The `related` query param is used to indicate that the request should
return a list of related (next, previous, and blocked) evaluations.
Co-authored-by: Jasmine Dahilig <jasmine@hashicorp.com>
The paginator logic was built when go-memdb iterators would return items
ordered lexicographically by their ID prefixes, but #12054 added the
option for some tables to return results ordered by their `CreateIndex`
instead, which invalidated the previous paginator assumption.
The iterator used for pagination must still return results in some order
so that the paginator can properly handle requests where the next_token
value is not present in the results anymore (e.g., the eval was GC'ed).
In these situations, the paginator will start the returned page in the
first element right after where the requested token should've been.
This commit moves the logic to generate pagination tokens from the
elements being paginated to the iterator itself so that callers can have
more control over the token format to make sure they are properly
ordered and stable.
It also allows configuring the paginator as being ordered in ascending
or descending order, which is relevant when looking for a token that may
not be present anymore.
These API endpoints now return results in chronological order. They
can return results in reverse chronological order by setting the
query parameter ascending=true.
- Eval.List
- Deployment.List
PR #11956 implemented a new mTLS RPC check to validate the role of the
certificate used in the request, but further testing revealed two flaws:
1. client-only endpoints did not accept server certificates so the
request would fail when forwarded from one server to another.
2. the certificate was being checked after the request was forwarded,
so the check would happen over the server certificate, not the
actual source.
This commit checks for the desired mTLS level, where the client level
accepts both, a server or a client certificate. It also validates the
cercertificate before the request is forwarded.
API queries can request pagination using the `NextToken` and `PerPage`
fields of `QueryOptions`, when supported by the underlying API.
Add a `NextToken` field to the `structs.QueryMeta` so that we have a
common field across RPCs to tell the caller where to resume paging
from on their next API call. Include this field on the `api.QueryMeta`
as well so that it's available for future versions of List HTTP APIs
that wrap the response with `QueryMeta` rather than returning a simple
list of structs. In the meantime callers can get the `X-Nomad-NextToken`.
Add pagination to the `Eval.List` RPC by checking for pagination token
and page size in `QueryOptions`. This will allow resuming from the
last ID seen so long as the query parameters and the state store
itself are unchanged between requests.
Add filtering by job ID or evaluation status over the results we get
out of the state store.
Parse the query parameters of the `Eval.List` API into the arguments
expected for filtering in the RPC call.
* Throw away result of multierror.Append
When given a *multierror.Error, it is mutated, therefore the return
value is not needed.
* Simplify MergeMultierrorWarnings, use StringBuilder
* Hash.Write() never returns an error
* Remove error that was always nil
* Remove error from Resources.Add signature
When this was originally written it could return an error, but that was
refactored away, and callers of it as of today never handle the error.
* Throw away results of io.Copy during Bridge
* Handle errors when computing node class in test
Fixes#9017
The ?resources=true query parameter includes resources in the object
stub listings. Specifically:
- For `/v1/nodes?resources=true` both the `NodeResources` and
`ReservedResources` field are included.
- For `/v1/allocations?resources=true` the `AllocatedResources` field is
included.
The ?task_states=false query parameter removes TaskStates from
/v1/allocations responses. (By default TaskStates are included.)
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.
Consider currently dequeued Evaluation's ModifyIndex when determining
its WaitIndex. Normally the Evaluation itself would already be in the
state store snapshot used to determine the WaitIndex. However, since the FSM
applies Raft messages to the state store concurrently with Dequeueing,
it's possible the currently dequeued Evaluation won't yet exist in the
state store snapshot used by JobsForEval.
This can be solved by always considering the current eval's modify index
and using it if it is greater than all of the evals returned by the
state store.
The ForceLeaveRequest endpoint may only be called on servers, but the
code was using a Client to resolve tokens. This would cause a panic when
an agent wasn't both a Server and a Client.
This PR fixes a scheduling race condition in which the plan results from
one invocation of the scheduler were not being considered by the next
since the Worker was not waiting for the correct index.
Fixes https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad/issues/3198
* Reverted changes to get methods
* Added prefix query parameter
* Updated node status to use prefix based searching
* Fixed tests
* Removed truncation logic
* Use go-memdb prefix indexer for lookups
* Add Job lookups
* Update state store with new ByIDPrefix get methods
* Call new methods when exact lookup fails or is not applicable