* circleci: remove fronted jobs
Signed-off-by: Dan Bond <danbond@protonmail.com>
* remove frontend-cache
Signed-off-by: Dan Bond <danbond@protonmail.com>
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Signed-off-by: Dan Bond <danbond@protonmail.com>
* Add a test to reproduce the race condition
* Fix race condition by publishing the event after the commit and adding a lock to prevent out of order events.
* split publish to generate the list of events before committing the transaction.
* add changelog
* remove extra func
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Dan Upton <daniel@floppy.co>
* add comment to explain test
---------
Co-authored-by: Dan Upton <daniel@floppy.co>
Prior to this change, peer services would be targeted by service-default
overrides as long as the new `peer` field was not found in the config entry.
This commit removes that deprecated backwards-compatibility behavior. Now
it is necessary to specify the `peer` field in order for upstream overrides
to apply to a peer upstream.
The old setting of 24 hours was not enough time to deal with an expiring certificates. This change ups it to 28 days OR 40% of the full cert duration, whichever is shorter. It also adds details to the log message to indicate which certificate it is logging about and a suggested action.
* Add go-tests-success job and make go-test-enterprise conditional
* fixing lint-32bit reference
* fixing reference to -go-test-troubleshoot
* add all jobs that fan out.
* fixing success job to need set up
* add echo to success job
* adding success jobs to build-artifacts, build-distros, and frontend.
* changing the name of the job in verify ci to be consistent with other workflows
* enable go-tests, build-distros, and verify-ci to run on merge to main and release branches because they currently do not with just the pull_request trigger
* Fix API GW broken link
* Update website/content/docs/api-gateway/upgrades.mdx
Co-authored-by: Tu Nguyen <im2nguyen@users.noreply.github.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Tu Nguyen <im2nguyen@users.noreply.github.com>
* docs: add envoy to the proxycfg diagram (#16834)
* docs: add envoy to the proxycfg diagram
* increase dee-copy job to use large runner. disable lint-enums on ENT
* set lint-enums to a large
* remove redunant installation of deep-copy
---------
Co-authored-by: cskh <hui.kang@hashicorp.com>
This is part of an effort to raise awareness that you need to monitor
your mesh CA if coming from an external source as you'll need to manage
the rotation.
Currently, if an acceptor peer deletes a peering the dialer's peering
will eventually get to a "terminated" state. If the two clusters need to
be re-peered the acceptor will re-generate the token but the dialer will
encounter this error on the call to establish:
"failed to get addresses to dial peer: failed to refresh peer server
addresses, will continue to use initial addresses: there is no active
peering for "<<<ID>>>""
This is because in `exchangeSecret().GetDialAddresses()` we will get an
error if fetching addresses for an inactive peering. The peering shows
up as inactive at this point because of the existing terminated state.
Rather than checking whether a peering is active we can instead check
whether it was deleted. This way users do not need to delete terminated
peerings in the dialing cluster before re-establishing them.
* Rename Intermediate cert references to LeafSigningCert
Within the Consul CA subsystem, the term "Intermediate"
is confusing because the meaning changes depending on
provider and datacenter (primary vs secondary). For
example, when using the Consul CA the "ActiveIntermediate"
may return the root certificate in a primary datacenter.
At a high level, we are interested in knowing which
CA is responsible for signing leaf certs, regardless of
its position in a certificate chain. This rename makes
the intent clearer.
* Move provider state check earlier
* Remove calls to GenerateLeafSigningCert
GenerateLeafSigningCert (formerly known
as GenerateIntermediate) is vestigial in
non-Vault providers, as it simply returns
the root certificate in primary
datacenters.
By folding Vault's intermediate cert logic
into `GenerateRoot` we can encapsulate
the intermediate cert handling within
`newCARoot`.
* Move GenerateLeafSigningCert out of PrimaryProvidder
Now that the Vault Provider calls
GenerateLeafSigningCert within
GenerateRoot, we can remove the method
from all other providers that never
used it in a meaningful way.
* Add test for IntermediatePEM
* Rename GenerateRoot to GenerateCAChain
"Root" was being overloaded in the Consul CA
context, as different providers and configs
resulted in a single root certificate or
a chain originating from an external trusted
CA. Since the Vault provider also generates
intermediates, it seems more accurate to
call this a CAChain.