This PR fixes a bug where tasks with Connect services could be
triggered to destructively update (i.e. placed in a new alloc)
when no update should be necessary.
Fixes#10077
In a deployment with two groups (ex. A and B), if group A's canary becomes
healthy before group B's, the deadline for the overall deployment will be set
to that of group A. When the deployment is promoted, if group A is done it
will not contribute to the next deadline cutoff. Group B's old deadline will
be used instead, which will be in the past and immediately trigger a
deployment progress failure. Reset the progress deadline when the job is
promotion to avoid this bug, and to better conform with implicit user
expectations around how the progress deadline should interact with promotions.
This PR fixes a bug where sidecar services would be re-registered into Consul every ~30
seconds, caused by the parent service having its tags field set and the sidecar_service
tags unset. Nomad would directly compare the tags between its copy of the sidecar service
definition and the tags of the sidecar service reported by Consul. This does not work,
because Consul will under-the-hood set the sidecar service tags to inherit the parent
service tags if the sidecar service tags are unset. The comparison then done by Nomad
would not match, if the parent sidecar tags are set.
Fixes#10025
This PR enables jobs configured with a custom sidecar_task to make
use of the `service.expose` feature for creating checks on services
in the service mesh. Before we would check that sidecar_task had not
been set (indicating that something other than envoy may be in use,
which would not support envoy's expose feature). However Consul has
not added support for anything other than envoy and probably never
will, so having the restriction in place seems like an unnecessary
hindrance. If Consul ever does support something other than Envoy,
they will likely find a way to provide the expose feature anyway.
Fixes#9854
This PR adds pid_mode and ipc_mode options to the exec and java task
driver config options. By default these will defer to the default_pid_mode
and default_ipc_mode agent plugin options created in #9969. Setting
these values to "host" mode disables isolation for the task. Doing so
is not recommended, but may be necessary to support legacy job configurations.
Closes#9970
This PR adds default_pid_mode and default_ipc_mode options to the exec and java
task drivers. By default these will default to "private" mode, enabling PID and
IPC isolation for tasks. Setting them to "host" mode disables isolation. Doing
so is not recommended, but may be necessary to support legacy job configurations.
Closes#9969
The details of host volume and CSI volume requests do not show up in `nomad
plan` outputs, although the updates are detected by the scheduler and result
in an update as expected.
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
Most allocation hooks don't need to know when a single task within the
allocation is restarted. The check watcher for group services triggers the
alloc runner to restart all tasks, but the alloc runner's `Restart` method
doesn't trigger any of the alloc hooks, including the group service hook. The
result is that after the first time a check triggers a restart, we'll never
restart the tasks of an allocation again.
This commit adds a `RunnerTaskRestartHook` interface so that alloc runner
hooks can act if a task within the alloc is restarted. The only implementation
is in the group service hook, which will force a re-registration of the
alloc's services and fix check restarts.
Connect ingress gateway services were being registered into Consul without
an explicit deterministic service ID. Consul would generate one automatically,
but then Nomad would have no way to register a second gateway on the same agent
as it would not supply 'proxy-id' during envoy bootstrap.
Set the ServiceID for gateways, and supply 'proxy-id' when doing envoy bootstrap.
Fixes#9834
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.
* Persist shared allocated ports for inplace update
Ports were not copied over when performing inplace updates in the
generic scheduler
* changelog
* drop spew
When a client restarts, the network_hook's prerun will call
`CreateNetwork`. Drivers that don't implement their own network manager will
fall back to the default network manager, which doesn't handle the case where
the network namespace is being recreated safely. This results in an error and
the task being restarted for `exec` tasks with `network` blocks (this also
impacts the community `containerd` and probably other community task drivers).
If we get an error when attempting to create the namespace and that error is
because the file already exists and is locked by its process, then we'll
return a `nil` error with the `created` flag set to false, just as we do with
the `docker` driver.
AllocatedSharedResources were not being copied over to the new
allocation struct the scheduler makes during inplace updates. This
caused downstream issues after the plan was applied, namely the shared
ports were dropped causing issues with service
registration/deregistration.
test that shared ports are preserved
change log, also carry over shared network
copy networks