* ui: Serialize proxies into the model, add Mesh* model props
Serializes the proxies associated with a service onto the Service model
itself, then adds various Mesh* properties
* ui: Uses the new Mesh* properties throughout the app
This might be better handled by allowing configuration for the InMemSink interval and retail, and disabling
the global. For now this is a smaller change to remove the goroutine leak caused by tests because go-metrics
does not provide any way of shutting down the global goroutine.
With this change, Agent.New() accepts many of the dependencies instead
of creating them in New. Accepting fully constructed dependencies from
a constructor makes the type easier to test, and easier to change.
There are still a number of dependencies created in Start() which can
be addressed in a follow up.
During gossip encryption key rotation it would be nice to be able to see if all nodes are using the same key. This PR adds another field to the json response from `GET v1/operator/keyring` which lists the primary keys in use per dc. That way an operator can tell when a key was successfully setup as primary key.
Based on https://github.com/hashicorp/serf/pull/611 to add primary key to list keyring output:
```json
[
{
"WAN": true,
"Datacenter": "dc2",
"Segment": "",
"Keys": {
"0OuM4oC3Os18OblWiBbZUaHA7Hk+tNs/6nhNYtaNduM=": 6,
"SINm887hKTzmMWeBNKTJReaTLX3mBEJKriDyt88Ad+g=": 6
},
"PrimaryKeys": {
"SINm887hKTzmMWeBNKTJReaTLX3mBEJKriDyt88Ad+g=": 6
},
"NumNodes": 6
},
{
"WAN": false,
"Datacenter": "dc2",
"Segment": "",
"Keys": {
"0OuM4oC3Os18OblWiBbZUaHA7Hk+tNs/6nhNYtaNduM=": 8,
"SINm887hKTzmMWeBNKTJReaTLX3mBEJKriDyt88Ad+g=": 8
},
"PrimaryKeys": {
"SINm887hKTzmMWeBNKTJReaTLX3mBEJKriDyt88Ad+g=": 8
},
"NumNodes": 8
},
{
"WAN": false,
"Datacenter": "dc1",
"Segment": "",
"Keys": {
"0OuM4oC3Os18OblWiBbZUaHA7Hk+tNs/6nhNYtaNduM=": 3,
"SINm887hKTzmMWeBNKTJReaTLX3mBEJKriDyt88Ad+g=": 8
},
"PrimaryKeys": {
"SINm887hKTzmMWeBNKTJReaTLX3mBEJKriDyt88Ad+g=": 8
},
"NumNodes": 8
}
]
```
I intentionally did not change the CLI output because I didn't find a good way of displaying this information. There are a couple of options that we could implement later:
* add a flag to show the primary keys
* add a flag to show json output
Fixes#3393.
Previsouly it was done in Agent.Start, which is much later then it needs to be.
The new 'dns' package was required, because otherwise there would be an
import cycle. In the future we should move more of the dns server into
the dns package.
- unexport testing shims, and document their purpose
- resolve a TODO by moving validation to NewBuilder and storing the one
field that is used instead of all of Options
- create a slice with the correct size to avoid extra allocations
While working on another change I caused a bunch of these tests to fail.
Unfortunately the failure messages were not super helpful at first.
One problem was that the request and response were created outside of
the retry. This meant that when the second attempt happened, the request
body was empty (because the buffer had been consumed), and so the
request was not actually being retried. This was fixed by moving more of
the request creation into the retry block.
Another problem was that these functions can return errors in two ways, and
are not consistent about which way they use. Some errors are returned to
the response writer, but the tests were not checking those errors, which
was causing a panic later on. This was fixed by adding a check for the
response code.
Also adds some missing t.Helper(), and has assertIndex use checkIndex so
that it is clear these are the same implementation.
I saw this test flake locally, and it was easy to reproduce with -count=10.
The failure was: 'TestAgent.dns: rpc error: error=No known Consul servers'.
Waiting for the agent seems to fix it.
This commit fixes a test that I saw flake locally while running tests. The test output from the monitor
started immediately after the line the test was looking for.
To fix the problem a channel is closed when the goroutine starts. Shutdown is not called until this channel
is closed, which seems to greatly reduce the chance of a flake.