Transparent proxies typically cannot dial upstreams in remote
datacenters. However, if their upstream configures a redirect to a
remote DC then the upstream targets will be in another datacenter.
In that sort of case we should use the WAN address for the passthrough.
Due to timing, a transparent proxy could have two upstreams to dial
directly with the same address.
For example:
- The orders service can dial upstreams shipping and payment directly.
- An instance of shipping at address 10.0.0.1 is deregistered.
- Payments is scaled up and scheduled to have address 10.0.0.1.
- The orders service receives the event for the new payments instance
before seeing the deregistration for the shipping instance. At this
point two upstreams have the same passthrough address and Envoy will
reject the listener configuration.
To disambiguate this commit considers the Raft index when storing
passthrough addresses. In the example above, 10.0.0.1 would only be
associated with the newer payments service instance.
Transparent proxies can set up filter chains that allow direct
connections to upstream service instances. Services that can be dialed
directly are stored in the PassthroughUpstreams map of the proxycfg
snapshot.
Previously these addresses were not being cleaned up based on new
service health data. The list of addresses associated with an upstream
service would only ever grow.
As services scale up and down, eventually they will have instances
assigned to an IP that was previously assigned to a different service.
When IP addresses are duplicated across filter chain match rules the
listener config will be rejected by Envoy.
This commit updates the proxycfg snapshot management so that passthrough
addresses can get cleaned up when no longer associated with a given
upstream.
There is still the possibility of a race condition here where due to
timing an address is shared between multiple passthrough upstreams.
That concern is mitigated by #12195, but will be further addressed
in a follow-up.
Fixes#11876
This enforces that multiple xDS mutations are not issued on the same ADS connection at once, so that we can 100% control the order that they are applied. The original code made assumptions about the way multiple in-flight mutations were applied on the Envoy side that was incorrect.
This commit makes two changes to the validation.
Previously we would call this validation in GenerateRoot, which happens
both on initialization (when a follower becomes leader), and when a
configuration is updated. We only want to do this validation during
config update so the logic was moved to the UpdateConfiguration
function.
Previously we would compare the config values against the actual cert.
This caused problems when the cert was created manually in Vault (not
created by Consul). Now we compare the new config against the previous
config. Using a already created CA cert should never error now.
Adding the key bit and types to the config should only error when
the previous values were not the defaults.
These two tests require debug logging enabled, because they look for log lines.
Also switched to testify assertions because the previous errors were not clear.
This test found a bug in the secondary. We were appending the root cert
to the PEM, but that cert was already appended. This was failing
validation in Vault here:
https://github.com/hashicorp/vault/blob/sdk/v0.3.0/sdk/helper/certutil/types.go#L329
Previously this worked because self signed certs have the same
SubjectKeyID and AuthorityKeyID. So having the same self-signed cert
repeated doesn't fail that check.
However with an intermediate that is not self-signed, those values are
different, and so we fail the check. A test I added in a previous commit
should show that this continues to work with self-signed root certs as
well.
This is safer than embedding two interface because there are a number of
places where we check the concrete type. If we check the concrete type
on the top-level interface it will fail. So instead expose the
ACLIdentity from a method.
This change allows us to remove one of the last remaining duplicate
resolve token methods (Server.ResolveToken).
With this change we are down to only 2, where the second one also
handles setting the default EnterpriseMeta from the token.
When a wildcard xDS type (LDS/CDS/SRDS) reconnects from a delta xDS stream,
prior to envoy `1.19.0` it would populate the `ResourceNamesSubscribe` field
with the full list of currently subscribed items, instead of simply omitting it
to infer that it wanted everything (which is what wildcard mode means).
This upstream issue was filed in envoyproxy/envoy#16063 and fixed in
envoyproxy/envoy#16153 which went out in Envoy `1.19.0` and is fixed in later
versions (later refactored in envoyproxy/envoy#16855).
This PR conditionally forces LDS/CDS to be wildcard-only even when the
connected Envoy requests a non-wildcard subscription, but only does so on
versions prior to `1.19.0`, as we should not need to do this on later versions.
This fixes the failure case as described here: #11833 (comment)
Co-authored-by: Huan Wang <fredwanghuan@gmail.com>
Now that ACLResolver is embedded we don't need ResolveTokenToIdentity on
Client and Server.
Moving ResolveTokenAndDefaultMeta to ACLResolver removes the duplicate
implementation.
set -euo pipefail
unset CDPATH
cd "$(dirname "$0")"
for f in $(git grep '\brequire := require\.New(' | cut -d':' -f1 | sort -u); do
echo "=== require: $f ==="
sed -i '/require := require.New(t)/d' $f
# require.XXX(blah) but not require.XXX(tblah) or require.XXX(rblah)
sed -i 's/\brequire\.\([a-zA-Z0-9_]*\)(\([^tr]\)/require.\1(t,\2/g' $f
# require.XXX(tblah) but not require.XXX(t, blah)
sed -i 's/\brequire\.\([a-zA-Z0-9_]*\)(\(t[^,]\)/require.\1(t,\2/g' $f
# require.XXX(rblah) but not require.XXX(r, blah)
sed -i 's/\brequire\.\([a-zA-Z0-9_]*\)(\(r[^,]\)/require.\1(t,\2/g' $f
gofmt -s -w $f
done
for f in $(git grep '\bassert := assert\.New(' | cut -d':' -f1 | sort -u); do
echo "=== assert: $f ==="
sed -i '/assert := assert.New(t)/d' $f
# assert.XXX(blah) but not assert.XXX(tblah) or assert.XXX(rblah)
sed -i 's/\bassert\.\([a-zA-Z0-9_]*\)(\([^tr]\)/assert.\1(t,\2/g' $f
# assert.XXX(tblah) but not assert.XXX(t, blah)
sed -i 's/\bassert\.\([a-zA-Z0-9_]*\)(\(t[^,]\)/assert.\1(t,\2/g' $f
# assert.XXX(rblah) but not assert.XXX(r, blah)
sed -i 's/\bassert\.\([a-zA-Z0-9_]*\)(\(r[^,]\)/assert.\1(t,\2/g' $f
gofmt -s -w $f
done
The gist here is that now we use a value-type struct proxycfg.UpstreamID
as the map key in ConfigSnapshot maps where we used to use "upstream
id-ish" strings. These are internal only and used just for bidirectional
trips through the agent cache keyspace (like the discovery chain target
struct).
For the few places where the upstream id needs to be projected into xDS,
that's what (proxycfg.UpstreamID).EnvoyID() is for. This lets us ALWAYS
inject the partition and namespace into these things without making
stuff like the golden testdata diverge.