* Update Consul Service List composite rows with Tooltips and description lists
* Update Consul Service Instance List composite rows with Tooltips and description lists
* Removed line height in reduced pill to match the description lists in the composite rows
This example shows a TLS enabled ingress config on a non-https port.
Currently, that means we require the port to be specified in one of the
host entries to route traffic.
* Add all the new data required for NodeIdentities
* Add potential NodeIdentity to the token list component
* Amend the policy-form/selector to allow node identity creation
* Fix up CSS for radio buttons and select label
* Add node-identity policy template component
* Fix up and add acceptance tests for NodeIndentities
* Make sure policy previews take node identities into account
* Only show certain policy markup if those we have those policies
* Potentially temporarily hide dt's that don't have icons yet
This will allow to increase cache value when DC is not valid (aka
return SOA to avoid too many consecutive requests) and will
distinguish DC being temporarily not available from DC not existing.
Implements https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/issues/8102
On the servers they must have a certificate.
On the clients they just have to set verify_outgoing to true to attempt TLS connections for RPCs.
Eventually we may relax these restrictions but right now all of the settings we push down (acl tokens, acl related settings, certificates, gossip key) are sensitive and shouldn’t be transmitted over an unencrypted connection. Our guides and docs should recoommend verify_server_hostname on the clients as well.
Another reason to do this is weird things happen when making an insecure RPC when TLS is not enabled. Basically it tries TLS anyways. We should probably fix that to make it clearer what is going on.
The envisioned changes would allow extra settings to enable dynamically defined auth methods to be used instead of or in addition to the statically defined one in the configuration.
This mixin was a very thin mixin over the top of our listeners utility,
and we have been gradually preferring using the utility straight rather
than using the mixin. This commit removes the last places where we still
used the mixin, and also potentially the last few places where we
continued to use the old API for our listeners utility.
There are a couple of things in here.
First, just like auto encrypt, any Cluster.AutoConfig RPC will implicitly use the less secure RPC mechanism.
This drastically modifies how the Consul Agent starts up and moves most of the responsibilities (other than signal handling) from the cli command and into the Agent.