* Add templating to inject JSON into an application/json script tag
Plus an external script in order to pick it out and inject the values we
need injecting into ember's environment meta tag.
The UI still uses env style naming (CONSUL_*) but we uses the new style
JSON/golang props behind the scenes.
Co-authored-by: Paul Banks <banks@banksco.de>
In some circumstances this endpoint will have no results in it (dues to
ACLs, Namespaces, filtering or missing configuration).
This ensures that the response is at least an empty array (`[]`) rather
than `null`
These expectations are optional because in a slow CI environment the deadline to cancell the context might occur before the go routine reaches issuing the RPC. Either way we are successfully ensuring context cancellation is working.
* ui: Convert Service.GatewayConfig to a model fragment
We added the ember-intl addon, which has its own format-number helper.
We replaced our own similarly named helper with this one, but the
ember-intl one is far stricter and errors if the arguments passed are
undefined. Our previously one would cope with this.
We'd rather continue to use the stricter ember-intl helper, so here we
convert the GatewayConfig property to a model fragment so that we can
give the GatewayConfig.AssociatedServices property a default zero value.
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.
* ui: Keep track of existing intentions and use those to save changes
Previously we risked overwriting existing data in an intention if we
tried to save an intention without having loaded it first, for example
Description and Metadata would have been overwritten.
This change loads in all the intentions for an origin service so we can
pick off the one we need to save and change to ensure that we don't
overwrite any existing data.
This originally comes form the ember-href-to helper and is one of those
errors that when I see it I think ... hmmm
This gives a little bit more of a clue as to what is wrong by logging
the route name you asked for plus the params you passed to it so you:
1. Have more help finding the href-to that is problematic in the
template/component
2. Can see all the parameters you passed (including a potential null
parameter for the thing you are missing)
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.
The field was not being included in the cache info key. This would result in a DNS request for
web.service.consul returning the same result as web.ingress.consul, when those results should
not be the same.
include all fields when fuzzing in tests
split tests by struct type
Ensure the new value for the field is different
fuzzer.Fuzz could produce the same value again in some cases.
Use a custom fuzz function for QueryOptions. That type is an embedded struct in the request types
but only one of the fields is important to include in the cache key.
Move enterpriseMetaField to an oss file so that we can change it in enterprise.
* 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