In order to minimize this change while keeping a simple version of the
behavior, we set `lastOk` to the current time less the intial server
connection timeout. If the client starts and never contacts the
server, it will stop all configured tasks after the initial server
connection grace period, on the assumption that we've been out of
touch longer than any configured `stop_after_client_disconnect`.
The more complex state behavior might be justified later, but we
should learn about failure modes first.
- track lastHeartbeat, the client local time of the last successful
heartbeat round trip
- track allocations with `stop_after_client_disconnect` configured
- trigger allocation destroy (which handles cleanup)
- restore heartbeat/killable allocs tracking when allocs are recovered from disk
- on client restart, stop those allocs after a grace period if the
servers are still partioned
* nomad/structs/structs: new NodeEventSubsystemCSI
* client/client: pass triggerNodeEvent in the CSIConfig
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/instance: add eventer to instanceManager
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/manager: pass triggerNodeEvent
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume: node event on [un]mount
* nomad/structs/structs: use storage, not CSI
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume: use storage, not CSI
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume_test: eventer
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume: event on error
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume_test: check event on error
* command/node_status: remove an extra space in event detail format
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume: use snake_case for details
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume_test: snake_case details
In order to correctly fingerprint dynamic plugins on client restarts,
we need to persist a handle to the plugin (that is, connection info)
to the client state store.
The dynamic registry will sync automatically to the client state
whenever it receives a register/deregister call.
As part of introducing support for CSI, AllocRunner hooks need to be
able to communicate with Nomad Servers for validation of and interaction
with storage volumes. Here we create a small RPCer interface and pass
the client (rpc client) to the AR in preparation for making these RPCs.
This changeset is some pre-requisite boilerplate that is required for
introducing CSI volume management for client nodes.
It extracts out fingerprinting logic from the csi instance manager.
This change is to facilitate reusing the csimanager to also manage the
node-local CSI functionality, as it is the easiest place for us to
guaruntee health checking and to provide additional visibility into the
running operations through the fingerprinter mechanism and goroutine.
It also introduces the VolumeMounter interface that will be used to
manage staging/publishing unstaging/unpublishing of volumes on the host.
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.
Nomad jobs may be configured with a TaskGroup which contains a Service
definition that is Consul Connect enabled. These service definitions end
up establishing a Consul Connect Proxy Task (e.g. envoy, by default). In
the case where Consul ACLs are enabled, a Service Identity token is required
for these tasks to run & connect, etc. This changeset enables the Nomad Server
to recieve RPC requests for the derivation of SI tokens on behalf of instances
of Consul Connect using Tasks. Those tokens are then relayed back to the
requesting Client, which then injects the tokens in the secrets directory of
the Task.
When a job is configured with Consul Connect aware tasks (i.e. sidecar),
the Nomad Client should be able to request from Consul (through Nomad Server)
Service Identity tokens specific to those tasks.
Adds new package that can be used by client and server RPC endpoints to
facilitate monitoring based off of a logger
clean up old code
small comment about write
rm old comment about minsize
rename to Monitor
Removes connection logic from monitor command
Keep connection logic in endpoints, use a channel to send results from
monitoring
use new multisink logger and interfaces
small test for dropped messages
update go-hclogger and update sink/intercept logger interfaces
Fix a bug where a millicious user can access or manipulate an alloc in a
namespace they don't have access to. The allocation endpoints perform
ACL checks against the request namespace, not the allocation namespace,
and performs the allocation lookup independently from namespaces.
Here, we check that the requested can access the alloc namespace
regardless of the declared request namespace.
Ideally, we'd enforce that the declared request namespace matches
the actual allocation namespace. Unfortunately, we haven't documented
alloc endpoints as namespaced functions; we suspect starting to enforce
this will be very disruptive and inappropriate for a nomad point
release. As such, we maintain current behavior that doesn't require
passing the proper namespace in request. A future major release may
start enforcing checking declared namespace.
Currently, there is an issue when running on Windows whereby under some
circumstances the Windows stats API's will begin to return errors (such
as internal timeouts) when a client is under high load, and potentially
other forms of resource contention / system states (and other unknown
cases).
When an error occurs during this collection, we then short circuit
further metrics emission from the client until the next interval.
This can be problematic if it happens for a sustained number of
intervals, as our metrics aggregator will begin to age out older
metrics, and we will eventually stop emitting various types of metrics
including `nomad.client.unallocated.*` metrics.
However, when metrics collection fails on Linux, gopsutil will in many cases
(e.g cpu.Times) silently return 0 values, rather than an error.
Here, we switch to returning empty metrics in these failures, and
logging the error at the source. This brings the behaviour into line
with Linux/Unix platforms, and although making aggregation a little
sadder on intermittent failures, will result in more desireable overall
behaviour of keeping metrics available for further investigation if
things look unusual.
Some drivers will automatically create directories when trying to mount
a path into a container, but some will not.
To unify this behaviour, this commit requires that host volumes already exist,
and can be stat'd by the Nomad Agent during client startup.
The ClientState being pending isn't a good criteria; as an alloc may
have been updated in-place before it was completed.
Also, updated the logic so we only check for task states. If an alloc
has deployment state but no persisted tasks at all, restore will still
fail.
This uses an alternative approach where we avoid restoring the alloc
runner in the first place, if we suspect that the alloc may have been
completed already.
This fixes a bug where allocs that have been GCed get re-run again after client
is restarted. A heavily-used client may launch thousands of allocs on startup
and get killed.
The bug is that an alloc runner that gets destroyed due to GC remains in
client alloc runner set. Periodically, they get persisted until alloc is
gced by server. During that time, the client db will contain the alloc
but not its individual tasks status nor completed state. On client restart,
client assumes that alloc is pending state and re-runs it.
Here, we fix it by ensuring that destroyed alloc runners don't persist any alloc
to the state DB.
This is a short-term fix, as we should consider revamping client state
management. Storing alloc and task information in non-transaction non-atomic
concurrently while alloc runner is running and potentially changing state is a
recipe for bugs.
Fixes https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad/issues/5984
Related to https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad/pull/5890
* nomad: add admission controller framework
* nomad: add admission controller framework and Consul Connect hooks
* run admission controllers before checking permissions
* client: add default node meta for connect configurables
* nomad: remove validateJob func since it has been moved to admission controller
* nomad: use new TaskKind type
* client: use consts for connect sidecar image and log level
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-Authored-By: Michael Schurter <mschurter@hashicorp.com>
* nomad: add job register test with connect sidecar
* Update nomad/job_endpoint_hooks.go
Co-Authored-By: Michael Schurter <mschurter@hashicorp.com>
When fetching node alloc assignments, be defensive against a stale read before
killing local nodes allocs.
The bug is when both client and servers are restarting and the client requests
the node allocation for the node, it might get stale data as server hasn't
finished applying all the restored raft transaction to store.
Consequently, client would kill and destroy the alloc locally, just to fetch it
again moments later when server store is up to date.
The bug can be reproduced quite reliably with single node setup (configured with
persistence). I suspect it's too edge-casey to occur in production cluster with
multiple servers, but we may need to examine leader failover scenarios more closely.
In this commit, we only remove and destroy allocs if the removal index is more
recent than the alloc index. This seems like a cheap resiliency fix we already
use for detecting alloc updates.
A more proper fix would be to ensure that a nomad server only serves
RPC calls when state store is fully restored or up to date in leadership
transition cases.
This fixes an issue where batch and service workloads would never be
restarted due to indefinitely blocking on a nil channel.
It also raises the restoration logging message to `Info` to simplify log
analysis.
Registration and restoring allocs don't share state or depend on each
other in any way (syncing allocs with servers is done outside of
registration).
Since restoring is synchronous, start the registration goroutine first.
For nodes with lots of allocs to restore or close to their heartbeat
deadline, this could be the difference between becoming "lost" or not.
Refactoring of 104067bc2b2002a4e45ae7b667a476b89addc162
Switch the MarkLive method for a chan that is closed by the client.
Thanks to @notnoop for the idea!
The old approach called a method on most existing ARs and TRs on every
runAllocs call. The new approach does a once.Do call in runAllocs to
accomplish the same thing with less work. Able to remove the gate
abstraction that did much more than was needed.
Fixes#1795
Running restored allocations and pulling what allocations to run from
the server happen concurrently. This means that if a client is rebooted,
and has its allocations rescheduled, it may restart the dead allocations
before it contacts the server and determines they should be dead.
This commit makes tasks that fail to reattach on restore wait until the
server is contacted before restarting.
* client: was not using up-to-date client state in determining which alloc count towards allocated resources
* Update client/client.go
Co-Authored-By: cgbaker <cgbaker@hashicorp.com>
This removes an unnecessary shared lock between discovery and heartbeating
which was causing heartbeats to be missed upon retries when a single server
fails. Also made a drive by fix to call the periodic server shuffler goroutine.
This command will be used to send a signal to either a single task within an
allocation, or all of the tasks if <task-name> is omitted. If the sent signal
terminates the allocation, it will be treated as if the allocation has crashed,
rather than as if it was operator-terminated.
Signal validation is currently handled by the driver itself and nomad
does not attempt to restrict or validate them.