Previously canRetry was attempting to retrieve this error from args, however there was never
any callers that would pass an error to args.
With the change to raftApply to move this error to the error return value, it is now possible
to receive this error from the err argument.
This commit updates canRetry to check for ErrChunkingResubmit in err.
Previously we were inconsistently checking the response for errors. This
PR moves the response-is-error check into raftApply, so that all callers
can look at only the error response, instead of having to know that
errors could come from two places.
This should expose a few more errors that were previously hidden because
in some calls to raftApply we were ignoring the response return value.
Also handle errors more consistently. In some cases we would log the
error before returning it. This can be very confusing because it can
result in the same error being logged multiple times. Instead return
a wrapped error.
Previously only a single auth method would be saved to the snapshot. This commit fixes the typo
and adds to the test, to show that all auth methods are now saved.
This PR replaces the original boolean used to configure transparent
proxy mode. It was replaced with a string mode that can be set to:
- "": Empty string is the default for when the setting should be
defaulted from other configuration like config entries.
- "direct": Direct mode is how applications originally opted into the
mesh. Proxy listeners need to be dialed directly.
- "transparent": Transparent mode enables configuring Envoy as a
transparent proxy. Traffic must be captured and redirected to the
inbound and outbound listeners.
This PR also adds a struct for transparent proxy specific configuration.
Initially this is not stored as a pointer. Will revisit that decision
before GA.
This is needed in case the client proxy is in TransparentProxy mode.
Typically they won't have explicit configuration for every upstream, so
this ensures the settings can be applied to all of them when generating
xDS config.
New clients in transparent proxy mode can send requests for service
config resolution without any upstream args because they do not have
explicitly defined upstreams.
Old clients on the other hand will never send requests without the
Upstreams args unless they don't have upstreams, in which case we do not
send back upstream config.
As part of this change the indexer will now be case insensitive by using
the lower case value. This should be safe because previously we always
had lower case strings.
This change was made out of convenience. All the other indexers use
lowercase, so we can re-use the indexFromQuery function by using
lowercase here as well.
Previously we were encoding the UUID as a string, but the index it references uses a UUID
so this index can also use an encoded UUID to save a bit of memory.
Prefix queries are generally being used to match part of a partial
index. We can support these indexes by using a function that accept
different types for each subset of the index.
What I found interesting is that in the generic StringFieldIndexer the
implementation for PrefixFromArgs would remove the trailing null, but
at least in these 2 cases we actually want a null terminated string.
We simply want fewer components in the string.
The TestServiceHealthEventsFromChanges function was over 1400 lines.
Attempting to debug test failures in test functions this large is
difficult. It requires scrolling to the line which defines the testcase
because the failure message only includes the line number of the
assertion, not the line number of the test case.
This is an excellent example of where test tables stop working well, and
start being a problem. To mitigate this problem, the runCase pattern can
be used. When one of these tests fails, a failure message will print the
line number of both the test case and the assertion. This allows a
developer to quickly jump to both of the relevant lines, signficanting
reducing the time it takes to debug test failures.
For example, one such failure could look like this:
catalog_events_test.go:1610: case: service reg, new node
catalog_events_test.go:1605: assertion failed: values are not equal
ResolveServiceConfig is called by service manager before the proxy
registration is in the catalog. Therefore we should pass proxy
registration flags in the request rather than trying to fetch
them from the state store (where they may not exist yet).
This is done because after removing ID and NodeName from
ServiceConfigRequest we will no longer know whether a request coming in
is for a Consul client earlier than v1.10.
This enables it to be called for many upstreams or downstreams of a
service while only querying intentions once.
Additionally, decisions are now optionally denied due to L7 permissions
being present. This enables the function to be used to filter for
potential upstreams/downstreams of a service.
Previously this type was defined in structs, but unlike the other types in structs this type
is not used by RPC requests. By moving it to state we can better indicate that this is not
an API type, but part of the state implementation.
I added this recently without realizing that the method already existed and was named
NamespaceOrEmpty. Replace all calls to GetNamespace with NamespaceOrEmpty or NamespaceOrDefault
as appropriate.
Document that this comparison should roughly match MatchesKey
Only sort by overrideKey or service name, but not both
Add namespace to the sort.
The client side also builds a map of these based on the namespace/node/service key, so the only order
that really matters is the ordering of register/dereigster events.
Refactored out a function that can be used for both the snapshot and stream of events to translate
an event into an appropriate connect event.
Previously terminating gateway events would have used the wrong key in the snapshot, which would have
caused them to be filtered out later on.
Also removed an unused function, and some commented out code.
Health of a terminating gateway instance changes
- Generate an event for creating/destroying this instance of the terminating gateway,
duplicate it for each affected service
Co-Authored-By: Kyle Havlovitz <kylehav@gmail.com>
These new functional indexers provide a few advantages:
1. enterprise differences can be isolated to a single function (the
indexer function), making code easier to change
2. as a consequence of (1) we no longer need to wrap all the calls to
Txn operations, making code easier to read.
3. by removing reflection we should increase the performance of all
operations.
One important change is in making all the function signatures the same.
https://blog.golang.org/errors-are-values
An extra boolean return value for SingleIndexer.FromObject is superfluous.
The error value can indicate when the index value could not be created.
By removing this extra return value we can use the same signature for both
indexer functions.
This has the nice properly of a function being usable for both indexing operations.
By using a new pattern for more specific indexes. This allows us to use
the same index for both service checks and node checks. It removes the
abstraction around memdb.Txn operations, and isolates all of the
enterprise differences in a single place (the indexer).
Previously a snapshot created as part of a resumse-stream request could have incorrectly
cached the newSnapshotToFollow event. This would cause clients to error because they
received an unexpected framing event.
This fixes an issue where leaf certificates issued in primary
datacenters using Vault as a Connect CA would be reissued very
frequently (every ~20 seconds) because the logic meant to detect root
rotation was errantly triggering.
The hash of the rootCA was being compared against a hash of the
intermediateCA and always failing. This doesn't apply to the Consul
built-in CA provider because there is no intermediate in use in the
primary DC.
This is reminiscent of #6513
registerSchema creates some indirection which is not necessary in this
case. newDBSchema can call each of the tables.
Enterprise tables can be added from the existing withEnterpriseSchema
shim.
This allows setting ForceWithoutCrossSigning when reconfiguring the CA
for any provider, in order to forcibly move to a new root in cases where
the old provider isn't reachable or able to cross-sign for whatever
reason.
This way we only have to wait for the serf barrier to pass once before
we can make use of federation state APIs Without this patch every
restart needs to re-compute the change.
Deleting from memdb inside an interation can cause a panic from Iterator.Next. This
case is technically safe (for now) because the iterator is using the root radix tree
not a modified one.
However this could break at any time if someone adds an insert or delete to the coordinates table
before this place in the function.
It also sets a bad example, because generally deletes in an interator are not safe. So this
commit uses the pattern we have in other places to move the deletes out of the iteration.
After fixing that bug I uncovered a couple more:
Fix an issue where we might try to cross sign a cert when we never had a valid root.
Fix a potential issue where reconfiguring the CA could cause either the Vault or AWS PCA CA providers to delete resources that are still required by the new incarnation of the CA.
Using withEnterpriseSchema() we can apply any enterprise schema changes
with a single shim, removing the need to duplicate all of the table
definitions.
Also move all the catalog schemas to a new file to shrink catalog.go a bit.
I believe this commit also fixes a bug. Previously RPCMaxConnsPerClient was not being re-read from the RuntimeConfig, so passing it to Server.ReloadConfig was never changing the value.
Also improve the test runtime by not doing a lot of unnecessary work.
* Fix bug in usage metrics that caused a negative count to occur
There were a couple of instances were usage metrics would do the wrong
thing and result in incorrect counts, causing the count to attempt to
decrement below zero and return an error. The usage metrics did not
account for various places where a single transaction could
delete/update/add multiple service instances at once.
We also remove the error when attempting to decrement below zero, and
instead just make sure we do not accidentally underflow the unsigned
integer. This is a more graceful failure than returning an error and not
allowing a transaction to commit.
* Add changelog
These types are used as values (not pointers) in other structs. Using a pointer receiver causes
problems when the value is printed. fmt will not call the String method if it is passed a value
and the String method has a pointer receiver. By using a value receiver the correct string is printed.
Also remove some unused methods.
This way we only have to wait for the serf barrier to pass once before
we can upgrade to v2 acls. Without this patch every restart needs to
re-compute the change, and potentially if a stray older node joins after
a migration it might regress back to v1 mode which would be problematic.
This can happen when one other node in the cluster such as a client is unable to communicate with the leader server and sees it as failed. When that happens its failing status eventually gets propagated to the other servers in the cluster and eventually this can result in RPCs returning “No cluster leader” error.
That error is misleading and unhelpful for determing the root cause of the issue as its not raft stability but rather and client -> server networking issue. Therefore this commit will add a new error that will be returned in that case to differentiate between the two cases.
Previously the tokens would fail to insert into the secondary's state
store because the AuthMethod field of the ACLToken did not point to a
known auth method from the primary.
Add a skip condition to all tests slower than 100ms.
This change was made using `gotestsum tool slowest` with data from the
last 3 CI runs of master.
See https://github.com/gotestyourself/gotestsum#finding-and-skipping-slow-tests
With this change:
```
$ time go test -count=1 -short ./agent
ok github.com/hashicorp/consul/agent 0.743s
real 0m4.791s
$ time go test -count=1 -short ./agent/consul
ok github.com/hashicorp/consul/agent/consul 4.229s
real 0m8.769s
```
* server: fix panic when deleting a non existent intention
* add changelog
* Always return an error when deleting non-existent ixn
Co-authored-by: freddygv <gh@freddygv.xyz>
A vulnerability was identified in Consul and Consul Enterprise (“Consul”) such that operators with `operator:read` ACL permissions are able to read the Consul Connect CA configuration when explicitly configured with the `/v1/connect/ca/configuration` endpoint, including the private key. This allows the user to effectively privilege escalate by enabling the ability to mint certificates for any Consul Connect services. This would potentially allow them to masquerade (receive/send traffic) as any service in the mesh.
--
This PR increases the permissions required to read the Connect CA's private key when it was configured via the `/connect/ca/configuration` endpoint. They are now `operator:write`.