache implementation over into the new package.
This was renamed as leafcert.Manager.
- Code that was irrelevant to the leaf cert type was deleted
(inlining blocking=true, refresh=false)
5. Everything that used the leaf cert cache type (including proxycfg
stuff) was shifted to use the leafcert.Manager instead.
6. agent/cache-types tests were moved and gently replumbed to execute
as-is against a leafcert.Manager.
7. Inspired by some of the locking changes from derek's branch I split
the fat lock into N+1 locks.
8. The waiter chan struct{} was eventually replaced with a
singleflight.Group around cache updates, which was likely the biggest
net structural change.
9. The awkward two layers or logic produced as a byproduct of marrying
the agent cache management code with the leaf cert type code was
slowly coalesced and flattened to remove confusion.
10. The .*Leaf tests from the agent package were copied and made to work
directly against a leafcert.Manager to increase direct coverage.
I have done a best effort attempt to port the previous leaf-cert cache
type's tests over in spirit, as well as to take the e2e-ish tests in the
agent package with Leaf in the test name and copy those into the
agent/leafcert package to get more direct coverage, rather than coverage
tangled up in the agent logic.
There is no net-new test coverage, just coverage that was pushed around
from elsewhere.
Protobuf Refactoring for Multi-Module Cleanliness
This commit includes the following:
Moves all packages that were within proto/ to proto/private
Rewrites imports to account for the packages being moved
Adds in buf.work.yaml to enable buf workspaces
Names the proto-public buf module so that we can override the Go package imports within proto/buf.yaml
Bumps the buf version dependency to 1.14.0 (I was trying out the version to see if it would get around an issue - it didn't but it also doesn't break things and it seemed best to keep up with the toolchain changes)
Why:
In the future we will need to consume other protobuf dependencies such as the Google HTTP annotations for openapi generation or grpc-gateway usage.
There were some recent changes to have our own ratelimiting annotations.
The two combined were not working when I was trying to use them together (attempting to rebase another branch)
Buf workspaces should be the solution to the problem
Buf workspaces means that each module will have generated Go code that embeds proto file names relative to the proto dir and not the top level repo root.
This resulted in proto file name conflicts in the Go global protobuf type registry.
The solution to that was to add in a private/ directory into the path within the proto/ directory.
That then required rewriting all the imports.
Is this safe?
AFAICT yes
The gRPC wire protocol doesn't seem to care about the proto file names (although the Go grpc code does tack on the proto file name as Metadata in the ServiceDesc)
Other than imports, there were no changes to any generated code as a result of this.
Adds another datasource for proxycfg.HTTPChecks, for use on server agents. Typically these checks are performed by local client agents and there is no equivalent of this in agentless (where servers configure consul-dataplane proxies).
Hence, the data source is mostly a no-op on servers but in the case where the service is present within the local state, it delegates to the cache data source.
This is the OSS portion of enterprise PR 2489.
This PR introduces a server-local implementation of the
proxycfg.InternalServiceDump interface that sources data from a blocking query
against the server's state store.
For simplicity, it only implements the subset of the Internal.ServiceDump RPC
handler actually used by proxycfg - as such the result type has been changed
to IndexedCheckServiceNodes to avoid confusion.
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.
This is the OSS portion of enterprise PR 2339.
It improves our handling of "irrecoverable" errors in proxycfg data sources.
The canonical example of this is what happens when the ACL token presented by
Envoy is deleted/revoked. Previously, the stream would get "stuck" until the
xDS server re-checked the token (after 5 minutes) and terminated the stream.
Materializers would also sit burning resources retrying something that could
never succeed.
Now, it is possible for data sources to mark errors as "terminal" which causes
the xDS stream to be closed immediately. Similarly, the submatview.Store will
evict materializers when it observes they have encountered such an error.
This is the OSS portion of enterprise PR 2377.
Adds a server-local implementation of the proxycfg.ExportedPeeredServices
interface that sources data from a blocking query against the server's
state store.
This is the OSS portion of enterprise PR 2352.
It adds a server-local implementation of the proxycfg.PeeredUpstreams interface
based on a blocking query against the server's state store.
It also fixes an omission in the Virtual IP freeing logic where we were never
updating the max index (and therefore blocking queries against
VirtualIPsForAllImportedServices would not return on service deletion).
This is the OSS portion of enterprise PR 2265.
This PR provides a server-local implementation of the
proxycfg.FederationStateListMeshGateways interface based on blocking queries.
This is the OSS portion of enterprise PR 2259.
This PR provides a server-local implementation of the proxycfg.GatewayServices
interface based on blocking queries.
This is the OSS portion of enterprise PR 2250.
This PR provides server-local implementations of the proxycfg.TrustBundle and
proxycfg.TrustBundleList interfaces, based on local blocking queries.
This is the OSS portion of enterprise PR 2249.
This PR introduces an implementation of the proxycfg.Health interface based on a
local materialized view of the health events.
It reuses the view and request machinery from agent/rpcclient/health, which made
it super straightforward.
This is the OSS portion of enterprise PR 2242.
This PR introduces a server-local implementation of the proxycfg.ServiceList
interface, backed by streaming events and a local materializer.
This is the OSS portion of enterprise PR 2157.
It builds on the local blocking query work in #13438 to implement the
proxycfg.IntentionUpstreams interface using server-local data.
Also moves the ACL filtering logic from agent/consul into the acl/filter
package so that it can be reused here.
This is the OSS portion of enterprise PR 2141.
This commit provides a server-local implementation of the `proxycfg.Intentions`
interface that sources data from streaming events.
It adds events for the `service-intentions` config entry type, and then consumes
event streams (via materialized views) for the service's explicit intentions and
any applicable wildcard intentions, merging them into a single list of intentions.
An alternative approach I considered was to consume _all_ intention events (via
`SubjectWildcard`) and filter out the irrelevant ones. This would admittedly
remove some complexity in the `agent/proxycfg-glue` package but at the expense
of considerable overhead from waking potentially many thousands of connect
proxies every time any intention is updated.
For initial cluster peering TProxy support we consider all imported services of a partition to be potential upstreams.
We leverage the VirtualIP table because it stores plain service names (e.g. "api", not "api-sidecar-proxy").
Mesh gateways will now enable tcp connections with SNI names including peering information so that those connections may be proxied.
Note: this does not change the callers to use these mesh gateways.
Envoy's SPIFFE certificate validation extension allows for us to
validate against different root certificates depending on the trust
domain of the dialing proxy.
If there are any trust bundles from peers in the config snapshot then we
use the SPIFFE validator as the validation context, rather than the
usual TrustedCA.
The injected validation config includes the local root certificates as
well.
For mTLS to work between two proxies in peered clusters with different root CAs,
proxies need to configure their outbound listener to use different root certificates
for validation.
Up until peering was introduced proxies would only ever use one set of root certificates
to validate all mesh traffic, both inbound and outbound. Now an upstream proxy
may have a leaf certificate signed by a CA that's different from the dialing proxy's.
This PR makes changes to proxycfg and xds so that the upstream TLS validation
uses different root certificates depending on which cluster is being dialed.
This is the OSS portion of enterprise PRs 1904, 1905, 1906, 1907, 1949,
and 1971.
It replaces the proxycfg manager's direct dependency on the agent cache
with interfaces that will be implemented differently when serving xDS
sessions from a Consul server.