* Update Consul Dataplane CLI reference
* Add new page for Consul Dataplane telemetry
* Add `server_type` label to agent grpc metrics
* Callout Consul Dataplane in Envoy bootstrap configuration section
* Update consul-dataplane unsupported features
Co-authored-by: trujillo-adam <47586768+trujillo-adam@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Riddhi Shah <riddhi@hashicorp.com>
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.
Adds a user-configurable rate limiter to proxycfg snapshot delivery,
with a default limit of 250 updates per second.
This addresses a problem observed in our load testing of Consul
Dataplane where updating a "global" resource such as a wildcard
intention or the proxy-defaults config entry could starve the Raft or
Memberlist goroutines of CPU time, causing general cluster instability.
* Add metrics for consul.memberlist.node.instances, consul.memberlist.queue.broadcast, consul.memberlist.size.local, and consul.memberlist.size.remote
* Fixing last table on page that does not render properly
* fixing queue name
* 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>
Co-authored-by: Ashlee Boyer <ashlee.boyer@hashicorp.com>
Co-authored-by: Ashlee M Boyer <43934258+ashleemboyer@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Tu Nguyen <im2nguyen@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Tu Nguyen <im2nguyen@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: HashiBot <62622282+hashibot-web@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Kevin Wang <kwangsan@gmail.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.
Adds guidance when upgrading a Consul service mesh deployment to 1.13 and:
- using auto-encrypt or auto-config; or
- the HTTPS port is not enabled on Consul agents
* defaulting to false because peering will be released as beta
* Ignore peering disabled error in bundles cachetype
Co-authored-by: Matt Keeler <mkeeler@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: freddygv <freddy@hashicorp.com>
Co-authored-by: Matt Keeler <mjkeeler7@gmail.com>
Ensure that the peer stream replication rpc can successfully be used with TLS activated.
Also:
- If key material is configured for the gRPC port but HTTPS is not
enabled now TLS will still be activated for the gRPC port.
- peerstream replication stream opened by the establishing-side will now
ignore grpc.WithBlock so that TLS errors will bubble up instead of
being awkwardly delayed or suppressed