TLDR with many modules the versions included in each diverged quite a bit. Attempting to use Go Workspaces produces a bunch of errors.
This commit:
1. Fixes envoy-library-references.sh to work again
2. Ensures we are pulling in go-control-plane@v0.11.0 everywhere (previously it was at that version in some modules and others were much older)
3. Remove one usage of golang/protobuf that caused us to have a direct dependency on it.
4. Remove deprecated usage of the Endpoint field in the grpc resolver.Target struct. The current version of grpc (v1.55.0) has removed that field and recommended replacement with URL.Opaque and calls to the Endpoint() func when needing to consume the previous field.
4. `go work init <all the paths to go.mod files>` && `go work sync`. This syncrhonized versions of dependencies from the main workspace/root module to all submodules
5. Updated .gitignore to ignore the go.work and go.work.sum files. This seems to be standard practice at the moment.
6. Update doc comments in protoc-gen-consul-rate-limit to be go fmt compatible
7. Upgraded makefile infra to perform linting, testing and go mod tidy on all modules in a flexible manner.
8. Updated linter rules to prevent usage of golang/protobuf
9. Updated a leader peering test to account for an extra colon in a grpc error message.
Protobuf Refactoring for Multi-Module Cleanliness
This commit includes the following:
Moves all packages that were within proto/ to proto/private
Rewrites imports to account for the packages being moved
Adds in buf.work.yaml to enable buf workspaces
Names the proto-public buf module so that we can override the Go package imports within proto/buf.yaml
Bumps the buf version dependency to 1.14.0 (I was trying out the version to see if it would get around an issue - it didn't but it also doesn't break things and it seemed best to keep up with the toolchain changes)
Why:
In the future we will need to consume other protobuf dependencies such as the Google HTTP annotations for openapi generation or grpc-gateway usage.
There were some recent changes to have our own ratelimiting annotations.
The two combined were not working when I was trying to use them together (attempting to rebase another branch)
Buf workspaces should be the solution to the problem
Buf workspaces means that each module will have generated Go code that embeds proto file names relative to the proto dir and not the top level repo root.
This resulted in proto file name conflicts in the Go global protobuf type registry.
The solution to that was to add in a private/ directory into the path within the proto/ directory.
That then required rewriting all the imports.
Is this safe?
AFAICT yes
The gRPC wire protocol doesn't seem to care about the proto file names (although the Go grpc code does tack on the proto file name as Metadata in the ServiceDesc)
Other than imports, there were no changes to any generated code as a result of this.
Ensure nothing in the troubleshoot go module depends on consul's top level module. This is so we can import troubleshoot into consul-k8s and not import all of consul.
* turns troubleshoot into a go module [authored by @curtbushko]
* gets the envoy protos into the troubleshoot module [authored by @curtbushko]
* adds a new go module `envoyextensions` which has xdscommon and extensioncommon folders that both the xds package and the troubleshoot package can import
* adds testing and linting for the new go modules
* moves the unit tests in `troubleshoot/validateupstream` that depend on proxycfg/xds into the xds package, with a comment describing why those tests cannot be in the troubleshoot package
* fixes all the imports everywhere as a result of these changes
Co-authored-by: Curt Bushko <cbushko@gmail.com>
* Protobuf Modernization
Remove direct usage of golang/protobuf in favor of google.golang.org/protobuf
Marshallers (protobuf and json) needed some changes to account for different APIs.
Moved to using the google.golang.org/protobuf/types/known/* for the well known types including replacing some custom Struct manipulation with whats available in the structpb well known type package.
This also updates our devtools script to install protoc-gen-go from the right location so that files it generates conform to the correct interfaces.
* Fix go-mod-tidy make target to work on all modules
Adds automation for generating the map of `gRPC Method Name → Rate Limit Type`
used by the middleware introduced in #15550, and will ensure we don't forget
to add new endpoints.
Engineers must annotate their RPCs in the proto file like so:
```
rpc Foo(FooRequest) returns (FooResponse) {
option (consul.internal.ratelimit.spec) = {
operation_type: READ,
};
}
```
When they run `make proto` a protoc plugin `protoc-gen-consul-rate-limit` will
be installed that writes rate-limit specs as a JSON array to a file called
`.ratelimit.tmp` (one per protobuf package/directory).
After running Buf, `make proto` will execute a post-process script that will
ingest all of the `.ratelimit.tmp` files and generate a Go file containing the
mappings in the `agent/grpc-middleware` package. In the enterprise repository,
it will write an additional file with the enterprise-only endpoints.
If an engineer forgets to add the annotation to a new RPC, the plugin will
return an error like so:
```
RPC Foo is missing rate-limit specification, fix it with:
import "proto-public/annotations/ratelimit/ratelimit.proto";
service Bar {
rpc Foo(...) returns (...) {
option (hashicorp.consul.internal.ratelimit.spec) = {
operation_type: OPERATION_READ | OPERATION_WRITE | OPERATION_EXEMPT,
};
}
}
```
In the future, this annotation can be extended to support rate-limit
category (e.g. KV vs Catalog) and to determine the retry policy.
Replaces the reflection-based implementation of proxycfg's
ConfigSnapshot.Clone with code generated by deep-copy.
While load testing server-based xDS (for consul-dataplane) we discovered
this method is extremely expensive. The ConfigSnapshot struct, directly
or indirectly, contains a copy of many of the structs in the agent/structs
package, which creates a large graph for copystructure.Copy to traverse
at runtime, on every proxy reconfiguration.
I had protoc-gen-go installed through `google.golang.org/protobuf` instead of
`github.com/golang/protobuf` and `make proto` was failing silently.
This change will ensure you get an error:
```
protoc-gen-go is already installed by module "google.golang.org/protobuf" but
should be installed by module "github.com/golang/protobuf".
Delete it and re-run to re-install.
```
Replace bindata packages with stdlib go:embed.
Modernize some uiserver code with newer interfaces introduced in go 1.16 (mainly working with fs.File instead of http.File.
Remove steps that are no longer used from our build files.
Add Github Action to detect differences in agent/uiserver/dist and verify that the files are correct (by compiling UI assets and comparing contents).
I noticed that the JSON api endpoints for peerings json encodes protobufs directly, rather than converting them into their `api` package equivalents before marshal/unmarshaling them.
I updated this and used `mog` to do the annoying part in the middle.
Other changes:
- the status enum was converted into the friendlier string form of the enum for readability with tools like `curl`
- some of the `api` library functions were slightly modified to match other similar endpoints in UX (cc: @ndhanushkodi )
- peeringRead returns `nil` if not found
- partitions are NOT inferred from the agent's partition (matching 1.11-style logic)
* Install `buf` instead of `protoc`
* Created `buf.yaml` and `buf.gen.yaml` files in the two proto directories to control how `buf` generates/lints proto code.
* Invoke `buf` instead of `protoc`
* Added a `proto-format` make target.
* Committed the reformatted proto files.
* Added a `proto-lint` make target.
* Integrated proto linting with CI
* Fixed tons of proto linter warnings.
* Got rid of deprecated builtin protoc-gen-go grpc plugin usage. Moved to direct usage of protoc-gen-go-grpc.
* Unified all proto directories / go packages around using pb prefixes but ensuring all proto packages do not have the prefix.
* mogify needed pbcommon structs
* mogify needed pbconnect structs
* fix compilation errors and make config_translate_test pass
* add missing file
* remove redundant oss func declaration
* fix EnterpriseMeta to copy the right data for enterprise
* rename pbcommon package to pbcommongogo
* regenerate proto and mog files
* add missing mog files
* add pbcommon package
* pbcommon no mog
* fix enterprise meta code generation
* fix enterprise meta code generation (pbcommongogo)
* fix mog generation for gogo
* use `protoc-go-inject-tag` to inject tags
* rename proto package
* pbcommon no mog
* use `protoc-go-inject-tag` to inject tags
* add non gogo proto to make file
* fix proto get
This machinery was not used, and does not appear to be maintained. In practice we really
don't need anything to detect flaky tests. Our CI system identifies flaky tests at
https://app.circleci.com/insights/github/hashicorp/consul/workflows/go-tests/tests?branch=main
Mostly what we need is a way to reproduce flakes, which can be done directly with the Go
CLI, using the -race, -count, and (new in Go 1.17) -shuffle flags.
Signed-off-by: Jakub Sokołowski <jakub@status.im>
* agent: add failures_before_warning setting
The new setting allows users to specify the number of check failures
that have to happen before a service status us updated to be `warning`.
This allows for more visibility for detected issues without creating
alerts and pinging administrators. Unlike the previous behavior, which
caused the service status to not update until it reached the configured
`failures_before_critical` setting, now Consul updates the Web UI view
with the `warning` state and the output of the service check when
`failures_before_warning` is breached.
The default value of `FailuresBeforeWarning` is the same as the value of
`FailuresBeforeCritical`, which allows for retaining the previous default
behavior of not triggering a warning.
When `FailuresBeforeWarning` is set to a value higher than that of
`FailuresBeforeCritical it has no effect as `FailuresBeforeCritical`
takes precedence.
Resolves: https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/issues/10680
Signed-off-by: Jakub Sokołowski <jakub@status.im>
Co-authored-by: Jakub Sokołowski <jakub@status.im>
This ensures that if someone does include some extension Consul does not currently make use of, that extension is actually usable. Without linking these envoy protobufs into the main binary it can't round trip the escape hatches to send them down to envoy.
Whenenver the go-control-plane library is upgraded next we just have to re-run 'make envoy-library'.
Right now this is only hooked into the insecure RPC server and requires JWT authorization. If no JWT authorizer is setup in the configuration then we inject a disabled “authorizer” to always report that JWT authorization is disabled.
This only works so long as we use simplistic protobuf types. Constructs such as oneof or Any types that require type annotations for decoding properly will fail hard but that is by design. If/when we want to use any of that we will probably need to consider a v2 API.
* Add JSON and Binary Marshaler Generators for Protobuf Types
* Generate files with the correct version of gogo/protobuf
I have pinned the version in the makefile so when you run make tools you get the right version. This pulls the version out of go.mod so it should remain up to date.
The version at the time of this commit we are using is v1.2.1
* Fixup some shell output
* Update how we determine the version of gogo
This just greps the go.mod file instead of expecting the go mod cache to already be present
* Fixup vendoring and remove no longer needed json encoder functions
* Add build system support for protobuf generation
This is done generically so that we don’t have to keep updating the makefile to add another proto generation.
Note: anything not in the vendor directory and with a .proto extension will be run through protoc if the corresponding namespace.pb.go file is not up to date.
If you want to rebuild just a single proto file you can do so with: make proto-rebuild PROTOFILES=<list of proto files to rebuild>
Providing the PROTOFILES var will override the default behavior of finding all the .proto files.
* Start adding types to the agent/proto package
These will be needed for some other work and are by no means comprehensive.
* Add ability to resolve/fixup the agentpb.ACLLinks structure in the state store.
* Use protobuf marshalling of raft requests instead of msgpack for protoc generated types.
This does not change any encoding of existing types.
* Removed structs package automatically encoding with protobuf marshalling
Instead the caller of raftApply that wants to opt-in to protobuf encoding will have to call `raftApplyProtobuf`
* Run update-vendor to fixup modules.txt
Nothing changed as far as dependencies go but the ordering of modules in that file depends on the time they are first seen and its not alphabetical.
* Rename some things and implement the structs.RPCInfo interface bits
agentpb.QueryOptions and agentpb.WriteRequest implement 3 of the 4 RPCInfo funcs and the new TargetDatacenter message type implements the fourth.
* Use the right encoding function.
* Renamed agent/proto package to agent/agentpb to prevent package name conflicts
* Update modules.txt to fix ordering
* Change blockingQuery to take in interfaces for the query options and meta
* Add %T to error output.
* Add/Update some comments
Adds additional 'enterprise' text underneath the 'startup' logo if the
ui is built with a CONSUL_BINARY_TYPE environment variable that doesn't
equal `oss`.