This method was accidentally re-introduced in an earlier rebase. It was
removed in ed1082510dc80523b1f2a3a740fa5a13c77594f9 as part of the tproxy work.
There is no interaction between these handlers, so splitting them into separate files
makes it easier to discover the full implementation of each kindHandler.
This commit extracts all the kind-specific logic into handler types, and
keeps the generic parts on the state struct. This change should make it
easier to add new kinds, and see the implementation of each kind more
clearly.
* remove flush for each write to http response in the agent monitor endpoint
* fix race condition when we stop and start monitor multiple times, the doneCh is closed and never recover.
* start log reading goroutine before adding the sink to avoid filling the log channel before getting a chance of reading from it
* flush every 500ms to optimize log writing in the http server side.
* add changelog file
* add issue url to changelog
* fix changelog url
* Update changelog
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
* use ticker to flush and avoid race condition when flushing in a different goroutine
* stop the ticker when done
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
* Revert "fix race condition when we stop and start monitor multiple times, the doneCh is closed and never recover."
This reverts commit 1eeddf7a
* wait for log consumer loop to start before registering the sink
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
In the absence of stats_tags to handle this pattern, when we pass
"ingress_upstream.$port" as the stat_prefix, Envoy splits up that prefix
and makes the port a part of the metric name.
For example:
- stat_prefix: ingress_upstream.8080
This leads to metric names like envoy_http_8080_no_route. Changing the
stat_prefix to ingress_upstream_80880 yields the expected metric names
such as envoy_http_no_route.
Note that we don't encode the destination's name/ns/dc in this
stat_prefix because for HTTP services ingress gateways use a single
filter chain. Only cluster metrics are available on a per-upstream
basis.
This change makes it so that the stat prefix for terminating gateways
matches that of connect proxies. By using the structure of
"upstream.svc.ns.dc" we can extract labels for the destination service,
namespace, and datacenter.
Updates to a cluster will clear the associated endpoints, and updates to
a listener will clear the associated routes. Update the incremental xDS
logic to account for this implicit cleanup so that we can finish warming
the clusters and listeners.
Fixes#10379
CatalogDestinationsOnly is a passthrough that would enable dialing
addresses outside of Consul's catalog. However, when this flag is set to
true only _connect_ endpoints for services can be dialed.
This flag is being renamed to signal that non-Connect endpoints can't be
dialed by transparent proxies when the value is set to true.
Previously we would return an error if duplicate paths were specified.
This could lead to problems in cases where a user has the same path,
say /healthz, on two different ports.
This validation was added to signal a potential misconfiguration.
Instead we will only check for duplicate listener ports, since that is
what would lead to ambiguity issues when generating xDS config.
In the future we could look into using a single listener and creating
distinct filter chains for each path/port.
These two new struct types will allow us to make polymorphic handler for each kind, instad of
having all the logic for each proxy kind on the state struct.
context.Context should never be stored on a struct (as it says in the godoc) because it is easy to
to end up with the wrong context when it is stored.
Also see https://blog.golang.org/context-and-structs
This change is also in preparation for splitting state into kind-specific handlers so that the
implementation of each kind is grouped together.
This field is available in DebugConfig, but that field is not stable and could change at any time.
The consul-k8s needs to be able to detect the primary DC for tests, so adding this field to the
stable part of the API response.
Both NextLink and NextNoBlock had the same logic, with slightly
different return values. By adding a bool return value (similar to map
lookups) we can remove the duplicate method.
The head of the topic buffer was being ignored when creating a snapshot. This commit fixes
the bug by ensuring that the head of the topic buffer is included in the snapshot
before handing it off to the subscription.
When info.Timeout is 0, it should have no timeout. Previously it was using a 0 duration timeout
which caused it to return without waiting.
This bug was masked by using a timeout in the tests. Removing the timeout caused the tests to fail.
This PR adds cluster members to the metrics API. The number of members per
segment are reported as well as the total number of members.
Tested by running a multi-node cluster locally and ensuring the numbers were
correct. Also added unit test coverage to add the new expected gauges to
existing test cases.
We have seen test flakes caused by 'concurrent map read and map write', and the race detector
reports the problem as well (prevent us from running some tests with -race).
The root of the problem is the grpc expects resolvers to be registered at init time
before any requests are made, but we were using a separate resolver for each test.
This commit introduces a resolver registry. The registry is registered as the single
resolver for the consul scheme. Each test uses the Authority section of the target
(instead of the scheme) to identify the resolver that should be used for the test.
The scheme is used for lookup, which is why it can no longer be used as the unique
key.
This allows us to use a lock around the map of resolvers, preventing the data race.
* fix tests to use a dummy nodeName and not fail when hostname is not a valid nodeName
* remove conditional testing
* add test when node name is invalid