This struct allows us to move all the deprecated config options off of
the main config struct, and keeps all the deprecation logic in a single
place, instead of spread across 3+ places.
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 field was never user-configurable. We always overwrote the value with 120s from
NonUserSource. However, we also never copied the value from RuntimeConfig to consul.Config,
So the value in NonUserSource was always ignored, and we used the default value of 30s
set by consul.DefaultConfig.
All of this code is an unnecessary distraction because a user can not actually configure
this value.
This commit removes the fields and uses a constant value instad. Someone attempting to set
acl.disabled_ttl in their config will now get an error about an unknown field, but previously
the value was completely ignored, so the new behaviour seems more correct.
We have to keep this field in the AutoConfig response for backwards compatibility, but the value
will be ignored by the client, so it doesn't really matter what value we set.
This field has been unnecessary for a while now. It was always set to the same value
as PrimaryDatacenter. So we can remove the duplicate field and use PrimaryDatacenter
directly.
This change was made by GoLand refactor, which did most of the work for me.
The blocking query backend sets the default value on the server side.
The streaming backend does not using blocking queries, so we must set the timeout on
the client.
This change adds a new `dns_config.recursor_strategy` option which
controls how Consul queries DNS resolvers listed in the `recursors`
config option. The supported options are `sequential` (default), and
`random`.
Closes#8807
Co-authored-by: Blake Covarrubias <blake@covarrubi.as>
Co-authored-by: Priyanka Sengupta <psengupta@flatiron.com>
And remove BuildAndValidate. This commit completes some earlier work to reduce the config
interface a single Load function.
The last remaining test was converted to use Load instad of BuildAndValidate.
The hcl decoding apparently uses strconv.ParseInt, which fails to parse a 64bit int.
Since hcl v1 is basically EOl, it seems unlikely we'll fix this in hcl.
Since this test is only about loading values from config files, the extra large number
doesn't seem important. Trim a few zeros from the numbers so that they parse
properly on 32bit platforms.
Also skip a slow test when -short is used.
CatalogDestinationsOnly is a passthrough that would enable dialing
addresses outside of Consul's catalog. However, when this flag is set to
true only _connect_ endpoints for services can be dialed.
This flag is being renamed to signal that non-Connect endpoints can't be
dialed by transparent proxies when the value is set to true.
The bulk of this commit is moving the LeaderRoutineManager from the agent/consul package into its own package: lib/gort. It also got a renaming and its Start method now requires a context. Requiring that context required updating a whole bunch of other places in the code.