The method is only used in tests, and only exists for legacy calls.
There was one other package which used this method in tests. Export
the AddServiceRequest and a couple of its fields so the new function can
be used in those tests.
This PR is based on the previous work by @snuggie12 in PR #6825. It adds the command consul intention list to list all available intentions. The list functionality for intentions seems a bit overdue as it's just very handy. The web UI cannot list intentions outside of the default namespace, and using the API is sometimes not the friendliest option. ;)
I cherry picked snuggie12's commits who did most of the heavy lifting (thanks again @snuggie12 for your great work!). The changes in the original commit mostly still worked on the current HEAD. On top of that I added support for namespaces and fixed the docs as they are managed differently today. Also the requested changes related to the "Connect" references in the original PRs have been addressed.
Fixes#5652
Co-authored-by: Matt Hoey <mhoey05@jcu.edu>
Add a skip condition to all tests slower than 100ms.
This change was made using `gotestsum tool slowest` with data from the
last 3 CI runs of master.
See https://github.com/gotestyourself/gotestsum#finding-and-skipping-slow-tests
With this change:
```
$ time go test -count=1 -short ./agent
ok github.com/hashicorp/consul/agent 0.743s
real 0m4.791s
$ time go test -count=1 -short ./agent/consul
ok github.com/hashicorp/consul/agent/consul 4.229s
real 0m8.769s
```
This PR updates the tags that we generate for Envoy stats.
Several of these come with breaking changes, since we can't keep two stats prefixes for a filter.
* ci: stop building darwin/386 binaries
Go 1.15 drops support for 32-bit binaries on Darwin https://golang.org/doc/go1.15#darwin
* tls: ConnectionState::NegotiatedProtocolIsMutual is deprecated in Go 1.15, this value is always true
* correct error messages that changed slightly
* Completely regenerate some TLS test data
Co-authored-by: R.B. Boyer <rb@hashicorp.com>
If one isn't included, then the nil check in the formatter never fails due to an empty slice being passed in, which causes the kv output to always get printed.
Extend Consul’s intentions model to allow for request-based access control enforcement for HTTP-like protocols in addition to the existing connection-based enforcement for unspecified protocols (e.g. tcp).
- Upgrade the ConfigEntry.ListAll RPC to be kind-aware so that older
copies of consul will not see new config entries it doesn't understand
replicate down.
- Add shim conversion code so that the old API/CLI method of interacting
with intentions will continue to work so long as none of these are
edited via config entry endpoints. Almost all of the read-only APIs will
continue to function indefinitely.
- Add new APIs that operate on individual intentions without IDs so that
the UI doesn't need to implement CAS operations.
- Add a new serf feature flag indicating support for
intentions-as-config-entries.
- The old line-item intentions way of interacting with the state store
will transparently flip between the legacy memdb table and the config
entry representations so that readers will never see a hiccup during
migration where the results are incomplete. It uses a piece of system
metadata to control the flip.
- The primary datacenter will begin migrating intentions into config
entries on startup once all servers in the datacenter are on a version
of Consul with the intentions-as-config-entries feature flag. When it is
complete the old state store representations will be cleared. We also
record a piece of system metadata indicating this has occurred. We use
this metadata to skip ALL of this code the next time the leader starts
up.
- The secondary datacenters continue to run the old intentions
replicator until all servers in the secondary DC and primary DC support
intentions-as-config-entries (via serf flag). Once this condition it met
the old intentions replicator ceases.
- The secondary datacenters replicate the new config entries as they are
migrated in the primary. When they detect that the primary has zeroed
it's old state store table it waits until all config entries up to that
point are replicated and then zeroes its own copy of the old state store
table. We also record a piece of system metadata indicating this has
occurred. We use this metadata to skip ALL of this code the next time
the leader starts up.