Follow up to https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/pull/10737#discussion_r682147950
Renames all variables for acl.Authorizer to use `authz`. Previously some
places used `rule` which I believe was an old name carried over from the
legacy ACL system.
A couple places also used authorizer.
This commit also removes another couple of authorizer nil checks that
are no longer necessary.
Now that we have at least one endpoint that uses context for cancellation we can
encounter this scenario where the returned error is a context.Cancelled or
context.DeadlineExceeded.
If the request.Context().Err() is not nil, then we know the request itself was cancelled, so
we can log a different message at Info level, instad of the error.
* debug: remove the CLI check for debug_enabled
The API allows collecting profiles even debug_enabled=false as long as
ACLs are enabled. Remove this check from the CLI so that users do not
need to set debug_enabled=true for no reason.
Also:
- fix the API client to return errors on non-200 status codes for debug
endpoints
- improve the failure messages when pprof data can not be collected
Co-Authored-By: Dhia Ayachi <dhia@hashicorp.com>
* remove parallel test runs
parallel runs create a race condition that fail the debug tests
* Add changelog
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
This bug would result in the UI not having the correct settings in
Consul enterprise, which could produce many warnings in the logs.
This bug occured because the index page, which includes a map of configuration
was rendered when the HTTPHandler is first created. This PR changes the
UIServer to instead render the index page when the page is requested.
The rendering does not appear to be all that expensive, so rendering it
when requested should not cause much extra latency.
HTTPUseCache is only used is a gate for allowing QueryOptions.UseCache to be enabled. By
moving it to the place where the query options are set, this behaviour is more obvious.
Also remove parseInternal which was an alias for parse.
Header is: X-Consul-Default-ACL-Policy=<allow|deny>
This is of particular utility when fetching matching intentions, as the
fallthrough for a request that doesn't match any intentions is to
enforce using the default acl policy.
This ensures the metrics proxy endpoint is ACL protected behind a
wildcard `service:read` and `node:read` set of rules. For Consul
Enterprise these will need to span all namespaces:
```
service_prefix "" { policy = "read" }
node_prefix "" { policy = "read" }
namespace_prefix "" {
service_prefix "" { policy = "read" }
node_prefix "" { policy = "read" }
}
```
This PR contains just the backend changes. The frontend changes to
actually pass the consul token header to the proxy through the JS plugin
will come in another PR.
- Upgrade the ConfigEntry.ListAll RPC to be kind-aware so that older
copies of consul will not see new config entries it doesn't understand
replicate down.
- Add shim conversion code so that the old API/CLI method of interacting
with intentions will continue to work so long as none of these are
edited via config entry endpoints. Almost all of the read-only APIs will
continue to function indefinitely.
- Add new APIs that operate on individual intentions without IDs so that
the UI doesn't need to implement CAS operations.
- Add a new serf feature flag indicating support for
intentions-as-config-entries.
- The old line-item intentions way of interacting with the state store
will transparently flip between the legacy memdb table and the config
entry representations so that readers will never see a hiccup during
migration where the results are incomplete. It uses a piece of system
metadata to control the flip.
- The primary datacenter will begin migrating intentions into config
entries on startup once all servers in the datacenter are on a version
of Consul with the intentions-as-config-entries feature flag. When it is
complete the old state store representations will be cleared. We also
record a piece of system metadata indicating this has occurred. We use
this metadata to skip ALL of this code the next time the leader starts
up.
- The secondary datacenters continue to run the old intentions
replicator until all servers in the secondary DC and primary DC support
intentions-as-config-entries (via serf flag). Once this condition it met
the old intentions replicator ceases.
- The secondary datacenters replicate the new config entries as they are
migrated in the primary. When they detect that the primary has zeroed
it's old state store table it waits until all config entries up to that
point are replicated and then zeroes its own copy of the old state store
table. We also record a piece of system metadata indicating this has
occurred. We use this metadata to skip ALL of this code the next time
the leader starts up.
In all cases (oss/ent, client/server) this method was returning a value from config. Since the
value is consistent, it doesn't need to be part of the delegate interface.
The embedded HTTPServer struct is not used by the large HTTPServer
struct. It is used by tests and the agent. This change is a small first
step in the process of removing that field.
The eventual goal is to reduce the scope of HTTPServer making it easier
to test, and split into separate packages.
Some of these problems are minor (unused vars), but others are real bugs (ignored errors).
Co-authored-by: Matt Keeler <mkeeler@users.noreply.github.com>