* Configure Envoy alpn_protocols based on service protocol
* define alpnProtocols in a more standard way
* http2 protocol should be h2 only
* formatting
* add test for getAlpnProtocol()
* create changelog entry
* change scope is connect-proxy
* ignore errors on ParseProxyConfig; fixes linter
* add tests for grpc and http2 public listeners
* remove newlines from PR
* Add alpn_protocol configuration for ingress gateway
* Guard against nil tlsContext
* add ingress gateway w/ TLS tests for gRPC and HTTP2
* getAlpnProtocols: add TCP protocol test
* add tests for ingress gateway with grpc/http2 and per-listener TLS config
* add tests for ingress gateway with grpc/http2 and per-listener TLS config
* add Gateway level TLS config with mixed protocol listeners to validate ALPN
* update changelog to include ingress-gateway
* add http/1.1 to http2 ALPN
* go fmt
* fix test on custom-trace-listener
A previous commit introduced an internally-managed server certificate
to use for peering-related purposes.
Now the peering token has been updated to match that behavior:
- The server name matches the structure of the server cert
- The CA PEMs correspond to the Connect CA
Note that if Conect is disabled, and by extension the Connect CA, we
fall back to the previous behavior of returning the manually configured
certs and local server SNI.
Several tests were updated to use the gRPC TLS port since they enable
Connect by default. This means that the peering token will embed the
Connect CA, and the dialer will expect a TLS listener.
* updating to serf v0.10.1 and memberlist v0.5.0 to get memberlist size metrics and memberlist broadcast queue depth metric
* update changelog
* update changelog
* correcting changelog
* adding "QueueCheckInterval" for memberlist to test
* updating integration test containers to grab latest api
This commit adds the xDS resources needed for INBOUND traffic from peer
clusters:
- 1 filter chain for all inbound peering requests.
- 1 cluster for all inbound peering requests.
- 1 endpoint per voting server with the gRPC TLS port configured.
There is one filter chain and cluster because unlike with WAN
federation, peer clusters will not attempt to dial individual servers.
Peer clusters will only dial the local mesh gateway addresses.
This commit adds handling so that the replication stream considers
whether the user intends to peer through mesh gateways.
The subscription will return server or mesh gateway addresses depending
on the mesh configuration setting. These watches can be updated at
runtime by modifying the mesh config entry.
* feat(ingress gateway: support configuring limits in ingress-gateway config entry
- a new Defaults field with max_connections, max_pending_connections, max_requests
is added to ingress gateway config entry
- new field max_connections, max_pending_connections, max_requests in
individual services to overwrite the value in Default
- added unit test and integration test
- updated doc
Co-authored-by: Chris S. Kim <ckim@hashicorp.com>
Co-authored-by: Jeff Boruszak <104028618+boruszak@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Dan Stough <dan.stough@hashicorp.com>
Routing peering control plane traffic through mesh gateways can be
enabled or disabled at runtime with the mesh config entry.
This commit updates proxycfg to add or cancel watches for local servers
depending on this central config.
Note that WAN federation over mesh gateways is determined by a service
metadata flag, and any updates to the gateway service registration will
force the creation of a new snapshot. If enabled, WAN-fed over mesh
gateways will trigger a local server watch on initialize().
Because of this we will only add/remove server watches if WAN federation
over mesh gateways is disabled.
Preivously the TLS configurator would default to presenting auto TLS
certificates as client certificates.
Server agents should not have this behavior and should instead present
the manually configured certs. The autoTLS certs for servers are
exclusively used for peering and should not be used as the default for
outbound communication.
This commit introduces a new ACL token used for internal server
management purposes.
It has a few key properties:
- It has unlimited permissions.
- It is persisted through Raft as System Metadata rather than in the
ACL tokens table. This is to avoid users seeing or modifying it.
- It is re-generated on leadership establishment.
* Typos
* Test failing
* Convert values <1ms to decimal
* Fix test
* Update docs and test error msg
* Applied suggested changes to test case
* Changelog file and suggested changes
* Update .changelog/12905.txt
Co-authored-by: Chris S. Kim <kisunji92@gmail.com>
* suggested change - start duration with microseconds instead of nanoseconds
* fix error
* suggested change - floats
Co-authored-by: alex <8968914+acpana@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Chris S. Kim <kisunji92@gmail.com>
* 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>
Prior to #13244, connect proxies and gateways could only be configured by an
xDS session served by the local client agent.
In an upcoming release, it will be possible to deploy a Consul service mesh
without client agents. In this model, xDS sessions will be handled by the
servers themselves, which necessitates load-balancing to prevent a single
server from receiving a disproportionate amount of load and becoming
overwhelmed.
This introduces a simple form of load-balancing where Consul will attempt to
achieve an even spread of load (xDS sessions) between all healthy servers.
It does so by implementing a concurrent session limiter (limiter.SessionLimiter)
and adjusting the limit according to autopilot state and proxy service
registrations in the catalog.
If a server is already over capacity (i.e. the session limit is lowered),
Consul will begin draining sessions to rebalance the load. This will result
in the client receiving a `RESOURCE_EXHAUSTED` status code. It is the client's
responsibility to observe this response and reconnect to a different server.
Users of the gRPC client connection brokered by the
consul-server-connection-manager library will get this for free.
The rate at which Consul will drain sessions to rebalance load is scaled
dynamically based on the number of proxies in the catalog.
http.Transport keeps a pool of connections and should be reused when possible. We instantiate a new http.DefaultTransport for every metrics request, making large numbers of concurrent requests inefficiently spin up new connections instead of reusing open ones.
Co-authored-by: Eric Haberkorn <erichaberkorn@gmail.com>
By adding a SpiffeID for server agents, servers can now request a leaf
certificate from the Connect CA.
This new Spiffe ID has a key property: servers are identified by their
datacenter name and trust domain. All servers that share these
attributes will share a ServerURI.
The aim is to use these certificates to verify the server name of ANY
server in a Consul datacenter.
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.
When a sidecar proxy is registered, a check is automatically added.
Previously, the address this check used was the underlying service's
address instead of the proxy's address, even though the check is testing
if the proxy is up.
This worked in most cases because the proxy ran on the same IP as the
underlying service but it's not guaranteed and so the proper default
address should be the proxy's address.
* draft commit
* add changelog, update test
* remove extra param
* fix test
* update type to account for nil value
* add test for custom passive health check
* update comments and tests
* update description in docs
* fix missing commas
* validate args before deleting proxy defaults
* add changelog
* validate name when normalizing proxy defaults
* add test for proxyConfigEntry
* add comments