This change modifies the template task runner to utilise the
new consul-template which includes Nomad service lookup template
funcs.
In order to provide security and auth to consul-template, we use
a custom HTTP dialer which is passed to consul-template when
setting up the runner. This method follows Vault implementation.
Co-authored-by: Michael Schurter <mschurter@hashicorp.com>
Add new namespace ACL requirement for the /v1/jobs/parse endpoint and
return early if HCLv2 parsing fails.
The endpoint now requires the new `parse-job` ACL capability or
`submit-job`.
* driver: fix integer conversion error
The shared executor incorrectly parsed the user's group into int32 and
then cast to uint32 without bounds checking. This is harmless because
an out-of-bounds gid will throw an error later, but it triggers
security and code quality scans. Parse directly to uint32 so that we
get correct error handling.
* helper: fix integer conversion error
The autopilot flags helper incorrectly parses a uint64 to a uint which
is machine specific size. Although we don't have 32-bit builds, this
sets off security and code quality scaans. Parse to the machine sized
uint.
* driver: restrict bounds of port map
The plugin server doesn't constrain the maximum integer for port
maps. This could result in a user-visible misconfiguration, but it
also triggers security and code quality scans. Restrict the bounds
before casting to int32 and return an error.
* cpuset: restrict upper bounds of cpuset values
Our cpuset configuration expects values in the range of uint16 to
match the expectations set by the kernel, but we don't constrain the
values before downcasting. An underflow could lead to allocations
failing on the client rather than being caught earlier. This also make
security and code quality scanners happy.
* http: fix integer downcast for per_page parameter
The parser for the `per_page` query parameter downcasts to int32
without bounds checking. This could result in underflow and
nonsensical paging, but there's no server-side consequences for
this. Fixing this will silence some security and code quality scanners
though.
This has been pinned since the Go modules migration, because the
nytimes gzip handler was modified in version v1.1.0 in a way that
is no longer compatible.
Pretty sure it is this commit: c551b6c3b4
Instead use handler.CompressHandler from gorilla, which is a web toolkit we already
make use of for other things.
## Development Environment Changes
* Added stringer to build deps
## New HTTP APIs
* Added scheduler worker config API
* Added scheduler worker info API
## New Internals
* (Scheduler)Worker API refactor—Start(), Stop(), Pause(), Resume()
* Update shutdown to use context
* Add mutex for contended server data
- `workerLock` for the `workers` slice
- `workerConfigLock` for the `Server.Config.NumSchedulers` and
`Server.Config.EnabledSchedulers` values
## Other
* Adding docs for scheduler worker api
* Add changelog message
Co-authored-by: Derek Strickland <1111455+DerekStrickland@users.noreply.github.com>
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.
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`.
The HTTP router did not correctly route `/v1/volumes/external` without being
explicitly added to the top-level router. Break this out into its own request
handler.
The OTT feature relies on having a query parameter for a one-time token which
gets handled by the UI. We need to make sure that query param is preserved
when redirecting from the root URL to the `/ui/` URI.
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
https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad/pull/9608 introduced the use of the
built-in HTTP 429 response handler provided by go-connlimit. There is
concern though around plausible DOS attacks that need to be addressed,
so this PR reverts that functionality.
It keeps a fix in the tests around the use of an HTTPS enabled client
for when the server is listening on HTTPS. Previously, the tests would
fail deterministically with io.EOF because that's how the TLS server
terminates invalid connections.
Now, the result is much less deterministic. The state of the client
connection and the server socket depends on when the connection is
closed and how far along the handshake was.
This is essentially a port of Consul's similar fix
Changes are:
go get -u github.com/hashicorp/go-connlimit
go mod vendor
Use new HTTP429 handler
20d1ea7d2d
* 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
* network sink rpc/api plumbing
state store methods and restore
upsert sink test
get sink
delete sink
event sink list and tests
go generate new msg types
validate sink on upsert
* go generate
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.)
This Commit adds an /v1/events/stream endpoint to stream events from.
The stream framer has been updated to include a SendFull method which
does not fragment the data between multiple frames. This essentially
treats the stream framer as a envelope to adhere to the stream framer
interface in the UI.
If the `encode` query parameter is omitted events will be streamed as
newline delimted JSON.
* 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
Failed requests due to API client errors are to be marked as DEBUG.
The Error log level should be reserved to signal problems with the
cluster and are actionable for nomad system operators. Logs due to
misbehaving API clients don't represent a system level problem and seem
spurius to nomad maintainers at best. These log messages can also be
attack vectors for deniel of service attacks by filling servers disk
space with spurious log messages.
Pipe http server log to hclog, so that it uses the same logging format
as rest of nomad logs. Also, supports emitting them as json logs, when
json formatting is set.
The http server logs are emitted as Trace level, as they are typically
repsent HTTP client errors (e.g. failed tls handshakes, invalid headers,
etc).
Though, Panic logs represent server errors and are relayed as Error
level.