API queries can request pagination using the `NextToken` and `PerPage`
fields of `QueryOptions`, when supported by the underlying API.
Add a `NextToken` field to the `structs.QueryMeta` so that we have a
common field across RPCs to tell the caller where to resume paging
from on their next API call. Include this field on the `api.QueryMeta`
as well so that it's available for future versions of List HTTP APIs
that wrap the response with `QueryMeta` rather than returning a simple
list of structs. In the meantime callers can get the `X-Nomad-NextToken`.
Add pagination to the `Eval.List` RPC by checking for pagination token
and page size in `QueryOptions`. This will allow resuming from the
last ID seen so long as the query parameters and the state store
itself are unchanged between requests.
Add filtering by job ID or evaluation status over the results we get
out of the state store.
Parse the query parameters of the `Eval.List` API into the arguments
expected for filtering in the RPC call.
During incident response, operators may find that automated processes
elsewhere in the organization can be generating new workloads on Nomad
clusters that are unable to handle the workload. This changeset adds a
field to the `SchedulerConfiguration` API that causes all job
registration calls to be rejected unless the request has a management
ACL token.
This change modifies the Nomad job register and deregister RPCs to
accept an updated option set which includes eval priority. This
param is optional and override the use of the job priority to set
the eval priority.
In order to ensure all evaluations as a result of the request use
the same eval priority, the priority is shared to the
allocReconciler and deploymentWatcher. This creates a new
distinction between eval priority and job priority.
The Nomad agent HTTP API has been modified to allow setting the
eval priority on job update and delete. To keep consistency with
the current v1 API, job update accepts this as a payload param;
job delete accepts this as a query param.
Any user supplied value is validated within the agent HTTP handler
removing the need to pass invalid requests to the server.
The register and deregister opts functions now all for setting
the eval priority on requests.
The change includes a small change to the DeregisterOpts function
which handles nil opts. This brings the function inline with the
RegisterOpts.
* build(deps): bump github.com/kr/pretty from 0.1.0 to 0.3.0 in /api
Bumps [github.com/kr/pretty](https://github.com/kr/pretty) from 0.1.0 to 0.3.0.
- [Release notes](https://github.com/kr/pretty/releases)
- [Commits](https://github.com/kr/pretty/compare/v0.1.0...v0.3.0)
---
updated-dependencies:
- dependency-name: github.com/kr/pretty
dependency-type: direct:production
update-type: version-update:semver-minor
...
Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
* update in core as well and tidy
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Tim Gross <tim@0x74696d.com>
Enhance the CLI in order to return the host network in two flavors
(default, verbose) of the `node status` command.
Fixes: #11223.
Signed-off-by: Alessandro De Blasis <alex@deblasis.net>
Add a new hostname string parameter to the network block which
allows operators to specify the hostname of the network namespace.
Changing this causes a destructive update to the allocation and it
is omitted if empty from API responses. This parameter also supports
interpolation.
In order to have a hostname passed as a configuration param when
creating an allocation network, the CreateNetwork func of the
DriverNetworkManager interface needs to be updated. In order to
minimize the disruption of future changes, rather than add another
string func arg, the function now accepts a request struct along with
the allocID param. The struct has the hostname as a field.
The in-tree implementations of DriverNetworkManager.CreateNetwork
have been modified to account for the function signature change.
In updating for the change, the enhancement of adding hostnames to
network namespaces has also been added to the Docker driver, whilst
the default Linux manager does not current implement it.
This PR implements a new "System Batch" scheduler type. Jobs can
make use of this new scheduler by setting their type to 'sysbatch'.
Like the name implies, sysbatch can be thought of as a hybrid between
system and batch jobs - it is for running short lived jobs intended to
run on every compatible node in the cluster.
As with batch jobs, sysbatch jobs can also be periodic and/or parameterized
dispatch jobs. A sysbatch job is considered complete when it has been run
on all compatible nodes until reaching a terminal state (success or failed
on retries).
Feasibility and preemption are governed the same as with system jobs. In
this PR, the update stanza is not yet supported. The update stanza is sill
limited in functionality for the underlying system scheduler, and is
not useful yet for sysbatch jobs. Further work in #4740 will improve
support for the update stanza and deployments.
Closes#2527
* api: revert to defaulting to http/1
PR #10778 incidentally changed the api http client to connect with
HTTP/2 first. However, the websocket libraries used in `alloc exec`
features don't handle http/2 well, and don't downgrade to http/1
gracefully.
Given that the switch is incidental, and not requested by users.
Furthermore, api consumers can opt-in to forcing http/2 by setting
custom http clients.
Fixes#10922
This PR fixes the API to _not_ set the default mesh gateway mode. Before,
the mode would be set to "none" in Canonicalize, which is incorrect. We
should pass through the empty string so that folks can make use of Consul
service-defaults Config entries to configure the default mode.
This PR implements first-class support for Nomad running Consul
Connect Mesh Gateways. Mesh gateways enable services in the Connect
mesh to make cross-DC connections via gateways, where each datacenter
may not have full node interconnectivity.
Consul docs with more information:
https://www.consul.io/docs/connect/gateways/mesh-gateway
The following group level service block can be used to establish
a Connect mesh gateway.
service {
connect {
gateway {
mesh {
// no configuration
}
}
}
}
Services can make use of a mesh gateway by configuring so in their
upstream blocks, e.g.
service {
connect {
sidecar_service {
proxy {
upstreams {
destination_name = "<service>"
local_bind_port = <port>
datacenter = "<datacenter>"
mesh_gateway {
mode = "<mode>"
}
}
}
}
}
}
Typical use of a mesh gateway is to create a bridge between datacenters.
A mesh gateway should then be configured with a service port that is
mapped from a host_network configured on a WAN interface in Nomad agent
config, e.g.
client {
host_network "public" {
interface = "eth1"
}
}
Create a port mapping in the group.network block for use by the mesh
gateway service from the public host_network, e.g.
network {
mode = "bridge"
port "mesh_wan" {
host_network = "public"
}
}
Use this port label for the service.port of the mesh gateway, e.g.
service {
name = "mesh-gateway"
port = "mesh_wan"
connect {
gateway {
mesh {}
}
}
}
Currently Envoy is the only supported gateway implementation in Consul.
By default Nomad client will run the latest official Envoy docker image
supported by the local Consul agent. The Envoy task can be customized
by setting `meta.connect.gateway_image` in agent config or by setting
the `connect.sidecar_task` block.
Gateways require Consul 1.8.0+, enforced by the Nomad scheduler.
Closes#9446
refactor the api handling of `nomad exec`, and ensure that we process
all received events before handling websocket closing.
The exit code should be the last message received, and we ought to
ignore any websocket close error we receive afterwards.
Previously, we used two channels: one for websocket frames and another
for handling errors. This raised the possibility that we processed the
error before processing the frames, resulting into an "unexpected EOF"
error.
Add a new driver capability: RemoteTasks.
When a task is run by a driver with RemoteTasks set, its TaskHandle will
be propagated to the server in its allocation's TaskState. If the task
is replaced due to a down node or draining, its TaskHandle will be
propagated to its replacement allocation.
This allows tasks to be scheduled in remote systems whose lifecycles are
disconnected from the Nomad node's lifecycle.
See https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad-driver-ecs for an example ECS
remote task driver.
Small change to pull in ent struct types in a switch
statement used by ent. They are benign in oss, this
is just to make sure OSS->ENT merges don't create a
diff.
This PR introduces the /v1/search/fuzzy API endpoint, used for fuzzy
searching objects in Nomad. The fuzzy search endpoint routes requests
to the Nomad Server leader, which implements the Search.FuzzySearch RPC
method.
Requests to the fuzzy search API are based on the api.FuzzySearchRequest
object, e.g.
{
"Text": "ed",
"Context": "all"
}
Responses from the fuzzy search API are based on the api.FuzzySearchResponse
object, e.g.
{
"Index": 27,
"KnownLeader": true,
"LastContact": 0,
"Matches": {
"tasks": [
{
"ID": "redis",
"Scope": [
"default",
"example",
"cache"
]
}
],
"evals": [],
"deployment": [],
"volumes": [],
"scaling_policy": [],
"images": [
{
"ID": "redis:3.2",
"Scope": [
"default",
"example",
"cache",
"redis"
]
}
]
},
"Truncations": {
"volumes": false,
"scaling_policy": false,
"evals": false,
"deployment": false
}
}
The API is tunable using the new server.search stanza, e.g.
server {
search {
fuzzy_enabled = true
limit_query = 200
limit_results = 1000
min_term_length = 5
}
}
These values can be increased or decreased, so as to provide more
search results or to reduce load on the Nomad Server. The fuzzy search
API can be disabled entirely by setting `fuzzy_enabled` to `false`.
Consul allows specifying the HTTP body to send in a health check. Nomad
uses Consul for health checking so this just plumbs the value through to
where the Consul API is called.
There is no validation that `body` is not used with an incompatible
check method like GET.
Our API client `delete` method doesn't include a request body, but accepts an
interface for the response. We were accidentally putting the request body into
the response, which doesn't get picked up in unit tests because we're not
reading the (always empty) response body anyways.
Registration of Nomad volumes previously allowed for a single volume
capability (access mode + attachment mode pair). The recent `volume create`
command requires that we pass a list of requested capabilities, but the
existing workflow for claiming volumes and attaching them on the client
assumed that the volume's single capability was correct and unchanging.
Add `AccessMode` and `AttachmentMode` to `CSIVolumeClaim`, use these fields to
set the initial claim value, and add backwards compatibility logic to handle
the existing volumes that already have claims without these fields.
This PR adds the common OSS changes for adding support for Consul Namespaces,
which is going to be a Nomad Enterprise feature. There is no new functionality
provided by this changeset and hopefully no new bugs.
Add new commands for creating, deleting, and listing external storage
volumes. Includes HCL decoding update for volume spec so that we can humanize
capacity bytes input values.
This commit updates the API to pass the MemoryMaxMB field, and the CLI to show
the max set for the task.
Also, start parsing the MemoryMaxMB in hcl2, as it's set by tags.
A sample CLI output; note the additional `Max: ` for "task":
```
$ nomad alloc status 96fbeb0b
ID = 96fbeb0b-a0b3-aa95-62bf-b8a39492fd5c
[...]
Task "cgroup-fetcher" is "running"
Task Resources
CPU Memory Disk Addresses
0/500 MHz 32 MiB/20 MiB 300 MiB
Task Events:
[...]
Task "task" is "running"
Task Resources
CPU Memory Disk Addresses
0/500 MHz 176 KiB/20 MiB 300 MiB
Max: 30 MiB
Task Events:
[...]
```
node drain: use msgtype on txn so that events are emitted
wip: encoding extension to add Node.Drain field back to API responses
new approach for hiding Node.SecretID in the API, using `json` tag
documented this approach in the contributing guide
refactored the JSON handlers with extensions
modified event stream encoding to use the go-msgpack encoders with the extensions
Add a `PerAlloc` field to volume requests that directs the scheduler to test
feasibility for volumes with a source ID that includes the allocation index
suffix (ex. `[0]`), rather than the exact source ID.
Read the `PerAlloc` field when making the volume claim at the client to
determine if the allocation index suffix (ex. `[0]`) should be added to the
volume source ID.
Callers of `CSIVolumeByID` are generally assuming they should receive a single
volume. This potentially results in feasibility checking being performed
against the wrong volume if a volume's ID is a prefix substring of other
volume (for example: "test" and "testing").
Removing the incorrect prefix matching from `CSIVolumeByID` breaks prefix
matching in the command line client. Add the required elements for prefix
matching to the commands and API.
* Fixup uses of `sanity`
* Remove unnecessary comments.
These checks are better explained by earlier comments about
the context of the test. Per @tgross, moved the tests together
to better reinforce the overall shared context.
* Update nomad/fsm_test.go
If the user has disabled Prometheus metrics and a request is
sent to the metrics endpoint requesting Prometheus formatted
metrics, then the request should fail.
Allow for readiness type checks by configuring nomad to ignore warnings
or errors reported by a service check. This allows the deployment to
progress and while Consul handles introducing the sercive into a
resource pool once the check passes.
This PR implements Nomad built-in support for running Consul Connect
terminating gateways. Such a gateway can be used by services running
inside the service mesh to access "legacy" services running outside
the service mesh while still making use of Consul's service identity
based networking and ACL policies.
https://www.consul.io/docs/connect/gateways/terminating-gateway
These gateways are declared as part of a task group level service
definition within the connect stanza.
service {
connect {
gateway {
proxy {
// envoy proxy configuration
}
terminating {
// terminating-gateway configuration entry
}
}
}
}
Currently Envoy is the only supported gateway implementation in
Consul. The gateay task can be customized by configuring the
connect.sidecar_task block.
When the gateway.terminating field is set, Nomad will write/update
the Configuration Entry into Consul on job submission. Because CEs
are global in scope and there may be more than one Nomad cluster
communicating with Consul, there is an assumption that any terminating
gateway defined in Nomad for a particular service will be the same
among Nomad clusters.
Gateways require Consul 1.8.0+, checked by a node constraint.
Closes#9445
If the connect.proxy stanza is left unset, the connection timeout
value is not set but is assumed to be, and may cause a non-fatal NPE
on job submission.
Deflake test-api job, currently failing at around 7.6% (44 out of 578
workflows), by ensuring that test nomad agent use a small dedicated port
range that doesn't conflict with the kernel ephemeral range.
The failures are disproportionatly related to port allocation, where a
nomad agent fails to start when the http port is already bound to
another process. The failures are intermitent and aren't specific to any
test in particular. The following is a representative failure:
https://app.circleci.com/pipelines/github/hashicorp/nomad/13995/workflows/6cf6eb38-f93c-46f8-8aa0-f61e62fe7694/jobs/128169
.
Upon investigation, the issue seems to be that the api freeport library
picks a port block within 10,000-14,500, but that overlaps with the
kernel ephemeral range 32,769-60,999! So, freeport may allocate a free
port to the nomad agent, just to be used by another process before the
nomad agent starts!
This happened for example in
https://app.circleci.com/pipelines/github/hashicorp/nomad/14111/workflows/e1fcd7ff-f0e0-4796-8719-f57f510b1ffa/jobs/129684
. `freeport` allocated port 41662 to serf, but `google_accounts`
raced to use it to connect to the CirleCI vm metadata service.
We avoid such races by using a dedicated port range that's disjoint from
the kernel ephemeral port range.
In a few places Nomad was using flag implementations directly
from Consul, lending to Nomad's need to import consul. Replace
those uses with helpers already in Nomad, and copy over the bare
minimum needed to make the autopilot flags behave as they have.
* use full name for events
use evaluation and allocation instead of short name
* update api event stream package and shortnames
* update docs
* make sync; fix typo
* backwards compat not from 1.0.0-beta event stream api changes
* use api types instead of string
* rm backwards compat note that only changed between prereleases
* remove backwards incompat that only existed in prereleases
* Remove Managed Sinks from Nomad
Managed Sinks were a beta feature in Nomad 1.0-beta2. During the beta
period it was determined that this was not a scalable approach to
support community and third party sinks.
* update comment
* changelog
Before, upstreams could only be defined using the default datacenter.
Now, the `datacenter` field can be set in a connect upstream definition,
informing consul of the desire for an instance of the upstream service
in the specified datacenter. The field is optional and continues to
default to the local datacenter.
Closes#8964
The API is missing values for `ReadAllocs` and `WriteAllocs` fields, resulting
in allocation claims not being populated in the web UI. These fields mirror
the fields in `nomad/structs.CSIVolume`. Returning a separate list of stubs
for read and write would be ideal, but this can't be done without either
bloating the API response with repeated full `Allocation` data, or causing a
panic in previous versions of the CLI.
The `nomad/structs` fields are persisted with nil values and are populated
during RPC, so we'll do the same in the HTTP API and populate the `ReadAllocs`
and `WriteAllocs` fields with a map of allocation IDs, but with null
values. The web UI will then create its `ReadAllocations` and
`WriteAllocations` fields by mapping from those IDs to the values in
`Allocations`, instead of flattening the map into a list.
This PR adds the ability to set HTTP headers when downloading
an artifact from an `http` or `https` resource.
The implementation in `go-getter` is such that a new `HTTPGetter`
must be created for each artifact that sets headers (as opposed
to conveniently setting headers per-request). This PR maintains
the memoization of the default Getter objects, creating new ones
only for artifacts where headers are set.
Closes#9306
* Get concrete types out of dynamic payload
wip
pull out value setting to func
* Add TestEventSTream_SetPayloadValue
Add more assertions
use alias type in unmarshalJSON to handle payload rawmessage
shorten unmarshal and remove anonymous wrap struct
* use map structure and helper functions to return concrete types
* ensure times are properly handled
* update test name
* put all decode logic in a single function
Co-authored-by: Kris Hicks <khicks@hashicorp.com>
state store: call-out to generic update of job recommendations from job update method
recommendations API work, and http endpoint errors for OSS
support for scaling polices in task block of job spec
add query filters for ScalingPolicy list endpoint
command: nomad scaling policy list: added -job and -type
* add goroutine text profiles to nomad operator debug
* add server-id=all to nomad operator debug
* fix bug from changing metrics from string to []byte
* Add function to return MetricsSummary struct, metrics gotemplate support
* fix bug resolving 'server-id=all' when no servers are available
* add url to operator_debug tests
* removed test section which is used for future operator_debug.go changes
* separate metrics from operator, use only structs from go-metrics
* ensure parent directories are created as needed
* add suggested comments for text debug pprof
* move check down to where it is used
* add WaitForFiles helper function to wait for multiple files to exist
* compact metrics check
Co-authored-by: Drew Bailey <2614075+drewbailey@users.noreply.github.com>
* fix github's silly apply suggestion
Co-authored-by: Drew Bailey <2614075+drewbailey@users.noreply.github.com>
properly wire up durable event count
move newline responsibility
moves newline creation from NDJson to the http handler, json stream only encodes and sends now
ignore snapshot restore if broker is disabled
enable dev mode to access event steam without acl
use mapping instead of switch
use pointers for config sizes, remove unused ttl, simplify closed conn logic
Fixes#9017
The ?resources=true query parameter includes resources in the object
stub listings. Specifically:
- For `/v1/nodes?resources=true` both the `NodeResources` and
`ReservedResources` field are included.
- For `/v1/allocations?resources=true` the `AllocatedResources` field is
included.
The ?task_states=false query parameter removes TaskStates from
/v1/allocations responses. (By default TaskStates are included.)
Since CPU resources are usually a soft limit it is desirable to allow
setting it as low as possible to allow tasks to run only in "idle" time.
Setting it to 0 is still not allowed to avoid potential unintentional
side effects with allowing a zero value. While there may not be any side
effects this commit attempts to minimize risk by avoiding the issue.
This does *not* change the defaults.
Allocation requests should target servers, which then can forward the
request to the appropriate clients.
Contacting clients directly is fragile and prune to failures: e.g.
clients maybe firewalled and not accessible from the API client, or have
some internal certificates not trusted by the API client.
FWIW, in contexts where we anticipate lots of traffic (e.g. logs, or
exec), the api package attempts contacting the client directly but then
fallsback to using the server. This approach seems excessive in these
simple GET/PUT requests.
Fixes#8894
Copy Consul API's format: QueryOptions.WithContext(context) will now return
a new QueryOption whose HTTP requests will be canceled with the context
provided (and similar for WriteOptions)
The initial implementation of global job stop for MRD looped over all the
regions in the CLI for expedience. This changeset includes the OSS parts of
moving this into the RPC layer so that API consumers don't have to implement
this logic themselves.
This PR adds initial support for running Consul Connect Ingress Gateways (CIGs) in Nomad. These gateways are declared as part of a task group level service definition within the connect stanza.
```hcl
service {
connect {
gateway {
proxy {
// envoy proxy configuration
}
ingress {
// ingress-gateway configuration entry
}
}
}
}
```
A gateway can be run in `bridge` or `host` networking mode, with the caveat that host networking necessitates manually specifying the Envoy admin listener (which cannot be disabled) via the service port value.
Currently Envoy is the only supported gateway implementation in Consul, and Nomad only supports running Envoy as a gateway using the docker driver.
Aims to address #8294 and tangentially #8647
The soundness guarantees of the CSI specification leave a little to be desired
in our ability to provide a 100% reliable automated solution for managing
volumes. This changeset provides a new command to bridge this gap by providing
the operator the ability to intervene.
The command doesn't take an allocation ID so that the operator doesn't have to
keep track of alloc IDs that may have been GC'd. Handle this case in the
unpublish RPC by sending the client RPC for all the terminal/nil allocs on the
selected node.
This change adds the ability to set the fields `success_before_passing` and
`failures_before_critical` on Consul service check definitions. This is a
feature added to Consul v1.7.0 and later.
https://www.consul.io/docs/agent/checks#success-failures-before-passing-critical
Nomad doesn't do much besides pass the fields through to Consul.
Fixes#6913
adds in oss components to support enterprise multi-vault namespace feature
upgrade specific doc on vault multi-namespaces
vault docs
update test to reflect new error
The CSI `volume deregister -force` flag was using the documented parameter
`force` everywhere except in the API, where it was incorrectly passing `purge`
as the query parameter.
* made api.Scaling.Max a pointer, so we can detect (and complain) when it is neglected
* added checks to HCL parsing that it is present
* when Scaling.Max is absent/invalid, don't return extraneous error messages during validation
* tweak to multiregion handling to ensure that the count is valid on the interpolated regional jobs
resolves#8355
* command/agent/host: collect host data, multi platform
* nomad/structs/structs: new HostDataRequest/Response
* client/agent_endpoint: add RPC endpoint
* command/agent/agent_endpoint: add Host
* api/agent: add the Host endpoint
* nomad/client_agent_endpoint: add Agent Host with forwarding
* nomad/client_agent_endpoint: use findClientConn
This changes forwardMonitorClient and forwardProfileClient to use
findClientConn, which was cribbed from the common parts of those
funcs.
* command/debug: call agent hosts
* command/agent/host: eliminate calling external programs
The `nomad volume deregister` command currently returns an error if the volume
has any claims, but in cases where the claims can't be dropped because of
plugin errors, providing a `-force` flag gives the operator an escape hatch.
If the volume has no allocations or if they are all terminal, this flag
deletes the volume from the state store, immediately and implicitly dropping
all claims without further CSI RPCs. Note that this will not also
unmount/detach the volume, which we'll make the responsibility of a separate
`nomad volume detach` command.
This PR adds the capability of running Connect Native Tasks on Nomad,
particularly when TLS and ACLs are enabled on Consul.
The `connect` stanza now includes a `native` parameter, which can be
set to the name of task that backs the Connect Native Consul service.
There is a new Client configuration parameter for the `consul` stanza
called `share_ssl`. Like `allow_unauthenticated` the default value is
true, but recommended to be disabled in production environments. When
enabled, the Nomad Client's Consul TLS information is shared with
Connect Native tasks through the normal Consul environment variables.
This does NOT include auth or token information.
If Consul ACLs are enabled, Service Identity Tokens are automatically
and injected into the Connect Native task through the CONSUL_HTTP_TOKEN
environment variable.
Any of the automatically set environment variables can be overridden by
the Connect Native task using the `env` stanza.
Fixes#6083
In multiregion deployments when ACLs are enabled, the deploymentwatcher needs
an appropriately scoped ACL token with the same `submit-job` rights as the
user who submitted it. The token will already be replicated, so store the
accessor ID so that it can be retrieved by the leader.
Integration points for multiregion jobs to be registered in the enterprise
version of Nomad:
* hook in `Job.Register` for enterprise to send job to peer regions
* remove monitoring from `nomad job run` and `nomad job stop` for multiregion jobs
Ensure that api test agent is terminated gracefully. This is desired for
two purposes:
First, to ensure that the logs are fully flished out. If the agent is
killed mid log line and go test doesn't emit a new line before `---
PASS:` indicator, the test may be marked as failed, even if it passed.
Sample failure is https://circleci.com/gh/hashicorp/nomad/72360 .
Second, ensure that the agent terminates any auxiliary processes (e.g.
logmon, tasks).
Add `Canonicalize` methods to the connect components of a service
definition in the `api` package. Without these, we have been relying
on good input for the connect stanza.
Fixes#7993
Allow a `/v1/jobs?all_namespaces=true` to list all jobs across all
namespaces. The returned list is to contain a `Namespace` field
indicating the job namespace.
If ACL is enabled, the request token needs to be a management token or
have `namespace:list-jobs` capability on all existing namespaces.
The MVP for CSI in the 0.11.0 release of Nomad did not include support
for opaque volume parameters or volume context. This changeset adds
support for both.
This also moves args for ControllerValidateCapabilities into a struct.
The CSI plugin `ControllerValidateCapabilities` struct that we turn
into a CSI RPC is accumulating arguments, so moving it into a request
struct will reduce the churn of this internal API, make the plugin
code more readable, and make this method consistent with the other
plugin methods in that package.
* jobspec, api: add stop_after_client_disconnect
* nomad/state/state_store: error message typo
* structs: alloc methods to support stop_after_client_disconnect
1. a global AllocStates to track status changes with timestamps. We
need this to track the time at which the alloc became lost
originally.
2. ShouldClientStop() and WaitClientStop() to actually do the math
* scheduler/reconcile_util: delayByStopAfterClientDisconnect
* scheduler/reconcile: use delayByStopAfterClientDisconnect
* scheduler/util: updateNonTerminalAllocsToLost comments
This was setup to only update allocs to lost if the DesiredStatus had
already been set by the scheduler. It seems like the intention was to
update the status from any non-terminal state, and not all lost allocs
have been marked stop or evict by now
* scheduler/testing: AssertEvalStatus just use require
* scheduler/generic_sched: don't create a blocked eval if delayed
* scheduler/generic_sched_test: several scheduling cases
CSI plugins can require credentials for some publishing and
unpublishing workflow RPCs. Secrets are configured at the time of
volume registration, stored in the volume struct, and then passed
around as an opaque map by Nomad to the plugins.