* Linear and Branching mock evaluations
* De-comment
* test-trigger
* Making evaluation trees dynamic
* Reinstated job relationship on eval mock
* Dasherize job prefix back to normal
* Handle bug where UUIDKey is not present on job
* Appending node to eval
* Job ID as a passed property
* Remove unused import
* Branching evals set up as generatable
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.
Fixes#10200
**The bug**
A user reported receiving the following error when an alloc was placed
that needed to preempt existing allocs:
```
[ERROR] client.alloc_watcher: error querying previous alloc:
alloc_id=28... previous_alloc=8e... error="rpc error: alloc lookup
failed: index error: UUID must be 36 characters"
```
The previous alloc (8e) was already complete on the client. This is
possible if an alloc stops *after* the scheduling decision was made to
preempt it, but *before* the node running both allocations was able to
pull and start the preemptor. While that is hopefully a narrow window of
time, you can expect it to occur in high throughput batch scheduling
heavy systems.
However the RPC error made no sense! `previous_alloc` in the logs was a
valid 36 character UUID!
**The fix**
The fix is:
```
- prevAllocID: c.Alloc.PreviousAllocation,
+ prevAllocID: watchedAllocID,
```
The alloc watcher new func used for preemption improperly referenced
Alloc.PreviousAllocation instead of the passed in watchedAllocID. When
multiple allocs are preempted, a watcher is created for each with
watchedAllocID set properly by the caller. In this case
Alloc.PreviousAllocation="" -- which is where the `UUID must be 36 characters`
error was coming from! Sadly we were properly referencing
watchedAllocID in the log, so it made the error make no sense!
**The repro**
I was able to reproduce this with a dev agent with [preemption enabled](https://gist.github.com/schmichael/53f79cbd898afdfab76865ad8c7fc6a0#file-preempt-hcl)
and [lowered limits](https://gist.github.com/schmichael/53f79cbd898afdfab76865ad8c7fc6a0#file-limits-hcl)
for ease of repro.
First I started a [low priority count 3 job](https://gist.github.com/schmichael/53f79cbd898afdfab76865ad8c7fc6a0#file-preempt-lo-nomad),
then a [high priority job](https://gist.github.com/schmichael/53f79cbd898afdfab76865ad8c7fc6a0#file-preempt-hi-nomad)
that evicts 2 low priority jobs. Everything worked as expected.
However if I force it to use the [remotePrevAlloc implementation](https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad/blob/v1.3.0-beta.1/client/allocwatcher/alloc_watcher.go#L147),
it reproduces the bug because the watcher references PreviousAllocation
instead of watchedAllocID.
We moved off the old provisioning process for nightly E2E to one driven
entirely by Terraform quite a while back now. We're in the slow
process of removing the framework code for this test-by-test, but this
chunk of code no longer has any callers.
We enforce exactly one plugin supervisor loop by checking whether
`running` is set and returning early. This works but is fairly
subtle. It can briefly result in two goroutines where one quickly
exits before doing any work. Clarify the intent by using
`sync.Once`. The goroutine we've spawned only exits when the entire
task runner is being torn down, and not when the task driver restarts
the workload, so it should never be re-run.
* 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>
* chore: remove commented out code and skipped tests
* refact: triggeredBy requires filter expression not qp
* refact: use filter expression dsl instead of named params
* fix: add type
* docs: add in-line reference to filter expression DSL
* fix: update filter copy for non-matches
* fix: correct conditional logic to render no match copy
The task runner hook `Prestart` response object includes a `Done`
field that's intended to tell the client not to run the hook
again. The plugin supervisor creates mount points for the task during
prestart and saves these mounts in the hook resources. But if a client
restarts the hook resources will not be populated. If the plugin task
restarts at any time after the client restarts, it will fail to have
the correct mounts and crash loop until restart attempts run out.
Fix this by not returning `Done` in the response, just as we do for
the `volume_mount_hook`.
* Unknown status for allocations accounted for
* Canary string removed
* Test cleanup
* Generate unknown in mirage
* aacidentally oovervoowled
* Update ui/app/components/allocation-status-bar.js
Co-authored-by: Derek Strickland <1111455+DerekStrickland@users.noreply.github.com>
* Disconnected state on job status in client
* Renaming Disconnected to Unknown in the job-status-in-client
* Unknown accounted for on job rows filtering and testsfix
* Adding lostAllocs as a computed dependency
* Unknown client status within acceptance test
* Swatches updated and PR comments addressed
* Unknown and disconnected added to test fixtures
Co-authored-by: Derek Strickland <1111455+DerekStrickland@users.noreply.github.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.
We don't need the absolute path for any of the commands in this script
so long as we `cd` into the source directory path. Doing this removes
the need for weird platform-specific tricks we have to do with
realpath vs GNU realpath.
The E2E test runner is running from the root of the Nomad
repository. Make this run independent of the working directory for
convenience of developers and the test runner.
* 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.
* Allocation page linkfix
* fix added to task page and computed prop moved to allocation model
* Fallback query added to task group when specific volume isnt knowable
* Delog
* link text reflects alloc suffix
* Helper instead of in-template conditionals
* formatVolumeName unit test
* Removing unused helper import
When shutting down an allocation that ends up needing to be
force-killed, we're getting a spurious "OOM Killed (137)" message on
the task termination event. We introduced this as part of cgroups v2
support because the Docker daemon isn't detecting the container status
correctly. Although exit code 137 is the exit code we get for
OOM-killed processes, that's because OOM kill is a `SIGKILL`. So any
sigkilled process will get that exit code.
The CSI plugin allocations take a while to be marked healthy,
sometimes causing E2E test flakes during the setup phase of the
tests. There's nothing CSI specific about marking plugin allocs
healthy, as the plugin supervisor hook does all the fingerprinting in
the postrun hook (the prestart hook just makes a couple of empty
directories). The timeouts we're seeing may be because of where we're
pulling the images from; most our jobs pull from a CDN-backed public
registry whereas these are pulling from ECR. Set a 1min timeout for
these to make sure we have enough time to pull the image and start the
task.
Scripts for running playwright tests in a Docker container that has
chromium and webkit preinstalled. Includes a basic smoke test for
authentication so that we can be sure the test rig is working
end-to-end. Wiring this up in CI will be in an upcoming PR.