This commit adds the PrioritizeByLocality field to both proxy-config
and service-resolver config entries for locality-aware routing. The
field is currently intended for enterprise only, and will be used to
enable prioritization of service-mesh connections to services based
on geographical region / zone.
* Leverage ServiceResolver ConnectTimeout for route timeouts to make TerminatingGateway upstream timeouts configurable
* Regenerate golden files
* Add RequestTimeout field
* Add changelog entry
Currently the config_entry.go subsystem delegates authorization decisions via the ConfigEntry interface CanRead and CanWrite code. Unfortunately this returns a true/false value and loses the details of the source.
This is not helpful, especially since it the config subsystem can be more complex to understand, since it covers so many domains.
This refactors CanRead/CanWrite to return a structured error message (PermissionDenied or the like) with more details about the reason for denial.
Part of #12241
Signed-off-by: Mark Anderson <manderson@hashicorp.com>
Failing over to a partition is more siimilar to failing over to another
datacenter than it is to failing over to a namespace. In a future
release we should update how localities for failover are specified. We
should be able to accept a list of localities which can include both
partition and datacenter.
* Add partition fields to targets like service route destinations
* Update validation to prevent cross-DC + cross-partition references
* Handle partitions when reading config entries for disco chain
* Encode partition in compiled targets
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.
Extend Consul’s intentions model to allow for request-based access control enforcement for HTTP-like protocols in addition to the existing connection-based enforcement for unspecified protocols (e.g. tcp).