open-consul/agent/consul/acl_replication.go
Josh Soref 1dd8c378b9 Spelling (#3958)
* spelling: another

* spelling: autopilot

* spelling: beginning

* spelling: circonus

* spelling: default

* spelling: definition

* spelling: distance

* spelling: encountered

* spelling: enterprise

* spelling: expands

* spelling: exits

* spelling: formatting

* spelling: health

* spelling: hierarchy

* spelling: imposed

* spelling: independence

* spelling: inspect

* spelling: last

* spelling: latest

* spelling: client

* spelling: message

* spelling: minimum

* spelling: notify

* spelling: nonexistent

* spelling: operator

* spelling: payload

* spelling: preceded

* spelling: prepared

* spelling: programmatically

* spelling: required

* spelling: reconcile

* spelling: responses

* spelling: request

* spelling: response

* spelling: results

* spelling: retrieve

* spelling: service

* spelling: significantly

* spelling: specifies

* spelling: supported

* spelling: synchronization

* spelling: synchronous

* spelling: themselves

* spelling: unexpected

* spelling: validations

* spelling: value
2018-03-19 16:56:00 +00:00

351 lines
12 KiB
Go

package consul
import (
"fmt"
"sort"
"time"
"github.com/armon/go-metrics"
"github.com/hashicorp/consul/agent/structs"
"github.com/hashicorp/consul/lib"
)
// aclIterator simplifies the algorithm below by providing a basic iterator that
// moves through a list of ACLs and returns nil when it's exhausted. It also has
// methods for pre-sorting the ACLs being iterated over by ID, which should
// already be true, but since this is crucial for correctness and we are taking
// input from other servers, we sort to make sure.
type aclIterator struct {
acls structs.ACLs
// index is the current position of the iterator.
index int
}
// newACLIterator returns a new ACL iterator.
func newACLIterator(acls structs.ACLs) *aclIterator {
return &aclIterator{acls: acls}
}
// See sort.Interface.
func (a *aclIterator) Len() int {
return len(a.acls)
}
// See sort.Interface.
func (a *aclIterator) Swap(i, j int) {
a.acls[i], a.acls[j] = a.acls[j], a.acls[i]
}
// See sort.Interface.
func (a *aclIterator) Less(i, j int) bool {
return a.acls[i].ID < a.acls[j].ID
}
// Front returns the item at index position, or nil if the list is exhausted.
func (a *aclIterator) Front() *structs.ACL {
if a.index < len(a.acls) {
return a.acls[a.index]
}
return nil
}
// Next advances the iterator to the next index.
func (a *aclIterator) Next() {
a.index++
}
// reconcileACLs takes the local and remote ACL state, and produces a list of
// changes required in order to bring the local ACLs into sync with the remote
// ACLs. You can supply lastRemoteIndex as a hint that replication has succeeded
// up to that remote index and it will make this process more efficient by only
// comparing ACL entries modified after that index. Setting this to 0 will force
// a full compare of all existing ACLs.
func reconcileACLs(local, remote structs.ACLs, lastRemoteIndex uint64) structs.ACLRequests {
// Since sorting the lists is crucial for correctness, we are depending
// on data coming from other servers potentially running a different,
// version of Consul, and sorted-ness is kind of a subtle property of
// the state store indexing, it's prudent to make sure things are sorted
// before we begin.
localIter, remoteIter := newACLIterator(local), newACLIterator(remote)
sort.Sort(localIter)
sort.Sort(remoteIter)
// Run through both lists and reconcile them.
var changes structs.ACLRequests
for localIter.Front() != nil || remoteIter.Front() != nil {
// If the local list is exhausted, then process this as a remote
// add. We know from the loop condition that there's something
// in the remote list.
if localIter.Front() == nil {
changes = append(changes, &structs.ACLRequest{
Op: structs.ACLSet,
ACL: *(remoteIter.Front()),
})
remoteIter.Next()
continue
}
// If the remote list is exhausted, then process this as a local
// delete. We know from the loop condition that there's something
// in the local list.
if remoteIter.Front() == nil {
changes = append(changes, &structs.ACLRequest{
Op: structs.ACLDelete,
ACL: *(localIter.Front()),
})
localIter.Next()
continue
}
// At this point we know there's something at the front of each
// list we need to resolve.
// If the remote list has something local doesn't, we add it.
if localIter.Front().ID > remoteIter.Front().ID {
changes = append(changes, &structs.ACLRequest{
Op: structs.ACLSet,
ACL: *(remoteIter.Front()),
})
remoteIter.Next()
continue
}
// If local has something remote doesn't, we delete it.
if localIter.Front().ID < remoteIter.Front().ID {
changes = append(changes, &structs.ACLRequest{
Op: structs.ACLDelete,
ACL: *(localIter.Front()),
})
localIter.Next()
continue
}
// Local and remote have an ACL with the same ID, so we might
// need to compare them.
l, r := localIter.Front(), remoteIter.Front()
if r.RaftIndex.ModifyIndex > lastRemoteIndex && !r.IsSame(l) {
changes = append(changes, &structs.ACLRequest{
Op: structs.ACLSet,
ACL: *r,
})
}
localIter.Next()
remoteIter.Next()
}
return changes
}
// FetchLocalACLs returns the ACLs in the local state store.
func (s *Server) fetchLocalACLs() (structs.ACLs, error) {
_, local, err := s.fsm.State().ACLList(nil)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return local, nil
}
// FetchRemoteACLs is used to get the remote set of ACLs from the ACL
// datacenter. The lastIndex parameter is a hint about which remote index we
// have replicated to, so this is expected to block until something changes.
func (s *Server) fetchRemoteACLs(lastRemoteIndex uint64) (*structs.IndexedACLs, error) {
defer metrics.MeasureSince([]string{"consul", "leader", "fetchRemoteACLs"}, time.Now())
defer metrics.MeasureSince([]string{"leader", "fetchRemoteACLs"}, time.Now())
args := structs.DCSpecificRequest{
Datacenter: s.config.ACLDatacenter,
QueryOptions: structs.QueryOptions{
Token: s.tokens.ACLReplicationToken(),
MinQueryIndex: lastRemoteIndex,
AllowStale: true,
},
}
var remote structs.IndexedACLs
if err := s.RPC("ACL.List", &args, &remote); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &remote, nil
}
// UpdateLocalACLs is given a list of changes to apply in order to bring the
// local ACLs in-line with the remote ACLs from the ACL datacenter.
func (s *Server) updateLocalACLs(changes structs.ACLRequests) error {
defer metrics.MeasureSince([]string{"consul", "leader", "updateLocalACLs"}, time.Now())
defer metrics.MeasureSince([]string{"leader", "updateLocalACLs"}, time.Now())
minTimePerOp := time.Second / time.Duration(s.config.ACLReplicationApplyLimit)
for _, change := range changes {
// Note that we are using the single ACL interface here and not
// performing all this inside a single transaction. This is OK
// for two reasons. First, there's nothing else other than this
// replication routine that alters the local ACLs, so there's
// nothing to contend with locally. Second, if an apply fails
// in the middle (most likely due to losing leadership), the
// next replication pass will clean up and check everything
// again.
var reply string
start := time.Now()
if err := aclApplyInternal(s, change, &reply); err != nil {
return err
}
// Do a smooth rate limit to wait out the min time allowed for
// each op. If this op took longer than the min, then the sleep
// time will be negative and we will just move on.
elapsed := time.Since(start)
time.Sleep(minTimePerOp - elapsed)
}
return nil
}
// replicateACLs is a runs one pass of the algorithm for replicating ACLs from
// a remote ACL datacenter to local state. If there's any error, this will return
// 0 for the lastRemoteIndex, which will cause us to immediately do a full sync
// next time.
func (s *Server) replicateACLs(lastRemoteIndex uint64) (uint64, error) {
remote, err := s.fetchRemoteACLs(lastRemoteIndex)
if err != nil {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("failed to retrieve remote ACLs: %v", err)
}
// This will be pretty common because we will be blocking for a long time
// and may have lost leadership, so lets control the message here instead
// of returning deeper error messages from from Raft.
if !s.IsLeader() {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("no longer cluster leader")
}
// Measure everything after the remote query, which can block for long
// periods of time. This metric is a good measure of how expensive the
// replication process is.
defer metrics.MeasureSince([]string{"consul", "leader", "replicateACLs"}, time.Now())
defer metrics.MeasureSince([]string{"leader", "replicateACLs"}, time.Now())
local, err := s.fetchLocalACLs()
if err != nil {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("failed to retrieve local ACLs: %v", err)
}
// If the remote index ever goes backwards, it's a good indication that
// the remote side was rebuilt and we should do a full sync since we
// can't make any assumptions about what's going on.
if remote.QueryMeta.Index < lastRemoteIndex {
s.logger.Printf("[WARN] consul: ACL replication remote index moved backwards (%d to %d), forcing a full ACL sync", lastRemoteIndex, remote.QueryMeta.Index)
lastRemoteIndex = 0
}
// Calculate the changes required to bring the state into sync and then
// apply them.
changes := reconcileACLs(local, remote.ACLs, lastRemoteIndex)
if err := s.updateLocalACLs(changes); err != nil {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("failed to sync ACL changes: %v", err)
}
// Return the index we got back from the remote side, since we've synced
// up with the remote state as of that index.
return remote.QueryMeta.Index, nil
}
// IsACLReplicationEnabled returns true if ACL replication is enabled.
func (s *Server) IsACLReplicationEnabled() bool {
authDC := s.config.ACLDatacenter
return len(authDC) > 0 && (authDC != s.config.Datacenter) &&
s.config.EnableACLReplication
}
// updateACLReplicationStatus safely updates the ACL replication status.
func (s *Server) updateACLReplicationStatus(status structs.ACLReplicationStatus) {
// Fixup the times to shed some useless precision to ease formatting,
// and always report UTC.
status.LastError = status.LastError.Round(time.Second).UTC()
status.LastSuccess = status.LastSuccess.Round(time.Second).UTC()
// Set the shared state.
s.aclReplicationStatusLock.Lock()
s.aclReplicationStatus = status
s.aclReplicationStatusLock.Unlock()
}
// runACLReplication is a long-running goroutine that will attempt to replicate
// ACLs while the server is the leader, until the shutdown channel closes.
func (s *Server) runACLReplication() {
var status structs.ACLReplicationStatus
status.Enabled = true
status.SourceDatacenter = s.config.ACLDatacenter
s.updateACLReplicationStatus(status)
// Show that it's not running on the way out.
defer func() {
status.Running = false
s.updateACLReplicationStatus(status)
}()
// Give each server's replicator a random initial phase for good
// measure.
select {
case <-s.shutdownCh:
return
case <-time.After(lib.RandomStagger(s.config.ACLReplicationInterval)):
}
// We are fairly conservative with the lastRemoteIndex so that after a
// leadership change or an error we re-sync everything (we also don't
// want to block the first time after one of these events so we can
// show a successful sync in the status endpoint).
var lastRemoteIndex uint64
replicate := func() {
if !status.Running {
lastRemoteIndex = 0 // Re-sync everything.
status.Running = true
s.updateACLReplicationStatus(status)
s.logger.Printf("[INFO] consul: ACL replication started")
}
index, err := s.replicateACLs(lastRemoteIndex)
if err != nil {
lastRemoteIndex = 0 // Re-sync everything.
status.LastError = time.Now()
s.updateACLReplicationStatus(status)
s.logger.Printf("[WARN] consul: ACL replication error (will retry if still leader): %v", err)
} else {
lastRemoteIndex = index
status.ReplicatedIndex = index
status.LastSuccess = time.Now()
s.updateACLReplicationStatus(status)
s.logger.Printf("[DEBUG] consul: ACL replication completed through remote index %d", index)
}
}
pause := func() {
if status.Running {
lastRemoteIndex = 0 // Re-sync everything.
status.Running = false
s.updateACLReplicationStatus(status)
s.logger.Printf("[INFO] consul: ACL replication stopped (no longer leader)")
}
}
// This will slowly poll to see if replication should be active. Once it
// is and we've caught up, the replicate() call will begin to block and
// only wake up when the query timer expires or there are new ACLs to
// replicate. We've chosen this design so that the ACLReplicationInterval
// is the lower bound for how quickly we will replicate, no matter how
// much ACL churn is happening on the remote side.
//
// The blocking query inside replicate() respects the shutdown channel,
// so we won't get stuck in here as things are torn down.
for {
select {
case <-s.shutdownCh:
return
case <-time.After(s.config.ACLReplicationInterval):
if s.IsLeader() {
replicate()
} else {
pause()
}
}
}
}