Ensure that `""` Scheduler Algorithm gets explicitly set to binpack on
upgrades or on API handling when user misses the value.
The scheduler already treats `""` value as binpack. This PR merely
ensures that the operator API returns the effective value.
This changeset implements a periodic garbage collection of unused CSI
plugins. Plugins are self-cleaning when the last allocation for a
plugin is stopped, but this feature will cover any missing edge cases
and ensure that upgrades from 0.11.0 and 0.11.1 get any stray plugins
cleaned up.
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.
Shutdown http server last, after nomad client/server components
terminate.
Before this change, if the agent is taking an unexpectedly long time to
shutdown, the operator cannot query the http server directly: they
cannot access agent specific http endpoints and need to query another
agent about the troublesome agent.
Unexpectedly long shutdown can happen in normal cases, e.g. a client
might hung is if one of the allocs it is running has a long
shutdown_delay.
Here, we switch to ensuring that the http server is shutdown last.
I believe this doesn't require extra care in agent shutting down logic
while operators may be able to submit write http requests. We already
need to cope with operators submiting these http requests to another
agent or by servers updating the client allocations.
Some tests assert on numbers on numbers of servers, e.g.
TestHTTP_AgentSetServers and TestHTTP_AgentListServers_ACL . Though, in dev and
test modes, the agent starts with servers having duplicate entries for
advertised and normalized RPC values, then settles with one unique value after
Raft/Serf re-sets servers with one single unique value.
This leads to flakiness, as the test will fail if assertion runs before Serf
update takes effect.
Here, we update the inital dev handling so it only adds a unique value if the
advertised and normalized values are the same.
Sample log lines illustrating the problem:
```
=== CONT TestHTTP_AgentSetServers
TestHTTP_AgentSetServers: testlog.go:34: 2020-04-06T21:47:51.016Z [INFO] nomad.raft: initial configuration: index=1 servers="[{Suffrage:Voter ID:127.0.0.1:9008 Address:127.0.0.1:9008}]"
TestHTTP_AgentSetServers: testlog.go:34: 2020-04-06T21:47:51.016Z [INFO] nomad: serf: EventMemberJoin: TestHTTP_AgentSetServers.global 127.0.0.1
TestHTTP_AgentSetServers: testlog.go:34: 2020-04-06T21:47:51.035Z [DEBUG] client.server_mgr: new server list: new_servers=[127.0.0.1:9008, 127.0.0.1:9008] old_servers=[]
...
TestHTTP_AgentSetServers: agent_endpoint_test.go:759:
Error Trace: agent_endpoint_test.go:759
http_test.go:1089
agent_endpoint_test.go:705
Error: "[127.0.0.1:9008 127.0.0.1:9008]" should have 1 item(s), but has 2
Test: TestHTTP_AgentSetServers
```
The javascript Websocket API doesn't support setting custom headers
(e.g. `X-Nomad-Token`). This change adds support for having an
authentication handshake message: clients can set `ws_handshake` URL
query parameter to true and send a single handshake message with auth
token first before any other mssage.
This is a backward compatible change: it does not affect nomad CLI path, as it
doesn't set `ws_handshake` parameter.
In some refactoring, a bug was introduced where if the connect.proxy
stanza in a submitted job was nil, the default proxy configuration
would not be initialized with default values, effectively breaking
Connect.
connect {
sidecar_service {} # should work
}
In contrast, by setting an empty proxy stanza, the config values would
be inserted correctly.
connect {
sidecar_service {
proxy {} # workaround
}
}
This commit restores the original behavior, where having a proxy
stanza present is not required.
The unit test for this case has also been corrected.
Part of #6120
Building on the support for enabling connect proxy paths in #7323, this change
adds the ability to configure the 'service.check.expose' flag on group-level
service check definitions for services that are connect-enabled. This is a slight
deviation from the "magic" that Consul provides. With Consul, the 'expose' flag
exists on the connect.proxy stanza, which will then auto-generate expose paths
for every HTTP and gRPC service check associated with that connect-enabled
service.
A first attempt at providing similar magic for Nomad's Consul Connect integration
followed that pattern exactly, as seen in #7396. However, on reviewing the PR
we realized having the `expose` flag on the proxy stanza inseperably ties together
the automatic path generation with every HTTP/gRPC defined on the service. This
makes sense in Consul's context, because a service definition is reasonably
associated with a single "task". With Nomad's group level service definitions
however, there is a reasonable expectation that a service definition is more
abstractly representative of multiple services within the task group. In this
case, one would want to define checks of that service which concretely make HTTP
or gRPC requests to different underlying tasks. Such a model is not possible
with the course `proxy.expose` flag.
Instead, we now have the flag made available within the check definitions themselves.
By making the expose feature resolute to each check, it is possible to have
some HTTP/gRPC checks which make use of the envoy exposed paths, as well as
some HTTP/gRPC checks which make use of some orthongonal port-mapping to do
checks on some other task (or even some other bound port of the same task)
within the task group.
Given this example,
group "server-group" {
network {
mode = "bridge"
port "forchecks" {
to = -1
}
}
service {
name = "myserver"
port = 2000
connect {
sidecar_service {
}
}
check {
name = "mycheck-myserver"
type = "http"
port = "forchecks"
interval = "3s"
timeout = "2s"
method = "GET"
path = "/classic/responder/health"
expose = true
}
}
}
Nomad will automatically inject (via job endpoint mutator) the
extrapolated expose path configuration, i.e.
expose {
path {
path = "/classic/responder/health"
protocol = "http"
local_path_port = 2000
listener_port = "forchecks"
}
}
Documentation is coming in #7440 (needs updating, doing next)
Modifications to the `countdash` examples in https://github.com/hashicorp/demo-consul-101/pull/6
which will make the examples in the documentation actually runnable.
Will add some e2e tests based on the above when it becomes available.
Enable configuration of HTTP and gRPC endpoints which should be exposed by
the Connect sidecar proxy. This changeset is the first "non-magical" pass
that lays the groundwork for enabling Consul service checks for tasks
running in a network namespace because they are Connect-enabled. The changes
here provide for full configuration of the
connect {
sidecar_service {
proxy {
expose {
paths = [{
path = <exposed endpoint>
protocol = <http or grpc>
local_path_port = <local endpoint port>
listener_port = <inbound mesh port>
}, ... ]
}
}
}
stanza. Everything from `expose` and below is new, and partially implements
the precedent set by Consul:
https://www.consul.io/docs/connect/registration/service-registration.html#expose-paths-configuration-reference
Combined with a task-group level network port-mapping in the form:
port "exposeExample" { to = -1 }
it is now possible to "punch a hole" through the network namespace
to a specific HTTP or gRPC path, with the anticipated use case of creating
Consul checks on Connect enabled services.
A future PR may introduce more automagic behavior, where we can do things like
1) auto-fill the 'expose.path.local_path_port' with the default value of the
'service.port' value for task-group level connect-enabled services.
2) automatically generate a port-mapping
3) enable an 'expose.checks' flag which automatically creates exposed endpoints
for every compatible consul service check (http/grpc checks on connect
enabled services).
- tg.Count defaults to tg.Scaling.Min if present (falls back on previous default of 1 if Scaling is absent)
- Validate() enforces tg.Scaling.Min <= tg.Count <= tg.Scaling.Max
modification in ApiScalingPolicyToStructs, api.TaskGroup.Validate so that defaults are handled for TaskGroup.Count and
Add mount_options to both the volume definition on registration and to the volume block in the group where the volume is requested. If both are specified, the options provided in the request replace the options defined in the volume. They get passed to the NodePublishVolume, which causes the node plugin to actually mount the volume on the host.
Individual tasks just mount bind into the host mounted volume (unchanged behavior). An operator can mount the same volume with different options by specifying it twice in the group context.
closes#7007
* nomad/structs/volumes: add MountOptions to volume request
* jobspec/test-fixtures/basic.hcl: add mount_options to volume block
* jobspec/parse_test: add expected MountOptions
* api/tasks: add mount_options
* jobspec/parse_group: use hcl decode not mapstructure, mount_options
* client/allocrunner/csi_hook: pass MountOptions through
client/allocrunner/csi_hook: add a VolumeMountOptions
client/allocrunner/csi_hook: drop Options
client/allocrunner/csi_hook: use the structs options
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/interface: UsageOptions.MountOptions
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume: pass MountOptions in capabilities
* plugins/csi/plugin: remove todo 7007 comment
* nomad/structs/csi: MountOptions
* api/csi: add options to the api for parsing, match structs
* plugins/csi/plugin: move VolumeMountOptions to structs
* api/csi: use specific type for mount_options
* client/allocrunner/csi_hook: merge MountOptions here
* rename CSIOptions to CSIMountOptions
* client/allocrunner/csi_hook
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume
* nomad/structs/csi
* plugins/csi/fake/client: add PrevVolumeCapability
* plugins/csi/plugin
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume_test: remove debugging
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume: fix odd merging logic
* api: rename CSIOptions -> CSIMountOptions
* nomad/csi_endpoint: remove a 7007 comment
* command/alloc_status: show mount options in the volume list
* nomad/structs/csi: include MountOptions in the volume stub
* api/csi: add MountOptions to stub
* command/volume_status_csi: clean up csiVolMountOption, add it
* command/alloc_status: csiVolMountOption lives in volume_csi_status
* command/node_status: display mount flags
* nomad/structs/volumes: npe
* plugins/csi/plugin: npe in ToCSIRepresentation
* jobspec/parse_test: expand volume parse test cases
* command/agent/job_endpoint: ApiTgToStructsTG needs MountOptions
* command/volume_status_csi: copy paste error
* jobspec/test-fixtures/basic: hclfmt
* command/volume_status_csi: clean up csiVolMountOption
* command/agent/csi_endpoint: support type filter in volumes & plugins
* command/agent/http: use /v1/volume/csi & /v1/plugin/csi
* api/csi: use /v1/volume/csi & /v1/plugin/csi
* api/nodes: use /v1/volume/csi & /v1/plugin/csi
* api/nodes: not /volumes/csi, just /volumes
* command/agent/csi_endpoint: fix ot parameter parsing
* api/allocations: GetTaskGroup finds the taskgroup struct
* command/node_status: display CSI volume names
* nomad/state/state_store: new CSIVolumesByNodeID
* nomad/state/iterator: new SliceIterator type implements memdb.ResultIterator
* nomad/csi_endpoint: deal with a slice of volumes
* nomad/state/state_store: CSIVolumesByNodeID return a SliceIterator
* nomad/structs/csi: CSIVolumeListRequest takes a NodeID
* nomad/csi_endpoint: use the return iterator
* command/agent/csi_endpoint: parse query params for CSIVolumes.List
* api/nodes: new CSIVolumes to list volumes by node
* command/node_status: use the new list endpoint to print volumes
* nomad/state/state_store: error messages consider the operator
* command/node_status: include the Provider
* command/csi: csi, csi_plugin, csi_volume
* helper/funcs: move ExtraKeys from parse_config to UnusedKeys
* command/agent/config_parse: use helper.UnusedKeys
* api/csi: annotate CSIVolumes with hcl fields
* command/csi_plugin: add Synopsis
* command/csi_volume_register: use hcl.Decode style parsing
* command/csi_volume_list
* command/csi_volume_status: list format, cleanup
* command/csi_plugin_list
* command/csi_plugin_status
* command/csi_volume_deregister
* command/csi_volume: add Synopsis
* api/contexts/contexts: add csi search contexts to the constants
* command/commands: register csi commands
* api/csi: fix struct tag for linter
* command/csi_plugin_list: unused struct vars
* command/csi_plugin_status: unused struct vars
* command/csi_volume_list: unused struct vars
* api/csi: add allocs to CSIPlugin
* command/csi_plugin_status: format the allocs
* api/allocations: copy Allocation.Stub in from structs
* nomad/client_rpc: add some error context with Errorf
* api/csi: collapse read & write alloc maps to a stub list
* command/csi_volume_status: cleanup allocation display
* command/csi_volume_list: use Schedulable instead of Healthy
* command/csi_volume_status: use Schedulable instead of Healthy
* command/csi_volume_list: sprintf string
* command/csi: delete csi.go, csi_plugin.go
* command/plugin: refactor csi components to sub-command plugin status
* command/plugin: remove csi
* command/plugin_status: remove csi
* command/volume: remove csi
* command/volume_status: split out csi specific
* helper/funcs: add RemoveEqualFold
* command/agent/config_parse: use helper.RemoveEqualFold
* api/csi: do ,unusedKeys right
* command/volume: refactor csi components to `nomad volume`
* command/volume_register: split out csi specific
* command/commands: use the new top level commands
* command/volume_deregister: hardwired type csi for now
* command/volume_status: csiFormatVolumes rescued from volume_list
* command/plugin_status: avoid a panic on no args
* command/volume_status: avoid a panic on no args
* command/plugin_status: predictVolumeType
* command/volume_status: predictVolumeType
* nomad/csi_endpoint_test: move CreateTestPlugin to testing
* command/plugin_status_test: use CreateTestCSIPlugin
* nomad/structs/structs: add CSIPlugins and CSIVolumes search consts
* nomad/state/state_store: add CSIPlugins and CSIVolumesByIDPrefix
* nomad/search_endpoint: add CSIPlugins and CSIVolumes
* command/plugin_status: move the header to the csi specific
* command/volume_status: move the header to the csi specific
* nomad/state/state_store: CSIPluginByID prefix
* command/status: rename the search context to just Plugins/Volumes
* command/plugin,volume_status: test return ids now
* command/status: rename the search context to just Plugins/Volumes
* command/plugin_status: support -json and -t
* command/volume_status: support -json and -t
* command/plugin_status_csi: comments
* command/*_status: clean up text
* api/csi: fix stale comments
* command/volume: make deregister sound less fearsome
* command/plugin_status: set the id length
* command/plugin_status_csi: more compact plugin health
* command/volume: better error message, comment
Previously when deserializing volumes we skipped over volumes that were
not of type `host`. This commit ensures that we parse both host and csi
volumes correctly.
This changeset implements the initial registration and fingerprinting
of CSI Plugins as part of #5378. At a high level, it introduces the
following:
* A `csi_plugin` stanza as part of a Nomad task configuration, to
allow a task to expose that it is a plugin.
* A new task runner hook: `csi_plugin_supervisor`. This hook does two
things. When the `csi_plugin` stanza is detected, it will
automatically configure the plugin task to receive bidirectional
mounts to the CSI intermediary directory. At runtime, it will then
perform an initial heartbeat of the plugin and handle submitting it to
the new `dynamicplugins.Registry` for further use by the client, and
then run a lightweight heartbeat loop that will emit task events
when health changes.
* The `dynamicplugins.Registry` for handling plugins that run
as Nomad tasks, in contrast to the existing catalog that requires
`go-plugin` type plugins and to know the plugin configuration in
advance.
* The `csimanager` which fingerprints CSI plugins, in a similar way to
`drivermanager` and `devicemanager`. It currently only fingerprints
the NodeID from the plugin, and assumes that all plugins are
monolithic.
Missing features
* We do not use the live updates of the `dynamicplugin` registry in
the `csimanager` yet.
* We do not deregister the plugins from the client when they shutdown
yet, they just become indefinitely marked as unhealthy. This is
deliberate until we figure out how we should manage deploying new
versions of plugins/transitioning them.
allow oss to parse sink duration
clean up audit sink parsing
ent eventer config reload
fix typo
SetEnabled to eventer interface
client acl test
rm dead code
fix failing test
This change updates tests to honor `BootstrapExpect` exclusively when
forming test clusters and removes test only knobs, e.g.
`config.DevDisableBootstrap`.
Background:
Test cluster creation is fragile. Test servers don't follow the
BootstapExpected route like production clusters. Instead they start as
single node clusters and then get rejoin and may risk causing brain
split or other test flakiness.
The test framework expose few knobs to control those (e.g.
`config.DevDisableBootstrap` and `config.Bootstrap`) that control
whether a server should bootstrap the cluster. These flags are
confusing and it's unclear when to use: their usage in multi-node
cluster isn't properly documented. Furthermore, they have some bad
side-effects as they don't control Raft library: If
`config.DevDisableBootstrap` is true, the test server may not
immediately attempt to bootstrap a cluster, but after an election
timeout (~50ms), Raft may force a leadership election and win it (with
only one vote) and cause a split brain.
The knobs are also confusing as Bootstrap is an overloaded term. In
BootstrapExpect, we refer to bootstrapping the cluster only after N
servers are connected. But in tests and the knobs above, it refers to
whether the server is a single node cluster and shouldn't wait for any
other server.
Changes:
This commit makes two changes:
First, it relies on `BootstrapExpected` instead of `Bootstrap` and/or
`DevMode` flags. This change is relatively trivial.
Introduce a `Bootstrapped` flag to track if the cluster is bootstrapped.
This allows us to keep `BootstrapExpected` immutable. Previously, the
flag was a config value but it gets set to 0 after cluster bootstrap
completes.
Nomad agent may silently ignore cni_path and bridge setting, when it
merges configs from multiple files (or against default/dev config).
This PR ensures that the values are merged properly.
Fix a bug where consul service definitions would not be updated if changes
were made to the service in the Nomad job. Currently this only fixes the
bug for cases where the fix is a matter of updating consul agent's service
registration. There is related bug where destructive changes are required
(see #6877) which will be fixed in another PR.
The enable_tag_override configuration setting for the parent service is
applied to the sidecar service.
Fixes#6459
Consul provides a feature of Service Definitions where the tags
associated with a service can be modified through the Catalog API,
overriding the value(s) configured in the agent's service configuration.
To enable this feature, the flag enable_tag_override must be configured
in the service definition.
Previously, Nomad did not allow configuring this flag, and thus the default
value of false was used. Now, it is configurable.
Because Nomad itself acts as a state machine around the the service definitions
of the tasks it manages, it's worth describing what happens when this feature
is enabled and why.
Consider the basic case where there is no Nomad, and your service is provided
to consul as a boring JSON file. The ultimate source of truth for the definition
of that service is the file, and is stored in the agent. Later, Consul performs
"anti-entropy" which synchronizes the Catalog (stored only the leaders). Then
with enable_tag_override=true, the tags field is available for "external"
modification through the Catalog API (rather than directly configuring the
service definition file, or using the Agent API). The important observation
is that if the service definition ever changes (i.e. the file is changed &
config reloaded OR the Agent API is used to modify the service), those
"external" tag values are thrown away, and the new service definition is
once again the source of truth.
In the Nomad case, Nomad itself is the source of truth over the Agent in
the same way the JSON file was the source of truth in the example above.
That means any time Nomad sets a new service definition, any externally
configured tags are going to be replaced. When does this happen? Only on
major lifecycle events, for example when a task is modified because of an
updated job spec from the 'nomad job run <existing>' command. Otherwise,
Nomad's periodic re-sync's with Consul will now no longer try to restore
the externally modified tag values (as long as enable_tag_override=true).
Fixes#2057