These options are mutually exclusive but, since `-hcl2-strict` defaults
to `true` users had to explicitily set it to `false` when using `-hcl1`.
Also return `255` when job plan fails validation as this is the expected
code in this situation.
Nomad is generally compliant with the CSI specification for Container
Orchestrators (CO), except for unimplemented features. However, some storage
vendors have built CSI plugins that are not compliant with the specification or
which expect that they're only deployed on Kubernetes. Nomad cannot vouch for
the compatibility of any particular plugin, so clarify this in the docs.
Co-authored-by: Derek Strickland <1111455+DerekStrickland@users.noreply.github.com>
The ACL command docs are now found within a sub-dir like the
operator command docs. Updates to the ACL token commands to
accommodate token expiry have also been added.
The ACL API docs are now found within a sub-dir like the operator
API docs. The ACL docs now include the ACL roles endpoint as well
as updated ACL token endpoints for token expiration.
The configuration section is also updated to accommodate the new
ACL and server parameters for the new ACL features.
Update the on-disk format for the root key so that it's wrapped with a unique
per-key/per-server key encryption key. This is a bit of security theatre for the
current implementation, but it uses `go-kms-wrapping` as the interface for
wrapping the key. This provides a shim for future support of external KMS such
as cloud provider APIs or Vault transit encryption.
* Removes the JSON serialization extension we had on the `RootKey` struct; this
struct is now only used for key replication and not for disk serialization, so
we don't need this helper.
* Creates a helper for generating cryptographically random slices of bytes that
properly accounts for short reads from the source.
* No observable functional changes outside of the on-disk format, so there are
no test updates.
* allocrunner: handle lifecycle when all tasks die
When all tasks die the Coordinator must transition to its terminal
state, coordinatorStatePoststop, to unblock poststop tasks. Since this
could happen at any time (for example, a prestart task dies), all states
must be able to transition to this terminal state.
* allocrunner: implement different alloc restarts
Add a new alloc restart mode where all tasks are restarted, even if they
have already exited. Also unifies the alloc restart logic to use the
implementation that restarts tasks concurrently and ignores
ErrTaskNotRunning errors since those are expected when restarting the
allocation.
* allocrunner: allow tasks to run again
Prevent the task runner Run() method from exiting to allow a dead task
to run again. When the task runner is signaled to restart, the function
will jump back to the MAIN loop and run it again.
The task runner determines if a task needs to run again based on two new
task events that were added to differentiate between a request to
restart a specific task, the tasks that are currently running, or all
tasks that have already run.
* api/cli: add support for all tasks alloc restart
Implement the new -all-tasks alloc restart CLI flag and its API
counterpar, AllTasks. The client endpoint calls the appropriate restart
method from the allocrunner depending on the restart parameters used.
* test: fix tasklifecycle Coordinator test
* allocrunner: kill taskrunners if all tasks are dead
When all non-poststop tasks are dead we need to kill the taskrunners so
we don't leak their goroutines, which are blocked in the alloc restart
loop. This also ensures the allocrunner exits on its own.
* taskrunner: fix tests that waited on WaitCh
Now that "dead" tasks may run again, the taskrunner Run() method will
not return when the task finishes running, so tests must wait for the
task state to be "dead" instead of using the WaitCh, since it won't be
closed until the taskrunner is killed.
* tests: add tests for all tasks alloc restart
* changelog: add entry for #14127
* taskrunner: fix restore logic.
The first implementation of the task runner restore process relied on
server data (`tr.Alloc().TerminalStatus()`) which may not be available
to the client at the time of restore.
It also had the incorrect code path. When restoring a dead task the
driver handle always needs to be clear cleanly using `clearDriverHandle`
otherwise, after exiting the MAIN loop, the task may be killed by
`tr.handleKill`.
The fix is to store the state of the Run() loop in the task runner local
client state: if the task runner ever exits this loop cleanly (not with
a shutdown) it will never be able to run again. So if the Run() loops
starts with this local state flag set, it must exit early.
This local state flag is also being checked on task restart requests. If
the task is "dead" and its Run() loop is not active it will never be
able to run again.
* address code review requests
* apply more code review changes
* taskrunner: add different Restart modes
Using the task event to differentiate between the allocrunner restart
methods proved to be confusing for developers to understand how it all
worked.
So instead of relying on the event type, this commit separated the logic
of restarting an taskRunner into two methods:
- `Restart` will retain the current behaviour and only will only restart
the task if it's currently running.
- `ForceRestart` is the new method where a `dead` task is allowed to
restart if its `Run()` method is still active. Callers will need to
restart the allocRunner taskCoordinator to make sure it will allow the
task to run again.
* minor fixes
This PR documents a change made in the enterprise version of nomad that addresses the following issue:
When a user tries to filter audit logs, they do so with a stanza that looks like the following:
audit {
enabled = true
filter "remove deletes" {
type = "HTTPEvent"
endpoints = ["*"]
stages = ["OperationComplete"]
operations = ["DELETE"]
}
}
When specifying both an "endpoint" and a "stage", the events with both matching a "endpoint" AND a matching "stage" will be filtered.
When specifying both an "endpoint" and an "operation" the events with both matching a "endpoint" AND a matching "operation" will be filtered.
When specifying both a "stage" and an "operation" the events with a matching a "stage" OR a matching "operation" will be filtered.
The "OR" logic with stages and operations is unexpected and doesn't allow customers to get specific on which events they want to filter. For instance the following use-case is impossible to achieve: "I want to filter out all OperationReceived events that have the DELETE verb".
The original design for workload identities and ACLs allows for operators to
extend the automatic capabilities of a workload by using a specially-named
policy. This has shown to be potentially unsafe because of naming collisions, so
instead we'll allow operators to explicitly attach a policy to a workload
identity.
This changeset adds workload identity fields to ACL policy objects and threads
that all the way down to the command line. It also a new secondary index to the
ACL policy table on namespace and job so that claim resolution can efficiently
query for related policies.
When a Nomad agent starts and loads jobs that already existed in the
cluster, the default template uid and gid was being set to 0, since this
is the zero value for int. This caused these jobs to fail in
environments where it was not possible to use 0, such as in Windows
clients.
In order to differentiate between an explicit 0 and a template where
these properties were not set we need to use a pointer.
This PR updates the checks documentation to mention support for checks
when using the Nomad service provider. There are limitations of NSD
compared to Consul, and those configuration options are now noted as
being Consul-only.
* Initialized keyboard service
Neat but funky: dynamic subnav traversal
👻
generalized traverseSubnav method
Shift as special modifier key
Nice little demo panel
Keyboard shortcuts keycard
Some animation styles on keyboard shortcuts
Handle situations where a link is deeply nested from its parent menu item
Keyboard service cleanup
helper-based initializer and teardown for new contextual commands
Keyboard shortcuts modal component added and demo-ghost removed
Removed j and k from subnav traversal
Register and unregister methods for subnav plus new subnavs for volumes and volume
register main nav method
Generalizing the register nav method
12762 table keynav (#12975)
* Experimental feature: shortcut visual hints
* Long way around to a custom modifier for keyboard shortcuts
* dynamic table and list iterative shortcuts
* Progress with regular old tether
* Delogging
* Table Keynav tether fix, server and client navs, and fix to shiftless on modified arrow keys
Go to Optimize keyboard link and storage key changed to g r
parameterized jobs keyboard nav
Dynamic numeric keynav for multiple tables (#13482)
* Multiple tables init
* URL-bind enumerable keyboard commands and add to more taskRow and allocationRows
* Type safety and lint fixes
* Consolidated push to keyCommands
* Default value when removing keyCommands
* Remove the URL-based removal method and perform a recompute on any add
Get tests passing in Keynav: remove math helpers and a few other defensive moves (#13761)
* Remove ember math helpers
* Test fixes for jobparts/body
* Kill an unneeded integration helper test
* delog
* Trying if disabling percy lets this finish
* Okay so its not percy; try parallelism in circle
* Percyless yet again
* Trying a different angle to not have percy
* Upgrade percy to 1.6.1
[ui] Keyboard nav: "u" key to go up a level (#13754)
* U to go up a level
* Mislabelled my conditional
* Custom lint ignore rule
* Custom lint ignore rule, this time with commas
* Since we're getting rid of ember math helpers elsewhere, do the math ourselves here
Replace ArrowLeft etc. with an ascii arrow (#13776)
* Replace ArrowLeft etc. with an ascii arrow
* non-mutative helper cleanup
Keyboard Nav: let users rebind their shortcuts (#13781)
* click-outside and shortcuts enabled/disabled toggle
* Trap focus when modal open
* Enabled/disabled saved to localStorage
* Autofocus edit button on variable index
* Modal overflow styles
* Functional rebind
* Saving rebinds to localStorage for all majors
* Started on defaultCommandBindings
* Modal header style and cancel rebind on escape
* keyboardable keybindings w buttons instead of spans
* recording and defaultvalues
* Enter short-circuits rebind
* Only some commands are rebindable, and dont show dupes
* No unused get import
* More visually distinct header on modal
* Disallowed keys for rebind, showing buffer as you type, and moving dedupe to modal logic
willDestroy hook to prevent tests from doubling/tripling up addEventListener on kb events
remove unused tests
Keyboard Navigation acceptance tests (#13893)
* Acceptance tests for keyboard modal
* a11y audit fix and localStorage clear
* Bind/rebind/localStorage tests
* Keyboard tests for dynamic nav and tables
* Rebinder and assert expectation
* Second percy snapshot showing hints no longer relevant
Weird issue where linktos with query props specifically from the task-groups page would fail to route / hit undefined.shouldSuperCede errors
Adds the concept of exclusivity to a keycommand, removing peers that also share its label
Lintfix
Changelog and PR feedback
Changelog and PR feedback
Fix to rebinding in firefox by blurring the now-disabled button on rebind (#14053)
* Secure Variables shortcuts removed
* Variable index route autofocus removed
* Updated changelog entry
* Updated changelog entry
* Keynav docs (#14148)
* Section added to the API Docs UI page
* Added a note about disabling
* Prev and Next order
* Remove dev log and unneeded comments
The List RPCs only checked the ACL for the Prefix argument of the request. Add
an ACL filter to the paginator for the List RPC.
Extend test coverage of ACLs in the List RPC and in the `acl` package, and add a
"deny" capability so that operators can deny specific paths or prefixes below an
allowed path.
This PR changes the behavior of 'nomad job validate' to forward the
request to the nomad leader, rather than responding from any server.
This is because we need the leader when validating Vault tokens, since
the leader is the only server with an active vault client.
The QEMU driver can take an optional `graceful_shutdown` configuration
which will create a Unix socket to send ACPI shutdown signal to the VM.
Unix sockets have a hard length limit and the driver implementation
assumed that QEMU versions 2.10.1 were able to handle longer paths. This
is not correct, the linked QEMU fix only changed the behaviour from
silently truncating longer socket paths to throwing an error.
By validating the socket path before starting the QEMU machine we can
provide users a more actionable and meaningful error message, and by
using a shorter socket file name we leave a bit more room for
user-defined values in the path, such as the task name.
The maximum length allowed is also platform-dependant, so validation
needs to be different for each OS.
UID/GID 0 is usually reserved for the root user/group. While Nomad
clients are expected to run as root it may not always be the case.
Setting these values as -1 if not defined will fallback to the pervious
behaviour of not attempting to set file ownership and use whatever
UID/GID the Nomad agent is running as. It will also keep backwards
compatibility, which is specially important for platforms where this
feature is not supported, like Windows.
* Allow specification of CSI staging and publishing directory path
* Add website documentation for stage_publish_dir
* Replace erroneous reference to csi_plugin.mount_config with csi_plugin.mount_dir
* Avoid requiring CSI plugins to be redeployed after introducing StagePublishDir
Move the secure variables quota enforcement calls into the state store to ensure
quota checks are atomic with quota updates (in the same transaction).
Switch to a machine-size int instead of a uint64 for quota tracking. The
ENT-side quota spec is described as int, and negative values have a meaning as
"not permitted at all". Using the same type for tracking will make it easier to
the math around checks, and uint64 is infeasibly large anyways.
Add secure vars to quota HTTP API and CLI outputs and API docs.
Document the secure variables keyring commands, document the aliased
gossip keyring commands, and note that the old gossip keyring commands
are deprecated.
Return 429 response on HTTP max connection limit. Instead of silently closing
the connection, return a `429 Too Many Requests` HTTP response with a helpful
error message to aid debugging when the connection limit is unintentionally
reached.
Set a 10-millisecond write timeout and rate limiter for connection-limit 429
response to prevent writing the HTTP response from consuming too many server
resources.
Add `nomad.agent.http.exceeded metric` counting the number of HTTP connections
exceeding concurrency limit.
This PR creates a top-level 'check' page for job-specification docs.
The content for checks is about half the content of the service page, and
is about to increase in size when we add docs about Nomad service checks.
Seemed like a good idea to just split the checks section out into its own
thing (e.g. check_restart is already a topic).
Doing the move first lets us backport this change without adding Nomad service
check stuff yet.
Mostly just a lift-and-shift but with some tweaked examples to de-emphasize
the use of script checks.
The "Secure Nomad with Access Control" guide provides a tutorial for
bootstrapping Nomad ACLs, writing policies, and creating tokens. Add a reference
guide just for the ACL policy specification.
* docs: tighten up parameterized job metrics docs
* docs: improve alloc status descriptions
Remove `nomad.client.allocations.start` as it doesn't exist.
Related to #13740
- blocked_evals.total_blocked is the number of evals blocked for *any*
reason
- blocked_evals.total_quota_limit is the number of evals blocked by
quota limits, but critically: their resources are *not* counted in the
cpu/memory
Plan rejections occur when the scheduler work and the leader plan
applier disagree on the feasibility of a plan. This may happen for valid
reasons: since Nomad does parallel scheduling, it is expected that
different workers will have a different state when computing placements.
As the final plan reaches the leader plan applier, it may no longer be
valid due to a concurrent scheduling taking up intended resources. In
these situations the plan applier will notify the worker that the plan
was rejected and that they should refresh their state before trying
again.
In some rare and unexpected circumstances it has been observed that
workers will repeatedly submit the same plan, even if they are always
rejected.
While the root cause is still unknown this mitigation has been put in
place. The plan applier will now track the history of plan rejections
per client and include in the plan result a list of node IDs that should
be set as ineligible if the number of rejections in a given time window
crosses a certain threshold. The window size and threshold value can be
adjusted in the server configuration.
To avoid marking several nodes as ineligible at one, the operation is rate
limited to 5 nodes every 30min, with an initial burst of 10 operations.
Fixes#13505
This fixes#13505 by treating reserved_ports like we treat a lot of jobspec settings: merging settings from more global stanzas (client.reserved.reserved_ports) "down" into more specific stanzas (client.host_networks[].reserved_ports).
As discussed in #13505 there are other options, and since it's totally broken right now we have some flexibility:
Treat overlapping reserved_ports on addresses as invalid and refuse to start agents. However, I'm not sure there's a cohesive model we want to publish right now since so much 0.9-0.12 compat code still exists! We would have to explain to folks that if their -network-interface and host_network addresses overlapped, they could only specify reserved_ports in one place or the other?! It gets ugly.
Use the global client.reserved.reserved_ports value as the default and treat host_network[].reserverd_ports as overrides. My first suggestion in the issue, but @groggemans made me realize the addresses on the agent's interface (as configured by -network-interface) may overlap with host_networks, so you'd need to remove the global reserved_ports from addresses shared with a shared network?! This seemed really confusing and subtle for users to me.
So I think "merging down" creates the most expressive yet understandable approach. I've played around with it a bit, and it doesn't seem too surprising. The only frustrating part is how difficult it is to observe the available addresses and ports on a node! However that's a job for another PR.
The sidebar navigation tree for the `operator` sub-sub commands is
getting cluttered and we have a new set of commands coming to support
secure variables keyring as well. Move these all under their own
subtrees.
Use the same output format when listing multiple evals in the `eval
list` command and when `eval status <prefix>` matches more than one
eval.
Include the eval namespace in all output formats and always include the
job ID in `eval status` since, even `node-update` evals are related to a
job.
Add Node ID to the evals table output to help differentiate
`node-update` evals.
Co-authored-by: James Rasell <jrasell@hashicorp.com>
* core: allow pause/un-pause of eval broker on region leader.
* agent: add ability to pause eval broker via scheduler config.
* cli: add operator scheduler commands to interact with config.
* api: add ability to pause eval broker via scheduler config
* e2e: add operator scheduler test for eval broker pause.
* docs: include new opertor scheduler CLI and pause eval API info.
This PR adds the 'choose' query parameter to the '/v1/service/<service>' endpoint.
The value of 'choose' is in the form '<number>|<key>', number is the number
of desired services and key is a value unique but consistent to the requester
(e.g. allocID).
Folks aren't really expected to use this API directly, but rather through consul-template
which will soon be getting a new helper function making use of this query parameter.
Example,
curl 'localhost:4646/v1/service/redis?choose=2|abc123'
Note: consul-templte v0.29.1 includes the necessary nomadServices functionality.
In addition to jobs, there are other objects in Nomad that have a
specific format and can be provided to commands and API endpoints.
This commit creates a new menu section to hold the specification for
volumes and update the command pages to point to the new centralized
definition.
Redirecting the previous entries is not possible with `redirect.js`
because they are done server-side and URL fragments are not accessible
to detect a match. So we provide hidden anchors with a link to the new
page to guide users towards the new documentation.
Co-authored-by: Tim Gross <tgross@hashicorp.com>
* website: fix redirects with fragments
Vercel redirects don't support fragments in relative destination paths,
so an absolute URL must be specified instead.
* website: fix Vercel redirect documentation link
Fix numerous go-getter security issues:
- Add timeouts to http, git, and hg operations to prevent DoS
- Add size limit to http to prevent resource exhaustion
- Disable following symlinks in both artifacts and `job run`
- Stop performing initial HEAD request to avoid file corruption on
retries and DoS opportunities.
**Approach**
Since Nomad has no ability to differentiate a DoS-via-large-artifact vs
a legitimate workload, all of the new limits are configurable at the
client agent level.
The max size of HTTP downloads is also exposed as a node attribute so
that if some workloads have large artifacts they can specify a high
limit in their jobspecs.
In the future all of this plumbing could be extended to enable/disable
specific getters or artifact downloading entirely on a per-node basis.
The description of `mount_flags` provides incorrect example
of the accepted value format.
This fixes the issue by changing the example from a string
`ro,noatime` to a slice of strings `["ro", "noatime"]`.
Nomad errors out when attempting to specify a task for a service that uses consul connect but does not have script or gRPC checks. See 304d0cf595/nomad/structs/structs.go (L6643) for details.
Closes#12927Closes#12958
This PR updates the version of redis used in our examples from 3.2 to 7.
The old version is very not supported anymore, and we should be setting
a good example by using a supported version.
The long-form example job is now fixed so that the service stanza uses
nomad as the service discovery provider, and so now the job runs without
a requirement of having Consul running and configured.
The shortlink /s/port-plan-failure is logged when a plan for a node is
rejected to help users debug and mitigate repeated `plan for node
rejected` failures.
The current link to #9506 is... less than useful. It is not clear to
users what steps they should take to either fix their cluster or
contribute to the issue.
While .../monitoring-nomad#progess isn't as comprehensive as it could
be, it's a much more gentle introduction to the class of bug than the
original issue.
In #12324 we made it so that plugins wait until the node drain is
complete, as we do for system jobs. But we neglected to mark the node
drain as complete once only plugins (or system jobs) remaining, which
means that the node drain is left in a draining state until the
`deadline` time expires. This was incorrectly documented as expected
behavior in #12324.
notably:
- name of the compiled binary is 'nomad-device-nvidia', not 'nvidia-gpu'
- link to Nvidia docs for installing the container runtime toolkit
- list docker v19.03 as minimum version, to track with nvidia's new container runtime toolkit
The capacity fields for `create volume` set bounds on the resulting
size of the volume, but the ultimate size of the volume will be
determined by the storage provider (between the min and max). Clarify
this in the documentation and provide a suggestion for how to set a
exact size.
This test exercises upgrades between 0.8 and Nomad versions greater
than 0.9. We have not supported 0.8.x in a very long time and in any
case the test has been marked to skip because the downloader doesn't
work.
* docs: update json jobs docs
Did you know that Nomad has not 1 but 2 JSON formats for jobs? 2½ if you
want to acknowledge that sometimes our JSON job representations have a
Job top-level wrapper and sometimes do not.
The 2½ formats are:
```
1. HCL JSON
2. Input API JSON (top-level Job field)
2.5. Output API JSON (lacks top-level Job field)
```
`#2` is what our docs consider our API JSON. `#2.5` seems to be an
accident of history we can't fix with breaking API compatibility.
`#1` is an even more interesting accident of history: the `jobspec2`
package automatically detects if the input to Parse is JSON and switches
to a JSON parser. This behavior is undocumented, the format is
unspecified, and there is no official HashiCorp tooling to produce this
JSON from HCL. The plot thickens when you discover popular third party
tools like hcl2json.com and https://github.com/tmccombs/hcl2json seem to
produce JSON that `nomad run` accepts!
Since we have no telemetry around whether or not anyone passes HCL JSON
to `nomad run`, and people don't file bugs around features that Just
Work, I'm choosing to leave that code path in place and *acknowledged
but not suggested* in documentation.
See https://github.com/hashicorp/hcl/issues/498 for a more comprehensive
discussion of what officially supporting HCL JSON in Nomad would look
like.
(I also added some of the missing fields to the (Input API flavor) JSON
Job documentation, but it still needs a lot of work to be
comprehensive.)
Co-authored-by: Tim Gross <tgross@hashicorp.com>
After a more detailed analysis of this feature, the approach taken in
PR #12449 was found to be not ideal due to poor UX (users are
responsible for setting the entity alias they would like to use) and
issues around jobs potentially masquerading itself as another Vault
entity.
This PR introduces the `address` field in the `service` block so that Nomad
or Consul services can be registered with a custom `.Address.` to advertise.
The address can be an IP address or domain name. If the `address` field is
set, the `service.address_mode` must be set in `auto` mode.
* cli: add -json flag to support job commands
While the CLI has always supported running JSON jobs, its support has
been via HCLv2's JSON parsing. I have no idea what format it expects the
job to be in, but it's absolutely not in the same format as the API
expects.
So I ignored that and added a new -json flag to explicitly support *API*
style JSON jobspecs.
The jobspecs can even have the wrapping {"Job": {...}} envelope or not!
* docs: fix example for `nomad job validate`
We haven't been able to validate inside driver config stanzas ever since
the move to task driver plugins. 😭
The new `namespace apply` feature that allows for passing a namespace
specification file detects the difference between an empty namespace
and a namespace specification by checking if the file exists. For most
cases, the file will have an extension like `.hcl` and so there's
little danger that a user will apply a file spec when they intended to
apply a file name.
But because directory names typically don't include an extension,
you're much more likely to collide when trying to `namespace apply` by
name only, and then you get a confusing error message of the form:
Failed to read file: read $namespace: is a directory
Detect the case where the namespace name collides with a directory in
the current working directory, and skip trying to load the directory.
This PR updates the changelog, adds notes the 1.3 upgrade guide, and
updates the connect integration docs with documentation about the new
requirement on Consul ACL policies of Consul agent default anonymous ACL
tokens.
* Add os to NodeListStub struct.
Signed-off-by: Shishir Mahajan <smahajan@roblox.com>
* Add os as a query param to /v1/nodes.
Signed-off-by: Shishir Mahajan <smahajan@roblox.com>
* Add test: os as a query param to /v1/nodes.
Signed-off-by: Shishir Mahajan <smahajan@roblox.com>
- Moved federation docs to the bottom since *everyone* is potentially
affected by the other sections on the page, but only users of
federation are affected by it.
- Added section on the plan for node rejected bug since it is fairly
easy to diagnose and removing affected nodes is a fairly reliable
workaround.
- Mention 5s cliff for wait_for_index.
- Remove the lie that we do not have job status metrics! How old was
that?!
- Reinforce the importance of monitoring basic system resources
This PR expands on the work done in #12543 to
- prefix the tag, so it is now "nomad.alloc_id" to be more consistent with Consul tags
- merge into pre-existing envoy_stats_tags fields
- update the upgrade guide docs
- update changelog
* services: add pagination and filter support to info RPC.
* cli: add filter flag to service info command.
* docs: add pagination and filter details to services info API.
* paginator: minor updates to comment and func signature.
Many of our scripts have a non-portable interpreter line for bash and
use bash-specific variables like `BASH_SOURCE`. Update the interpreter
line to be portable between various Linuxes and macOS without
complaint from posix shell users.
Custom variable validation is a useful feature that is supported by
Nomad and not just Terraform. As such it should be documented on the
input variable page.
I've cribbed the content from the terraform docs so this should be
consistent across projects
We introduced a `pprof-interval` argument to `operator debug` in #11938, and unfortunately this has resulted in a lot of test flakes. The actual command in use is mostly fine (although I've fixed some quirks here), so what's really happened is that the change has revealed some existing issues in the tests. Summary of changes:
* Make first pprof collection synchronous to preserve the existing
behavior for the common case where the pprof interval matches the
duration.
* Clamp `operator debug` pprof timing to that of the command. The
`pprof-duration` should be no more than `duration` and the
`pprof-interval` should be no more than `pprof-duration`. Clamp the
values rather than throwing errors, which could change the commands
that existing users might already have in debugging scripts
* Testing: remove test parallelism
The `operator debug` tests that stand up servers can't be run in
parallel, because we don't have a way of canceling the API calls for
pprof. The agent will still be running the last pprof when we exit,
and that breaks the next test that talks to that same agent.
(Because you can only run one pprof at a time on any process!)
We could split off each subtest into its own server, but this test
suite is already very slow. In future work we should fix this "for
real" by making the API call cancelable.
* Testing: assert against unexpected errors in `operator debug` tests.
If we assert there are no unexpected error outputs, it's easier for
the developer to debug when something is going wrong with the tests
because the error output will be presented as a failing test, rather
than just a failing exit code check. Or worse, no failing exit code
check!
This also forces us to be explicit about which tests will return 0
exit codes but still emit (presumably ignorable) error outputs.
Additional minor bug fixes (mostly in tests) and test refactorings:
* Fix text alignment on pprof Duration in `operator debug` output
* Remove "done" channel from `operator debug` event stream test. The
goroutine we're blocking for here already tells us it's done by
sending a value, so block on that instead of an extraneous channel
* Event stream test timer should start at current time, not zero
* Remove noise from `operator debug` test log output. The `t.Logf`
calls already are picked out from the rest of the test output by
being prefixed with the filename.
* Remove explicit pprof args so we use the defaults clamped from
duration/interval
This PR injects the 'NOMAD_CPU_CORES' environment variable into
tasks that have been allocated reserved cpu cores. The value uses
normal cpuset notation, as found in cpuset.cpu cgroup interface files.
Note this value is not necessiarly the same as the content of the actual
cpuset.cpus interface file, which will also include shared cpu cores when
using cgroups v2. This variable is a workaround for users who used to be
able to read the reserved cgroup cpuset file, but lose the information
about distinct reserved cores when using cgroups v2.
Side discussion in: https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad/issues/12374
Move some common Vault API data struct decoding out of the Vault client
so it can be reused in other situations.
Make Vault job validation its own function so it's easier to expand it.
Rename the `Job.VaultPolicies` method to just `Job.Vault` since it
returns the full Vault block, not just their policies.
Set `ChangeMode` on `Vault.Canonicalize`.
Add some missing tests.
Allows specifying an entity alias that will be used by Nomad when
deriving the task Vault token.
An entity alias assigns an indentity to a token, allowing better control
and management of Vault clients since all tokens with the same indentity
alias will now be considered the same client. This helps track Nomad
activity in Vault's audit logs and better control over Vault billing.
Add support for a new Nomad server configuration to define a default
entity alias to be used when deriving Vault tokens. This default value
will be used if the task doesn't have an entity alias defined.
This PR adds support for the raw_exec driver on systems with only cgroups v2.
The raw exec driver is able to use cgroups to manage processes. This happens
only on Linux, when exec_driver is enabled, and the no_cgroups option is not
set. The driver uses the freezer controller to freeze processes of a task,
issue a sigkill, then unfreeze. Previously the implementation assumed cgroups
v1, and now it also supports cgroups v2.
There is a bit of refactoring in this PR, but the fundamental design remains
the same.
Closes#12351#12348
The client configuration options for drivers have been deprecated
since 0.9. We haven't torn them out completely but because they're
deprecated it's been hard to guarantee correct behavior. Remove the
documentation so that users aren't misled about their viability.
Resolves#12095 by WONTFIXing it.
This approach disables `writeToFile` as it allows arbitrary host
filesystem writes and is only a small quality of life improvement over
multiple `template` stanzas.
This approach has the significant downside of leaving people who have
altered their `template.function_denylist` *still vulnerable!* I added
an upgrade note, but we should have implemented the denylist as a
`map[string]bool` so that new funcs could be denied without overriding
custom configurations.
This PR also includes a bug fix that broke enabling all consul-template
funcs. We repeatedly failed to differentiate between a nil (unset)
denylist and an empty (allow all) one.