As newer versions of Consul are released, the minimum version of Envoy
it supports as a sidecar proxy also gets bumped. Starting with the upcoming
Consul v1.9.X series, Envoy v1.11.X will no longer be supported. Current
versions of Nomad hardcode a version of Envoy v1.11.2 to be used as the
default implementation of Connect sidecar proxy.
This PR introduces a change such that each Nomad Client will query its
local Consul for a list of Envoy proxies that it supports (https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/pull/8545)
and then launch the Connect sidecar proxy task using the latest supported version
of Envoy. If the `SupportedProxies` API component is not available from
Consul, Nomad will fallback to the old version of Envoy supported by old
versions of Consul.
Setting the meta configuration option `meta.connect.sidecar_image` or
setting the `connect.sidecar_task` stanza will take precedence as is
the current behavior for sidecar proxies.
Setting the meta configuration option `meta.connect.gateway_image`
will take precedence as is the current behavior for connect gateways.
`meta.connect.sidecar_image` and `meta.connect.gateway_image` may make
use of the special `${NOMAD_envoy_version}` variable interpolation, which
resolves to the newest version of Envoy supported by the Consul agent.
Addresses #8585#7665
When we try to prefix match the `nomad volume detach` node ID argument, the
node may have been already GC'd. The volume unpublish workflow gracefully
handles this case so that we can free the claim. So make a best effort to find
a node ID among the volume's claimed allocations, or otherwise just use the
node ID we've been given by the user as-is.
CSI plugins with the same plugin ID and type (controller, node, monolith) will
collide on a host, both in the communication socket and in the dynamic plugin
registry. Until this can be fixed, leave notice to operators in the
documentation.
Previously, Nomad was using a hand-made lookup table for looking
up EC2 CPU performance characteristics (core count + speed = ticks).
This data was incomplete and incorrect depending on region. The AWS
API has the correct data but requires API keys to use (i.e. should not
be queried directly from Nomad).
This change introduces a lookup table generated by a small command line
tool in Nomad's tools module which uses the Amazon AWS API.
Running the tool requires AWS_* environment variables set.
$ # in nomad/tools/cpuinfo
$ go run .
Going forward, Nomad can incorporate regeneration of the lookup table
somewhere in the CI pipeline so that we remain up-to-date on the latest
offerings from EC2.
Fixes#7830
The CSI specification for `ValidateVolumeCapability` says that we shall
"reconcile successful capability-validation responses by comparing the
validated capabilities with those that it had originally requested" but leaves
the details of that reconcilation unspecified. This API is not implemented in
Kubernetes, so controller plugins don't have a real-world implementation to
verify their behavior against.
We have found that CSI plugins in the wild may return "successful" but
incomplete `VolumeCapability` responses, so we can't require that all
capabilities we expect have been validated, only that the ones that have been
validated match. This appears to violate the CSI specification but until
that's been resolved in upstream we have to loosen our validation
requirements. The tradeoff is that we're more likely to have runtime errors
during `NodeStageVolume` instead of at the time of volume registration.
The CSI specification allows only the `file-system` attachment mode to have
mount options. The `block-device` mode is left "intentionally empty, for now"
in the protocol. We should be validating against this problem, but our
documentation also had it backwards.
Also adds missing mount_options on group volume.
This PR adds a version specific upgrade note about the docker stop
signal behavior. Also adds test for the signal logic in docker driver.
Closes#8932 which was fixed in #8933
`nomad volume detach volume-id 00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000` produces an API call containing the UUID as part of the query string. This is the only way the API accepts the request correctly - if you pass it in the payload you get `detach requires node ID`
When defining a script-check in a group-level service, Nomad needs to
know which task is associated with the check so that it can use the
correct task driver to execute the check.
This PR fixes two bugs:
1) validate service.task or service.check.task is configured
2) make service.check.task inherit service.task if it is itself unset
Fixes#8952
The 'docker.config.infra_image' would default to an amd64 container.
It is possible to reference the correct image for a platform using
the `runtime.GOARCH` variable, eliminating the need to explicitly set
the `infra_image` on non-amd64 platforms.
Also upgrade to Google's pause container version 3.1 from 3.0, which
includes some enhancements around process management.
Fixes#8926