There are a few changes that needed to be made to to handle authorizing
reads for imported data:
- If the data was imported from a peer we should not attempt to read the
data using the traditional authz rules. This is because the name of
services/nodes in a peer cluster are not equivalent to those of the
importing cluster.
- If the data was imported from a peer we need to check whether the
token corresponds to a service, meaning that it has service:write
permissions, or to a local read only token that can read all
nodes/services in a namespace.
This required changes at the policyAuthorizer level, since that is the
only view available to OSS Consul, and at the enterprise
partition/namespace level.
Fix an issue where rpc_hold_timeout was being used as the timeout for non-blocking queries. Users should be able to tune read timeouts without fiddling with rpc_hold_timeout. A new configuration `rpc_read_timeout` is created.
Refactor some implementation from the original PR 11500 to remove the misleading linkage between RPCInfo's timeout (used to retry in case of certain modes of failures) and the client RPC timeouts.
Replaces the reflection-based implementation of proxycfg's
ConfigSnapshot.Clone with code generated by deep-copy.
While load testing server-based xDS (for consul-dataplane) we discovered
this method is extremely expensive. The ConfigSnapshot struct, directly
or indirectly, contains a copy of many of the structs in the agent/structs
package, which creates a large graph for copystructure.Copy to traverse
at runtime, on every proxy reconfiguration.
Consul 1.13.0 changed ServiceVirtualIP to use PeeredServiceName instead of ServiceName which was a breaking change for those using service mesh and wanted to restore their snapshot after upgrading to 1.13.0.
This commit handles existing data with older ServiceName and converts it during restore so that there are no issues when restoring from older snapshots.
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").
Adds the merge-central-config query param option to the /catalog/node-services/:node-name API,
to get a service definition in the response that is merged with central defaults (proxy-defaults/service-defaults).
Updated the consul connect envoy command to use this option when
retrieving the proxy service details so as to render the bootstrap configuration correctly.
* update gateway-services table with endpoints
* fix failing test
* remove unneeded config in test
* rename "endpoint" to "destination"
* more endpoint renaming to destination in tests
* update isDestination based on service-defaults config entry creation
* use a 3 state kind to be able to set the kind to unknown (when neither a service or a destination exist)
* set unknown state to empty to avoid modifying alot of tests
* fix logic to set the kind correctly on CRUD
* fix failing tests
* add missing tests and fix service delete
* fix failing test
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Dan Stough <dan.stough@hashicorp.com>
* fix a bug with kind and add relevant test
* fix compile error
* fix failing tests
* add kind to clone
* fix failing tests
* fix failing tests in catalog endpoint
* fix service dump test
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Dan Stough <dan.stough@hashicorp.com>
* remove duplicate tests
* first draft of destinations intention in connect proxy
* remove ServiceDestinationList
* fix failing tests
* fix agent/consul failing tests
* change to filter intentions in the state store instead of adding a field.
* fix failing tests
* fix comment
* fix comments
* store service kind destination and add relevant tests
* changes based on review
* filter on destinations when querying source match
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: alex <8968914+acpana@users.noreply.github.com>
* fix style
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Dan Stough <dan.stough@hashicorp.com>
* rename destinationType to targetType.
Co-authored-by: Dan Stough <dan.stough@hashicorp.com>
Co-authored-by: alex <8968914+acpana@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: github-team-consul-core <github-team-consul-core@hashicorp.com>
OSS port of enterprise PR 1822
Includes the necessary changes to the `proxycfg` and `xds` packages to enable
Consul servers to configure arbitrary proxies using catalog data.
Broadly, `proxycfg.Manager` now has public methods for registering,
deregistering, and listing registered proxies — the existing local agent
state-sync behavior has been moved into a separate component that makes use of
these methods.
When an xDS session is started for a proxy service in the catalog, a goroutine
will be spawned to watch the service in the server's state store and
re-register it with the `proxycfg.Manager` whenever it is updated (and clean
it up when the client goes away).
Adds a new query param merge-central-config for use with the below endpoints:
/catalog/service/:service
/catalog/connect/:service
/health/service/:service
/health/connect/:service
If set on the request, the response will include a fully resolved service definition which is merged with the proxy-defaults/global and service-defaults/:service config entries (on-demand style). This is useful to view the full service definition for a mesh service (connect-proxy kind or gateway kind) which might not be merged before being written into the catalog (example: in case of services in the agentless model).
The importing peer will need to know what SNI and SPIFFE name
corresponds to each exported service. Additionally it will need to know
at a high level the protocol in use (L4/L7) to generate the appropriate
connection pool and local metrics.
For replicated connect synthetic entities we edit the `Connect{}` part
of a `NodeService` to have a new section:
{
"PeerMeta": {
"SNI": [
"web.default.default.owt.external.183150d5-1033-3672-c426-c29205a576b8.consul"
],
"SpiffeID": [
"spiffe://183150d5-1033-3672-c426-c29205a576b8.consul/ns/default/dc/dc1/svc/web"
],
"Protocol": "tcp"
}
}
This data is then replicated and saved as-is at the importing side. Both
SNI and SpiffeID are slices for now until I can be sure we don't need
them for how mesh gateways will ultimately work.
Add validation to ensure connect native services have a port or socketpath specified on catalog registration.
This was the only missing piece to ensure all mesh services are validated for a port (or socketpath) specification on catalog registration.
Introduces two new public gRPC endpoints (`Login` and `Logout`) and
includes refactoring of the equivalent net/rpc endpoints to enable the
majority of logic to be reused (i.e. by extracting the `Binder` and
`TokenWriter` types).
This contains the OSS portions of the following enterprise commits:
- 75fcdbfcfa6af21d7128cb2544829ead0b1df603
- bce14b714151af74a7f0110843d640204082630a
- cc508b70fbf58eda144d9af3d71bd0f483985893
The primary bug here is in the streaming subsystem that makes the overall v1/health/service/:service request behave incorrectly when servicing a blocking request with a filter provided.
There is a secondary non-streaming bug being fixed here that is much less obvious related to when to update the `reply` variable in a `blockingQuery` evaluation. It is unlikely that it is triggerable in practical environments and I could not actually get the bug to manifest, but I fixed it anyway while investigating the original issue.
Simple reproduction (streaming):
1. Register a service with a tag.
curl -sL --request PUT 'http://localhost:8500/v1/agent/service/register' \
--header 'Content-Type: application/json' \
--data-raw '{ "ID": "ID1", "Name": "test", "Tags":[ "a" ], "EnableTagOverride": true }'
2. Do an initial filter query that matches on the tag.
curl -sLi --get 'http://localhost:8500/v1/health/service/test' --data-urlencode 'filter=a in Service.Tags'
3. Note you get one result. Use the `X-Consul-Index` header to establish
a blocking query in another terminal, this should not return yet.
curl -sLi --get 'http://localhost:8500/v1/health/service/test?index=$INDEX' --data-urlencode 'filter=a in Service.Tags'
4. Re-register that service with a different tag.
curl -sL --request PUT 'http://localhost:8500/v1/agent/service/register' \
--header 'Content-Type: application/json' \
--data-raw '{ "ID": "ID1", "Name": "test", "Tags":[ "b" ], "EnableTagOverride": true }'
5. Your blocking query from (3) should return with a header
`X-Consul-Query-Backend: streaming` and empty results if it works
correctly `[]`.
Attempts to reproduce with non-streaming failed (where you add `&near=_agent` to the read queries and ensure `X-Consul-Query-Backend: blocking-query` shows up in the results).
Adds a timeout (deadline) to client RPC calls, so that streams will no longer hang indefinitely in unstable network conditions.
Co-authored-by: kisunji <ckim@hashicorp.com>
* mogify needed pbcommon structs
* mogify needed pbconnect structs
* fix compilation errors and make config_translate_test pass
* add missing file
* remove redundant oss func declaration
* fix EnterpriseMeta to copy the right data for enterprise
* rename pbcommon package to pbcommongogo
* regenerate proto and mog files
* add missing mog files
* add pbcommon package
* pbcommon no mog
* fix enterprise meta code generation
* fix enterprise meta code generation (pbcommongogo)
* fix mog generation for gogo
* use `protoc-go-inject-tag` to inject tags
* rename proto package
* pbcommon no mog
* use `protoc-go-inject-tag` to inject tags
* add non gogo proto to make file
* fix proto get
Many places in consul already treated node names case insensitively.
The state store indexes already do it, but there are a few places that
did a direct byte comparison which have now been corrected.
One place of particular consideration is ensureCheckIfNodeMatches
which is executed during snapshot restore (among other places). If a
node check used a slightly different casing than the casing of the node
during register then the snapshot restore here would deterministically
fail. This has been fixed.
Primary approach:
git grep -i "node.*[!=]=.*node" -- ':!*_test.go' ':!docs'
git grep -i '\[[^]]*member[^]]*\]
git grep -i '\[[^]]*\(member\|name\|node\)[^]]*\]' -- ':!*_test.go' ':!website' ':!ui' ':!agent/proxycfg/testing.go:' ':!*.md'
This commit syncs ENT changes to the OSS repo.
Original commit details in ENT:
```
commit 569d25f7f4578981c3801e6e067295668210f748
Author: FFMMM <FFMMM@users.noreply.github.com>
Date: Thu Feb 10 10:23:33 2022 -0800
Vendor fork net rpc (#1538)
* replace net/rpc w consul-net-rpc/net/rpc
Signed-off-by: FFMMM <FFMMM@users.noreply.github.com>
* replace msgpackrpc and go-msgpack with fork from mono repo
Signed-off-by: FFMMM <FFMMM@users.noreply.github.com>
* gofmt all files touched
Signed-off-by: FFMMM <FFMMM@users.noreply.github.com>
```
Signed-off-by: FFMMM <FFMMM@users.noreply.github.com>
Due to timing, a transparent proxy could have two upstreams to dial
directly with the same address.
For example:
- The orders service can dial upstreams shipping and payment directly.
- An instance of shipping at address 10.0.0.1 is deregistered.
- Payments is scaled up and scheduled to have address 10.0.0.1.
- The orders service receives the event for the new payments instance
before seeing the deregistration for the shipping instance. At this
point two upstreams have the same passthrough address and Envoy will
reject the listener configuration.
To disambiguate this commit considers the Raft index when storing
passthrough addresses. In the example above, 10.0.0.1 would only be
associated with the newer payments service instance.
This safeguard should be safe to apply in general. We are already
applying it to non-blocking queries that call blockingQuery, so it
should be fine to apply it to others.