Upcoming work to instrument the rate of RPC requests by consumer (and eventually
rate limit) requires that we thread the `RPCContext` through all RPC
handlers so that we can access the underlying connection. This changeset adds
the context to everywhere we intend to initially support it and intentionally
excludes streaming RPCs and client RPCs.
To improve the ergonomics of adding the context everywhere its needed and to
clarify the requirements of dynamic vs static handlers, I've also done a good
bit of refactoring here:
* canonicalized the RPC handler fields so they're as close to identical as
possible without introducing unused fields (i.e. I didn't add loggers if the
handler doesn't use them already).
* canonicalized the imports in the handler files.
* added a `NewExampleEndpoint` function for each handler that ensures we're
constructing the handlers with the required arguments.
* reordered the registration in server.go to match the order of the files (to
make it easier to see if we've missed one), and added a bunch of commentary
there as to what the difference between static and dynamic handlers is.
Currently CRUD code that operates on SSO auth methods does not return created or updated object upon creation/update. This is bad UX and inconsistent behavior compared to other ACL objects like roles, policies or tokens.
This PR fixes it.
Relates to #13120
* scheduler: create placements for non-register MRD
For multiregion jobs, the scheduler does not create placements on
registration because the deployment must wait for the other regions.
Once of these regions will then trigger the deployment to run.
Currently, this is done in the scheduler by considering any eval for a
multiregion job as "paused" since it's expected that another region will
eventually unpause it.
This becomes a problem where evals not triggered by a job registration
happen, such as on a node update. These types of regional changes do not
have other regions waiting to progress the deployment, and so they were
never resulting in placements.
The fix is to create a deployment at job registration time. This
additional piece of state allows the scheduler to differentiate between
a multiregion change, where there are other regions engaged in the
deployment so no placements are required, from a regional change, where
the scheduler does need to create placements.
This deployment starts in the new "initializing" status to signal to the
scheduler that it needs to compute the initial deployment state. The
multiregion deployment will wait until this deployment state is
persisted and its starts is set to "pending". Without this state
transition it's possible to hit a race condition where the plan applier
and the deployment watcher may step of each other and overwrite their
changes.
* changelog: add entry for #15325
In #14621 we added an eval canelation reaper goroutine with a channel that
allowed us to wake it up. But we forgot to actually send on this channel from
`Eval.Ack` and are still committing the cancelations synchronously. Fix this by
sending on the buffered channel to wake up the reaper instead.
When we migrated to the updated autopilot library in Nomad 1.4.0, the interface
for finding servers changed. Previously autopilot would get the serf members and
call `IsServer` on each of them, leaving it up to the implementor to filter out
clients (and in Nomad's case, other regions). But in the "new" autopilot
library, the equivalent interface is `KnownServers` for which we did not filter
by region. This causes spurious attempts for the cross-region stats fetching,
which results in TLS errors and a lot of log noise.
Filter the member set by region to fix the regression.
After Deployments were added in Nomad 0.6.0, the `AllocUpdateRequestType` raft
log entry was no longer in use. Mark this as deprecated, remove the associated
dead code, and remove references to the metrics it emits from the docs. We'll
leave the entry itself just in case we encounter old raft logs that we need to
be able to safely load.
* keyring: update handle to state inside replication loop
When keyring replication starts, we take a handle to the state store. But
whenever a snapshot is restored, this handle is invalidated and no longer points
to a state store that is receiving new keys. This leaks a bunch of memory too!
In addition to operator-initiated restores, when fresh servers are added to
existing clusters with large-enough state, the keyring replication can get
started quickly enough that it's running before the snapshot from the existing
clusters have been restored.
Fix this by updating the handle to the state store on each pass.
When an evaluation is acknowledged by a scheduler, the resulting plan is
guaranteed to cover up to the `waitIndex` set by the worker based on the most
recent evaluation for that job in the state store. At that point, we no longer
need to retain blocked evaluations in the broker that are older than that index.
Move all but the highest priority / highest `ModifyIndex` blocked eval into a
canceled set. When the `Eval.Ack` RPC returns from the eval broker it will
signal a reap of a batch of cancelable evals to write to raft. This paces the
cancelations limited by how frequently the schedulers are acknowledging evals;
this should reduce the risk of cancelations from overwhelming raft relative to
scheduler progress. In order to avoid straggling batches when the cluster is
quiet, we also include a periodic sweep through the cancelable list.
The `TestLeader_Reelection` test waits for a leader to be elected and then makes
some other assertions. But it implcitly assumes that there's no failure of
leadership before shutting down the leader, which can lead to a panic in the
tests. Assert there's still a leader before the shutdown.
During unusual outage recovery scenarios on large clusters, a backlog of
millions of evaluations can appear. In these cases, the `eval delete` command can
put excessive load on the cluster by listing large sets of evals to extract the
IDs and then sending larges batches of IDs. Although the command's batch size
was carefully tuned, we still need to be JSON deserialize, re-serialize to
MessagePack, send the log entries through raft, and get the FSM applied.
To improve performance of this recovery case, move the batching process into the
RPC handler and the state store. The design here is a little weird, so let's
look a the failed options first:
* A naive solution here would be to just send the filter as the raft request and
let the FSM apply delete the whole set in a single operation. Benchmarking with
1M evals on a 3 node cluster demonstrated this can block the FSM apply for
several minutes, which puts the cluster at risk if there's a leadership
failover (the barrier write can't be made while this apply is in-flight).
* A less naive but still bad solution would be to have the RPC handler filter
and paginate, and then hand a list of IDs to the existing raft log
entry. Benchmarks showed this blocked the FSM apply for 20-30s at a time and
took roughly an hour to complete.
Instead, we're filtering and paginating in the RPC handler to find a page token,
and then passing both the filter and page token in the raft log. The FSM apply
recreates the paginator using the filter and page token to get roughly the same
page of evaluations, which it then deletes. The pagination process is fairly
cheap (only abut 5% of the total FSM apply time), so counter-intuitively this
rework ends up being much faster. A benchmark of 1M evaluations showed this
blocked the FSM apply for 20-30ms at a time (typical for normal operations) and
completes in less than 4 minutes.
Note that, as with the existing design, this delete is not consistent: a new
evaluation inserted "behind" the cursor of the pagination will fail to be
deleted.
This PR implements ACLAuthMethod type, acl_auth_methods table schema and crud state store methods. It also updates nomadSnapshot.Persist and nomadSnapshot.Restore methods in order for them to work with the new table, and adds two new Raft messages: ACLAuthMethodsUpsertRequestType and ACLAuthMethodsDeleteRequestType
This PR is part of the SSO work captured under ☂️ ticket #13120.
Add a new `Eval.Count` RPC and associated HTTP API endpoints. This API is
designed to support interactive use in the `nomad eval delete` command to get a
count of evals expected to be deleted before doing so.
The state store operations to do this sort of thing are somewhat expensive, but
it's cheaper than serializing a big list of evals to JSON. Note that although it
seems like this could be done as an extra parameter and response field on
`Eval.List`, having it as its own endpoint avoids having to change the response
body shape and lets us avoid handling the legacy filter params supported by
`Eval.List`.
* scheduler: allow updates after alloc reconnects
When an allocation reconnects to a cluster the scheduler needs to run
special logic to handle the reconnection, check if a replacement was
create and stop one of them.
If the allocation kept running while the node was disconnected, it will
be reconnected with `ClientStatus: running` and the node will have
`Status: ready`. This combination is the same as the normal steady state
of allocation, where everything is running as expected.
In order to differentiate between the two states (an allocation that is
reconnecting and one that is just running) the scheduler needs an extra
piece of state.
The current implementation uses the presence of a
`TaskClientReconnected` task event to detect when the allocation has
reconnected and thus must go through the reconnection process. But this
event remains even after the allocation is reconnected, causing all
future evals to consider the allocation as still reconnecting.
This commit changes the reconnect logic to use an `AllocState` to
register when the allocation was reconnected. This provides the
following benefits:
- Only a limited number of task states are kept, and they are used for
many other events. It's possible that, upon reconnecting, several
actions are triggered that could cause the `TaskClientReconnected`
event to be dropped.
- Task events are set by clients and so their timestamps are subject
to time skew from servers. This prevents using time to determine if
an allocation reconnected after a disconnect event.
- Disconnect events are already stored as `AllocState` and so storing
reconnects there as well makes it the only source of information
required.
With the new logic, the reconnection logic is only triggered if the
last `AllocState` is a disconnect event, meaning that the allocation has
not been reconnected yet. After the reconnection is handled, the new
`ClientStatus` is store in `AllocState` allowing future evals to skip
the reconnection logic.
* scheduler: prevent spurious placement on reconnect
When a client reconnects it makes two independent RPC calls:
- `Node.UpdateStatus` to heartbeat and set its status as `ready`.
- `Node.UpdateAlloc` to update the status of its allocations.
These two calls can happen in any order, and in case the allocations are
updated before a heartbeat it causes the state to be the same as a node
being disconnected: the node status will still be `disconnected` while
the allocation `ClientStatus` is set to `running`.
The current implementation did not handle this order of events properly,
and the scheduler would create an unnecessary placement since it
considered the allocation was being disconnected. This extra allocation
would then be quickly stopped by the heartbeat eval.
This commit adds a new code path to handle this order of events. If the
node is `disconnected` and the allocation `ClientStatus` is `running`
the scheduler will check if the allocation is actually reconnecting
using its `AllocState` events.
* rpc: only allow alloc updates from `ready` nodes
Clients interact with servers using three main RPC methods:
- `Node.GetAllocs` reads allocation data from the server and writes it
to the client.
- `Node.UpdateAlloc` reads allocation from from the client and writes
them to the server.
- `Node.UpdateStatus` writes the client status to the server and is
used as the heartbeat mechanism.
These three methods are called periodically by the clients and are done
so independently from each other, meaning that there can't be any
assumptions in their ordering.
This can generate scenarios that are hard to reason about and to code
for. For example, when a client misses too many heartbeats it will be
considered `down` or `disconnected` and the allocations it was running
are set to `lost` or `unknown`.
When connectivity is restored the to rest of the cluster, the natural
mental model is to think that the client will heartbeat first and then
update its allocations status into the servers.
But since there's no inherit order in these calls the reverse is just as
possible: the client updates the alloc status and then heartbeats. This
results in a state where allocs are, for example, `running` while the
client is still `disconnected`.
This commit adds a new verification to the `Node.UpdateAlloc` method to
reject updates from nodes that are not `ready`, forcing clients to
heartbeat first. Since this check is done server-side there is no need
to coordinate operations client-side: they can continue sending these
requests independently and alloc update will succeed after the heartbeat
is done.
* chagelog: add entry for #15068
* code review
* client: skip terminal allocations on reconnect
When the client reconnects with the server it synchronizes the state of
its allocations by sending data using the `Node.UpdateAlloc` RPC and
fetching data using the `Node.GetClientAllocs` RPC.
If the data fetch happens before the data write, `unknown` allocations
will still be in this state and would trigger the
`allocRunner.Reconnect` flow.
But when the server `DesiredStatus` for the allocation is `stop` the
client should not reconnect the allocation.
* apply more code review changes
* scheduler: persist changes to reconnected allocs
Reconnected allocs have a new AllocState entry that must be persisted by
the plan applier.
* rpc: read node ID from allocs in UpdateAlloc
The AllocUpdateRequest struct is used in three disjoint use cases:
1. Stripped allocs from clients Node.UpdateAlloc RPC using the Allocs,
and WriteRequest fields
2. Raft log message using the Allocs, Evals, and WriteRequest fields
3. Plan updates using the AllocsStopped, AllocsUpdated, and Job fields
Adding a new field that would only be used in one these cases (1) made
things more confusing and error prone. While in theory an
AllocUpdateRequest could send allocations from different nodes, in
practice this never actually happens since only clients call this method
with their own allocations.
* scheduler: remove logic to handle exceptional case
This condition could only be hit if, somehow, the allocation status was
set to "running" while the client was "unknown". This was addressed by
enforcing an order in "Node.UpdateStatus" and "Node.UpdateAlloc" RPC
calls, so this scenario is not expected to happen.
Adding unnecessary code to the scheduler makes it harder to read and
reason about it.
* more code review
* remove another unused test
* Adds meta to job list stub and displays a pack logo on the jobs index
* Changelog
* Modifying struct for optional meta param
* Explicitly ask for meta anytime I look up a job from index or job page
* Test case for the endpoint
* adding meta field to API struct and ommitting from response if empty
* passthru method added to api/jobs.list
* Meta param listed in docs for jobs list
* Update api/jobs.go
Co-authored-by: Tim Gross <tgross@hashicorp.com>
Co-authored-by: Tim Gross <tgross@hashicorp.com>
If a GC claim is written and then volume is deleted before the `volumewatcher`
enters its run loop, we panic on the nil-pointer access. Simply doing a
nil-check at the top of the loop reveals a race condition around shutting down
the loop just as a new update is coming in.
Have the parent `volumeswatcher` send an initial update on the channel before
returning, so that we're still holding the lock. Update the watcher's `Stop`
method to set the running state, which lets us avoid having a second context and
makes stopping synchronous. This reduces the cases we have to handle in the run
loop.
Updated the tests now that we'll safely return from the goroutine and stop the
runner in a larger set of cases. Ran the tests with the `-race` detection flag
and fixed up any problems found here as well.
In order to limit how much the rekey job can monopolize a scheduler worker, we
limit how long it can run to 1min before stopping work and emitting a new
eval. But this exactly matches the default nack timeout, so it'll fail the eval
rather than getting a chance to emit a new one.
Set the timeout for the rekey eval to half the configured nack timeout.
When replication of a single key fails, the replication loop breaks early and
therefore keys that fall later in the sorting order will never get
replicated. This is particularly a problem for clusters impacted by the bug that
caused #14981 and that were later upgraded; the keys that were never replicated
can now never be replicated, and so we need to handle them safely.
Included in the replication fix:
* Refactor the replication loop so that each key replicated in a function call
that returns an error, to make the workflow more clear and reduce nesting. Log
the error and continue.
* Improve stability of keyring replication tests. We no longer block leadership
on initializing the keyring, so there's a race condition in the keyring tests
where we can test for the existence of the root key before the keyring has
been initialize. Change this to an "eventually" test.
But these fixes aren't enough to fix#14981 because they'll end up seeing an
error once a second complaining about the missing key, so we also need to fix
keyring GC so the keys can be removed from the state store. Now we'll store the
key ID used to sign a workload identity in the Allocation, and we'll index the
Allocation table on that so we can track whether any live Allocation was signed
with a particular key ID.
The `Eval.Delete` endpoint has a helper that takes a list of jobs and allocs and
determines whether the eval associated with those is safe to delete (based on
their state). Filtering improvements to the `Eval.Delete` endpoint are going to
need this check to run in the state store itself for consistency.
Refactor to push this check down into the state store to keep the eventual diff
for that work reasonable.
While working on filtering improvements to the `Eval.Delete` endpoint I noticed
that this test was going to need to expand significantly and needed some
refactoring to make that work nicely. In order to reduce the size of the
eventual diff, I've pulled this refactoring out into its own changeset.
The List RPC correctly authorized against the prefix argument. But when
filtering results underneath the prefix, it only checked authorization for
standard ACL tokens and not Workload Identity. This results in WI tokens being
able to read List results (metadata only: variable paths and timestamps) for
variables under the `nomad/` prefix that belong to other jobs in the same
namespace.
Fixes the filtering and split the `handleMixedAuthEndpoint` function into
separate authentication and authorization steps so that we don't need to
re-verify the claim token on each filtered object.
Also includes:
* update semgrep rule for mixed auth endpoints
* variables: List returns empty set when all results are filtered
This change ensures that a token's expiry is checked before every
event is sent to the caller. Previously, a token could still be
used to listen for events after it had expired, as long as the
subscription was made while it was unexpired. This would last until
the token was garbage collected from state.
The check occurs within the RPC as there is currently no state
update when a token expires.
The configuration knobs for root keyring garbage collection are present in the
consumer and present in the user-facing config, but we missed the spot where we
copy from one to the other. Fix this so that users can set their own thresholds.
The root key is automatically rotated every ~30d, but the function that does
both rotation and key GC was wired up such that `nomad system gc` caused an
unexpected key rotation. Split this into two functions so that `nomad system gc`
cleans up old keys without forcing a rotation, which will be done periodially
or by the `nomad operator root keyring rotate` command.
* keyring: don't unblock early if rate limit burst exceeded
The rate limiter returns an error and unblocks early if its burst limit is
exceeded (unless the burst limit is Inf). Ensure we're not unblocking early,
otherwise we'll only slow down the cases where we're already pausing to make
external RPC requests.
* keyring: set MinQueryIndex on stale queries
When keyring replication makes a stale query to non-leader peers to find a key
the leader doesn't have, we need to make sure the peer we're querying has had a
chance to catch up to the most current index for that key. Otherwise it's
possible for newly-added servers to query another newly-added server and get a
non-error nil response for that key ID.
Ensure that we're setting the correct reply index in the blocking query.
Note that the "not found" case does not return an error, just an empty key. So
as a belt-and-suspenders, update the handling of empty responses so that we
don't break the loop early if we hit a server that doesn't have the key.
* test for adding new servers to keyring
* leader: initialize keyring after we have consistent reads
Wait until we're sure the FSM is current before we try to initialize the
keyring.
Also, if a key is rotated immediately following a leader election, plans that
are in-flight may get signed before the new leader has the key. Allow for a
short timeout-and-retry to avoid rejecting plans
ACL tokens are granted permissions either by direct policy links
or via ACL role links. Callers should therefore be able to read
policies directly assigned to the caller token or indirectly by
ACL role links.
This changes adds ACL role creation and deletion to the event
stream. It is exposed as a single topic with two types; the filter
is primarily the role ID but also includes the role name.
While conducting this work it was also discovered that the events
stream has its own ACL resolution logic. This did not account for
ACL tokens which included role links, or tokens with expiry times.
ACL role links are now resolved to their policies and tokens are
checked for expiry correctly.
* One-time tokens are not replicated between regions, so we don't want to enforce
that the version check across all of serf, just members in the same region.
* Scheduler: Disconnected clients handling is specific to a single region, so we
don't want to enforce that the version check across all of serf, just members in
the same region.
* Variables: enforce version check in Apply RPC
* Cleans up a bunch of legacy checks.
This changeset is specific to 1.4.x and the changes for previous versions of
Nomad will be manually backported in a separate PR.
In #14821 we fixed a panic that can happen if a leadership election happens in
the middle of an upgrade. That fix checks that all servers are at the minimum
version before initializing the keyring (which blocks evaluation processing
during trhe upgrade). But the check we implemented is over the serf membership,
which includes servers in any federated regions, which don't necessarily have
the same upgrade cycle.
Filter the version check by the leader's region.
Also bump up log levels of major keyring operations
This PR adds a jobspec mutator to constrain jobs making use of checks
in the nomad service provider to nomad clients of at least v1.4.0.
Before, in a mixed client version cluster it was possible to submit
an NSD job making use of checks and for that job to land on an older,
incompatible client node.
Closes#14862
This PR removes the assertion around when the 'task' field of
a check may be set. Starting in Nomad 1.4 we automatically set
the task field on all checks in support of the NSD checks feature.
This is causing validation problems elsewhere, e.g. when a group
service using the Consul provider sets 'task' it will fail
validation that worked previously.
The assertion of leaving 'task' unset was only about making sure
job submitters weren't expecting some behavior, but in practice
is causing bugs now that we need the task field for more than it
was originally added for.
We can simply update the docs, noting when the task field set by
job submitters actually has value.
During an upgrade to Nomad 1.4.0, if a server running 1.4.0 becomes the leader
before one of the 1.3.x servers, the old server will crash because the keyring
is initialized and writes a raft entry.
Wait until all members are on a version that supports the keyring before
initializing it.
A test flake revealed a bug in the CSI unpublish workflow, where an unpublish
that comes from a client that's successfully done the node-unpublish step will
not have the claim checkpointed if the controller-unpublish step fails. This
will result in a delay in releasing the volume claim until the next GC.
This changeset also ensures we're using a new snapshot after each write to raft,
and fixes two timing issues in test where either the volume watcher can
unpublish before the unpublish RPC is sent or we don't wait long enough in
resource-restricted environements like GHA.
This PR splits up the nomad/mock package into more files. Specific features
that have a lot of mocks get their own file (e.g. acl, variables, csi, connect, etc.).
Above that, functions that return jobs/allocs/nodes are in the job/alloc/node file. And
lastly other mocks/helpers are in mock.go
* scheduler: Fix bug where the scheduler would treat multiregion jobs as paused for job types that don't use deployments
Co-authored-by: Tim Gross <tgross@hashicorp.com>
Co-authored-by: Tim Gross <tgross@hashicorp.com>
* cleanup: refactor MapStringStringSliceValueSet to be cleaner
* cleanup: replace SliceStringToSet with actual set
* cleanup: replace SliceStringSubset with real set
* cleanup: replace SliceStringContains with slices.Contains
* cleanup: remove unused function SliceStringHasPrefix
* cleanup: fixup StringHasPrefixInSlice doc string
* cleanup: refactor SliceSetDisjoint to use real set
* cleanup: replace CompareSliceSetString with SliceSetEq
* cleanup: replace CompareMapStringString with maps.Equal
* cleanup: replace CopyMapStringString with CopyMap
* cleanup: replace CopyMapStringInterface with CopyMap
* cleanup: fixup more CopyMapStringString and CopyMapStringInt
* cleanup: replace CopySliceString with slices.Clone
* cleanup: remove unused CopySliceInt
* cleanup: refactor CopyMapStringSliceString to be generic as CopyMapOfSlice
* cleanup: replace CopyMap with maps.Clone
* cleanup: run go mod tidy
* test: don't use loop vars in goroutines
fixes a data race in the test
* test: copy objects in statestore before mutating
fixes data race in test
* test: @lgfa29's segmgrep rule for loops/goroutines
Found 2 places where we were improperly using loop variables inside
goroutines.
* scheduler: stopped-yet-running allocs are still running
* scheduler: test new stopped-but-running logic
* test: assert nonoverlapping alloc behavior
Also add a simpler Wait test helper to improve line numbers and save few
lines of code.
* docs: tried my best to describe #10446
it's not concise... feedback welcome
* scheduler: fix test that allowed overlapping allocs
* devices: only free devices when ClientStatus is terminal
* test: output nicer failure message if err==nil
Co-authored-by: Mahmood Ali <mahmood@hashicorp.com>
Co-authored-by: Michael Schurter <mschurter@hashicorp.com>
This PR implements support for check_restart for checks registered
in the Nomad service provider.
Unlike Consul, Nomad service checks never report a "warning" status,
and so the check_restart.ignore_warnings configuration is not valid
for Nomad service checks.
Restrict variable paths to RFC3986 URL-safe characters that don't conflict with
the use of characters "@" and "." in `template` blocks. This prevents users from
writing variables that will require tricky templating syntax or that they simply
won't be able to use.
Also restrict the length so that a user can't make queries in the state store
unusually expensive (as they are O(k) on the key length).
This PR refactors agent/consul/check_watcher into client/serviceregistration,
and abstracts away the Consul-specific check lookups.
In doing so we should be able to reuse the existing check watcher logic for
also watching NSD checks in a followup PR.
A chunk of consul/unit_test.go is removed - we'll cover that in e2e tests
in a follow PR if needed. In the long run I'd like to remove this whole file.
A Nomad user reported problems with CSI volumes associated with failed
allocations, where the Nomad server did not send a controller unpublish RPC.
The controller unpublish is skipped if other non-terminal allocations on the
same node claim the volume. The check has a bug where the allocation belonging
to the claim being freed was included in the check incorrectly. During a normal
allocation stop for job stop or a new version of the job, the allocation is
terminal. But allocations that fail are not yet marked terminal at the point in
time when the client sends the unpublish RPC to the server.
For CSI plugins that support controller attach/detach, this means that the
controller will not be able to detach the volume from the allocation's host and
the replacement claim will fail until a GC is run. This changeset fixes the
conditional so that the claim's own allocation is not included, and makes the
logic easier to read. Include a test case covering this path.
Also includes two minor extra bugfixes:
* Entities we get from the state store should always be copied before
altering. Ensure that we copy the volume in the top-level unpublish workflow
before handing off to the steps.
* The list stub object for volumes in `nomad/structs` did not match the stub
object in `api`. The `api` package also did not include the current
readers/writers fields that are expected by the UI. True up the two objects and
add the previously undocumented fields to the docs.
When querying the checks for an allocation, the request must be
forwarded to the agent that is running the allocation. If the
initial request is made to a server agent, the request can be made
directly to the client agent running the allocation. If the
request is made to a client agent not running the alloc, the
request needs to be forwarded to a server and then the correct
client.
The map of in-flight RPCs gets cleared by a goroutine in the test without first
locking it to make sure that it's not being accessed concurrently by the stats
fetcher itself. This can cause a panic in tests.
Includes:
* Remove leader upgrade raft version test, as older versions of raft are now
incompatible with our autopilot library.
* Remove attempt to assert initial non-voter status on the `PromoteNonVoter`
test, as this happens too quickly to reliably detect.
* Unskip some previously-skipped tests which we should make stable.
* Remove the `consul/sdk` retry helper for these tests; this uses panic recovery
in a kind of a clever/gross way to reduce LoC but it seems to introduce some
timing issues in the process.
* Add more test step logging and reduce logging noise from the scheduler
goroutines to make it easier to debug failing tests.
* Be more consistent about using the `waitForStableLeadership` helper so that we
can assert the cluster is fully stable and not just that we've added peers.
Nomad's original autopilot was importing from a private package in Consul. It
has been moved out to a shared library. Switch Nomad to use this library so that
we can eliminate the import of Consul, which is necessary to build Nomad ENT
with the current version of the Consul SDK. This also will let us pick up
autopilot improvements shared with Consul more easily.
Log lines which include an error should use the full term "error"
as the context key. This provides consistency across the codebase
and avoids a Go style which operators might not be aware of.
PR #12130 refactored the test to use the `wantPeers` helper, but this
function only returns the number of voting peers, which in this test
should be equal to 2.
I think the tests were passing back them because of a bug in Raft
(https://github.com/hashicorp/raft/pull/483) where a non-voting server
was able to transition to candidate state.
One possible evidence of this is that a successful test run would have
the following log line:
```
raft@v1.3.5/raft.go:1058: nomad.raft: updating configuration: command=AddVoter server-id=127.0.0.1:9101 server-addr=127.0.0.1:9101 servers="[{Suffrage:Voter ID:127.0.0.1:9107 Address:127.0.0.1:9107} {Suffrage:Voter ID:127.0.0.1:9105 Address:127.0.0.1:9105} {Suffrage:Voter ID:127.0.0.1:9103 Address:127.0.0.1:9103} {Suffrage:Voter ID:127.0.0.1:9101 Address:127.0.0.1:9101}]"
```
This commit reverts the test logic to check for peer count, regardless
of voting status.
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.
This PR creates a pointer.Compare helper for comparing equality of
two pointers. Strictly only works with primitive types we know are
safe to derefence and compare using '=='.
An ACL roles name must be unique, however, a bug meant multiple
roles of the same same could be created. This fixes that problem
with checks in the RPC handler and state store.
* 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
The `namespace` field was not included in the equality check between old and new
Vault configurations, which meant that a Vault config change that only changed
the namespace would not be detected as a change and the clients would not be
reloaded.
Also, the comparison for boolean fields such as `enabled` and
`allow_unauthenticated` was on the pointer and not the value of that pointer,
which results in spurious reloads in real config reload that is easily missed in
typical test scenarios.
Includes a minor refactor of the order of fields for `Copy` and `Merge` to match
the struct fields in hopes it makes it harder to make this mistake in the
future, as well as additional test coverage.
The current implementation for the task coordinator unblocks tasks by
performing destructive operations over its internal state (like closing
channels and deleting maps from keys).
This presents a problem in situations where we would like to revert the
state of a task, such as when restarting an allocation with tasks that
have already exited.
With this new implementation the task coordinator behaves more like a
finite state machine where task may be blocked/unblocked multiple times
by performing a state transition.
This initial part of the work only refactors the task coordinator and
is functionally equivalent to the previous implementation. Future work
will build upon this to provide bug fixes and enhancements.
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.
Making the ACL Role listing return object a stub future-proofs the
endpoint. In the event the role object grows, we are not bound by
having to return all fields within the list endpoint or change the
signature of the endpoint to reduce the list return size.
ACL Roles along with policies and global token will be replicated
from the authoritative region to all federated regions. This
involves a new replication loop running on the federated leader.
Policies and roles may be replicated at different times, meaning
the policies and role references may not be present within the
local state upon replication upsert. In order to bypass the RPC
and state check, a new RPC request parameter has been added. This
is used by the replication process; all other callers will trigger
the ACL role policy validation check.
There is a new ACL RPC endpoint to allow the reading of a set of
ACL Roles which is required by the replication process and matches
ACL Policies and Tokens. A bug within the ACL Role listing RPC has
also been fixed which returned incorrect data during blocking
queries where a deletion had occurred.
Since the state store returns a pointer to the shared job structs in
memdb we must always copy it before mutating it and applying the new
version via raft. Otherwise if the rpc fails before the mutated job is
committed to raft (either due to validation, bug, crash, or other exit
condition), the leader server will have an updated copy of the job that
other servers will not have.
Before this change, Client had 2 copies of the config object: config and configCopy. There was no guidance around which to use where (other than configCopy's comment to pass it to alloc runners), both are shared among goroutines and mutated in data racy ways. At least at one point I think the idea was to have `config` be mutable and then grab a lock to overwrite `configCopy`'s pointer atomically. This would have allowed alloc runners to read their config copies in data race safe ways, but this isn't how the current implementation worked.
This change takes the following approach to safely handling configs in the client:
1. `Client.config` is the only copy of the config and all access must go through the `Client.configLock` mutex
2. Since the mutex *only protects the config pointer itself and not fields inside the Config struct:* all config mutation must be done on a *copy* of the config, and then Client's config pointer is overwritten while the mutex is acquired. Alloc runners and other goroutines with the old config pointer will not see config updates.
3. Deep copying is implemented on the Config struct to satisfy the previous approach. The TLS Keyloader is an exception because it has its own internal locking to support mutating in place. An unfortunate complication but one I couldn't find a way to untangle in a timely fashion.
4. To facilitate deep copying I made an *internally backward incompatible API change:* our `helper/funcs` used to turn containers (slices and maps) with 0 elements into nils. This probably saves a few memory allocations but makes it very easy to cause panics. Since my new config handling approach uses more copying, it became very difficult to ensure all code that used containers on configs could handle nils properly. Since this code has caused panics in the past, I fixed it: nil containers are copied as nil, but 0-element containers properly return a new 0-element container. No more "downgrading to nil!"
ACL tokens can now utilize ACL roles in order to provide API
authorization. Each ACL token can be created and linked to an
array of policies as well as an array of ACL role links. The link
can be provided via the role name or ID, but internally, is always
resolved to the ID as this is immutable whereas the name can be
changed by operators.
When resolving an ACL token, the policies linked from an ACL role
are unpacked and combined with the policy array to form the
complete auth set for the token.
The ACL token creation endpoint handles deduplicating ACL role
links as well as ensuring they exist within state.
When reading a token, Nomad will also ensure the ACL role link is
current. This handles ACL roles being deleted from under a token
from a UX standpoint.
Similar to the deployment watcher fix in #14121 - the server code loves these mutable structs so we need to guard access to the struct fields with locks.
Capturing ch := b.capacityChangeCh is sufficient to satisfy the data race detector, but I noticed it was also possible to leak goroutines:
Since the watchCapacity loop is in charge of receiving from capacityChangeCh and exits when stopCh is closed, senders to capacityChangeCh also must exit when stopCh is closed. Otherwise they may block forever if capacityChangeCh is full because it will never be received on again. I did not find evidence of this occurring in my meager smattering of prod goroutine dumps I have laying around, but this isn't surprising as the chan has a buffer of 8096! I would imagine that is sufficient to handle "late" sends and then just get GC'd away when the last reference to the old chan is dropped. This is just additional safety/correctness.
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.
Move conflict resolution implementation into the state store with a new Apply RPC.
This also makes the RPC for secure variables much more similar to Consul's KV,
which will help us support soft deletes in a post-1.4.0 version of Nomad.
Reimplement quotas in the state store functions.
Co-authored-by: Charlie Voiselle <464492+angrycub@users.noreply.github.com>
This PR changes the use of structs.ConsulMeshGateway to value types
instead of via pointers. This will help in a follow up PR where we
cleanup a lot of custom comparison code with helper functions instead.
New ACL Role RPC endpoints have been created to allow the creation,
update, read, and deletion of ACL roles. All endpoints require a
management token; in the future readers will also be allowed to
view roles associated to their ACL token.
The create endpoint in particular is responsible for deduplicating
ACL policy links and ensuring named policies are found within
state. This is done within the RPC handler so we perform a single
loop through the links for slight efficiency.
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.
This commit includes the new state schema for ACL roles along with
state interaction functions for CRUD actions.
The change also includes snapshot persist and restore
functionality and the addition of FSM messages for Raft updates
which will come via RPC endpoints.
This PR enables setting of the headers block on services registered
into Nomad's service provider. Works just like the existing support
in Consul checks.
* 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.
When we delete a namespace, we check to ensure that there are no non-terminal
jobs or CSI volume, which also covers evals, allocs, etc. Secure variables are
also namespaces, so extend this check to them as well.
When we delete a namespace, we check to ensure that there are no non-terminal
jobs, which effectively covers evals, allocs, etc. CSI volumes are also
namespaced, so extend this check to cover CSI volumes.
Workload identities grant implicit access to policies, and operators
will not want to craft separate policies for each invocation of a
periodic or dispatch job. Use the parent job's ID as the JobID claim.
The search RPC used a placeholder policy for searching within the secure
variables context. Now that we have ACL policies built for secure variables, we
can use them for search. Requires a new loose policy for checking if a token has
any secure variables access within a namespace, so that we can filter on
specific paths in the iterator.
Most of our objects use int64 timestamps derived from `UnixNano()` instead of
`time.Time` objects. Switch the keyring metadata to use `UnixNano()` for
consistency across the API.
To discourage accidentally DoS'ing the cluster with secure variables
data, we're providing a very low limit to the maximum size of a given
secure variable. This currently matches the limit for dispatch
payloads.
In future versions, we may increase this limit or make it
configurable, once we have better metrics from real-world operators.
Tasks are automatically granted access to variables on a path that matches their
workload identity, with a well-known prefix. Change the prefix to `nomad/jobs`
to allow for future prefixes like `nomad/volumes` or `nomad/plugins`. Reserve
the prefix by emitting errors during validation.
Two new periodic core jobs have been added which handle removing
expired local and global tokens from state. The local core job is
run on every leader; the global core job is only run on the leader
within the authoritative region.
When applying a raft log to expire ACL tokens, we need to use a
timestamp provided by the leader so that the result is deterministic
across servers. Use leader's timestamp from RPC call
The test for simulating a key rotation across leader elections was
flaky because we weren't waiting for a leader election and was
checking the server configs rather than raft for which server was
currently the leader. Fixing the flake revealed a bug in the test that
we weren't ensuring the new leader was running its own replication, so
it wouldn't pick up the key material from the previous follower.
When secure variables are updated, we were adding the update to the
existing quota tracking without first checking whether it was an
update to an existing variable. In that case we need to add/subtract
only the difference between the new and existing quota usage.
This commit adds basic expiry checking when performing ACL token
resolution. This expiry checking is local to each server and does
not at this time take into account potential time skew on server
hosts.
A new error message has been created so clients whose token has
expired get a clear message, rather than a generic token not
found.
The ACL resolution tests have been refactored into table driven
tests, so additions are easier in the future.
The split between OSS/ENT in ACL checks for the Search RPC has a lot
of repeated code that results in merge conflicts. Move most of the
logic into the shared code so that we can call out to thin functions
for ENT checks.
The ACL token state schema has been updated to utilise two new
indexes which track expiration of tokens that are configured with
an expiration TTL or time. A new state function allows listing
ACL expired tokens which will be used by internal garbage
collection.
The ACL endpoint has been modified so that all validation happens
within a single function call. This is easier to understand and
see at a glance. The ACL token validation now also includes logic
for expiry TTL and times. The ACL endpoint upsert tests have been
condensed into a single, table driven test.
There is a new token canonicalize which provides a single place
for token canonicalization, rather than logic spread in the RPC
handler.
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.
This PR adds support for specifying checks in services registered to
the built-in nomad service provider.
Currently only HTTP and TCP checks are supported, though more types
could be added later.
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.
In OSS we can upsert an allocation without worrying about whether that
alloc is in a namespace that actually exists, but in ENT that upsert
will add to the namespace's quotas. Ensure we're doing so in this
secure variables RPC test to fix the test breaking in the ENT repo.
This commit adds configuration parameters to control ACL token
expirations. This includes both limits on the min and max TTL
expiration values, as well as a GC threshold for expired tokens.
* Failing test and TODO for wildcard
* Alias the namespace query parameter for Evals
* eval: fix list when using ACLs and * namespace
Apply the same verification process as in job, allocs and scaling
policy list endpoints to handle the eval list when using an ACL token
with limited namespace support but querying using the `*` wildcard
namespace.
* changelog: add entry for #13530
* ui: set namespace when querying eval
Evals have a unique UUID as ID, but when querying them the Nomad API
still expects a namespace query param, otherwise it assumes `default`.
Co-authored-by: Luiz Aoqui <luiz@hashicorp.com>
When the `Full` flag is passed for key rotation, we kick off a core
job to decrypt and re-encrypt all the secure variables so that they
use the new key.
* SV: CAS
* Implement Check and Set for Delete and Upsert
* Reading the conflict from the state store
* Update endpoint for new error text
* Updated HTTP api tests
* Conflicts to the HTTP api
* SV: structs: Update SV time to UnixNanos
* update mock to UnixNano; refactor
* SV: encrypter: quote KeyID in error
* SV: mock: add mock for namespace w/ SV
We need to track per-namespace storage usage for secure variables even
in Nomad OSS so that a cluster can be seamlessly upgraded from OSS to
ENT without having to re-calculate quota usage.
Provide a hook in the upsert RPC for enforcement of quotas in
ENT. This will be a no-op in Nomad OSS.
Extend the GC job to support periodic key rotation.
Update the GC process to safely support signed workload identity. We
can't GC any key used to sign a workload identity. Finding which key
was used to sign every allocation will be expensive, but there are not
that many keys. This lets us take a conservative approach: find the
oldest live allocation and ensure that we don't GC any key older than
that key.
The blocking query for `Keyring.List` appended the keys for each pass
through the blocking query to the response. This results in mulitple
copies of keys in the response. Overwrite the `reply.Keys` field on
each pass through the blocking query to ensure we only get the
expected page of responses.
Adds a new policy block inside namespaces to control access to secure
variables on the basis of path, with support for globbing.
Splits out VerifyClaim from ResolveClaim.
The ServiceRegistration RPC only needs to be able to verify that a
claim is valid for some allocation in the store; it doesn't care about
implicit policies or capabilities. Split this out to its own method on
the server so that the SecureVariables RPC can reuse it as a separate
step from resolving policies (see next commit).
Support implicit policies based on workload identity
The `Encrypt` method generates an appropriately-sized nonce and uses
that buffer as the prefix for the ciphertext. This keeps the
ciphertext and nonce together for decryption, and reuses the buffer as
much as possible without presenting the temptation to reuse the
cleartext buffer owned by the caller.
We include the key ID as the "additional data" field that's used as an
extra input to the authentication signature, to provide additional
protection that a ciphertext originated with that key.
Refactors the locking for the keyring so that the public methods are
generally (with one commented exception) responsible for taking the
lock and then inner methods are assumed locked.
* Add Path only index for SecureVariables
* Add GetSecureVariablesByPrefix; refactor tests
* Add search for SecureVariables
* Add prefix search for secure variables
This PR splits SecureVariable into SecureVariableDecrypted and
SecureVariableEncrypted in order to use the type system to help
verify that cleartext secret material is not committed to file.
* Make Encrypt function return KeyID
* Split SecureVariable
Co-authored-by: Tim Gross <tgross@hashicorp.com>
In order to support implicit ACL policies for tasks to get their own
secrets, each task would need to have its own ACL token. This would
add extra raft overhead as well as new garbage collection jobs for
cleaning up task-specific ACL tokens. Instead, Nomad will create a
workload Identity Claim for each task.
An Identity Claim is a JSON Web Token (JWT) signed by the server’s
private key and attached to an Allocation at the time a plan is
applied. The encoded JWT can be submitted as the X-Nomad-Token header
to replace ACL token secret IDs for the RPCs that support identity
claims.
Whenever a key is is added to a server’s keyring, it will use the key
as the seed for a Ed25519 public-private private keypair. That keypair
will be used for signing the JWT and for verifying the JWT.
This implementation is a ruthlessly minimal approach to support the
secure variables feature. When a JWT is verified, the allocation ID
will be checked against the Nomad state store, and non-existent or
terminal allocation IDs will cause the validation to be rejected. This
is sufficient to support the secure variables feature at launch
without requiring implementation of a background process to renew
soon-to-expire tokens.
Replication for the secure variables keyring. Because only key
metadata is stored in raft, we need to distribute key material
out-of-band from raft replication. A goroutine runs on each server and
watches for changes to the `RootKeyMeta`. When a new key is received,
attempt to fetch the key from the leader. If the leader doesn't have
the key (which may happen if a key is rotated right before a leader
transition), try to get the key from any peer.
After internal design review, we decided to remove exposing algorithm
choice to the end-user for the initial release. We'll solve nonce
rotation by forcing rotations automatically on key GC (in a core job,
not included in this changeset). Default to AES-256 GCM for the
following criteria:
* faster implementation when hardware acceleration is available
* FIPS compliant
* implementation in pure go
* post-quantum resistance
Also fixed a bug in the decoding from keystore and switched to a
harder-to-misuse encoding method.
The core jobs to garbage collect unused keys and perform full key
rotations will need to be able to query secure variables by key ID for
efficiency. Add an index to the state store and associated query
function and test.
When a server becomes leader, it will check if there are any keys in
the state store, and create one if there is not. The key metadata will
be replicated via raft to all followers, who will then get the key
material via key replication (not implemented in this changeset).
This changeset implements the keystore serialization/deserialization:
* Adds a JSON serialization extension for the `RootKey` struct, along with a metadata stub. When we serialize RootKey to the on-disk keystore, we want to base64 encode the key material but also exclude any frequently-changing fields which are stored in raft.
* Implements methods for loading/saving keys to the keystore.
* Implements methods for restoring the whole keystore from disk.
* Wires it all up with the `Keyring` RPC handlers and fixes up any fallout on tests.
Implement the basic upsert, list, and delete operations for
`RootKeyMeta` needed by the Keyring RPCs.
This changeset also implements two convenience methods
`RootKeyMetaByID` and `GetActiveRootKeyMeta` which are useful for
testing but also will be needed to implement the rest of the RPCs.
Stream snapshot to FSM when restoring from archive
The `RestoreFromArchive` helper decompresses the snapshot archive to a
temporary file before reading it into the FSM. For large snapshots
this performs a lot of disk IO. Stream decompress the snapshot as we
read it, without first writing to a temporary file.
Add bexpr filters to the `RestoreFromArchive` helper.
The operator can pass these as `-filter` arguments to `nomad operator
snapshot state` (and other commands in the future) to include only
desired data when reading the snapshot.
Whenever a node joins the cluster, either for the first time or after
being `down`, we emit a evaluation for every system job to ensure all
applicable system jobs are running on the node.
This patch adds an optimization to skip creating evaluations for system
jobs not in the current node's DC. While the scheduler performs the same
feasability check, skipping the creation of the evaluation altogether
saves disk, network, and memory.
This PR fixes a bug where client configuration max_kill_timeout was
not being enforced. The feature was introduced in 9f44780 but seems
to have been removed during the major drivers refactoring.
We can make sure the value is enforced by pluming it through the DriverHandler,
which now uses the lesser of the task.killTimeout or client.maxKillTimeout.
Also updates Event.SetKillTimeout to require both the task.killTimeout and
client.maxKillTimeout so that we don't make the mistake of using the wrong
value - as it was being given only the task.killTimeout before.
api: apply new ACL check for wildcard namespace
In #13606 the ACL check was refactored to better support the all
namespaces wildcard (`*`). This commit applies the changes to the jobs
and alloc list endpoints.
Improve how the all namespaces wildcard (`*`) is handled when checking
ACL permissions. When using the wildcard namespace the `AllowNsOp` would
return false since it looks for a namespace called `*` to match.
This commit changes this behavior to return `true` when the queried
namespace is `*` and the token allows the operation in _any_ namespace.
Actual permission must be checked per object. The helper function
`AllowNsOpFunc` returns a function that can be used to make this
verification.
* 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.
It appears way back when this was first implemented in
9a917281af9c0a97a6c59575eaa52c5c86ffc60d, it was renamed from
NodeEvict (with a correct comment) to NodeUpdate. The comment was
changed from referring to only evictions to referring to "all allocs" in
the first sentence and "stop or evict" in the second.
This confuses every time I see it because I read the name (NodeUpdate)
and first sentence ("all the allocs") and assume this represents *all*
allocations... which isn't true.
I'm going to assume I'm the only one who doesn't read the 2nd sentence
and that's why this suboptimal wording has lasted 7 years, but can we
change it for my sake?
When calculating a services namespace for registration, the code
assumed the first task within the task array would include a
service block. This is incorrect as it is possible only a latter
task within the array contains a service definition.
This change fixes the logic, so we correctly search for a service
definition before identifying the namespace.
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.
The plan applier has to get a snapshot with a minimum index for the
plan it's working on in order to ensure consistency. Under heavy raft
loads, we can exceed the timeout. When this happens, we hit a bug
where the plan applier blocks waiting on the `indexCh` forever, and
all schedulers will block in `Plan.Submit`.
Closing the `indexCh` when the `asyncPlanWait` is done with it will
prevent the deadlock without impacting correctness of the previous
snapshot index.
This changeset includes the a PoC failing test that works by injecting
a large timeout into the state store. We need to turn this into a test
we can run normally without breaking the state store before we can
merge this PR.
Increase `snapshotMinIndex` timeout to 10s.
This timeout creates backpressure where any concurrent `Plan.Submit`
RPCs will block waiting for results. This sheds load across all
servers and gives raft some CPU to catch up, because schedulers won't
dequeue more work while waiting. Increase it to 10s based on
observations of large production clusters.
If the node has been GC'd or is down, we can't send it a node
unpublish. The CSI spec requires that we don't send the controller
unpublish before the node unpublish, but in the case where a node is
gone we can't know the final fate of the node unpublish step.
The `csi_hook` on the client will unpublish if the allocation has
stopped and if the host is terminated there's no mount for the volume
anyways. So we'll now assume that the node has unpublished at its
end. If it hasn't, any controller unpublish will potentially hang or
error and need to be retried.
When deleting evaluations and allocations during a reap event, the
index table entries for evals and allocs was updated irregardless
of whether changes were made.
This change modifies the state logic so that the index table is
only modified when the corresponding table has actually been
modified. Along with matching expected behaviour, this change has
the potential to reduce the number of times blocking queries will
return without any real state change.
Almost all GC jobs check the index of the objects being GC'd to see if
they're older than a configured threshold. This code was repeated six
times in `CoreScheduler` with only logging changes, so it seems safe
to extract it as its own method.
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.
* test: use `T.TempDir` to create temporary test directory
This commit replaces `ioutil.TempDir` with `t.TempDir` in tests. The
directory created by `t.TempDir` is automatically removed when the test
and all its subtests complete.
Prior to this commit, temporary directory created using `ioutil.TempDir`
needs to be removed manually by calling `os.RemoveAll`, which is omitted
in some tests. The error handling boilerplate e.g.
defer func() {
if err := os.RemoveAll(dir); err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
}
is also tedious, but `t.TempDir` handles this for us nicely.
Reference: https://pkg.go.dev/testing#T.TempDir
Signed-off-by: Eng Zer Jun <engzerjun@gmail.com>
* test: fix TestLogmon_Start_restart on Windows
Signed-off-by: Eng Zer Jun <engzerjun@gmail.com>
* test: fix failing TestConsul_Integration
t.TempDir fails to perform the cleanup properly because the folder is
still in use
testing.go:967: TempDir RemoveAll cleanup: unlinkat /tmp/TestConsul_Integration2837567823/002/191a6f1a-5371-cf7c-da38-220fe85d10e5/web/secrets: device or resource busy
Signed-off-by: Eng Zer Jun <engzerjun@gmail.com>
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.
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.
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>
The CSI HTTP API has to transform the CSI volume to redact secrets,
remove the claims fields, and to consolidate the allocation stubs into
a single slice of alloc stubs. This was done manually in #8590 but
this is a large amount of code and has proven both very bug prone
(see #8659, #8666, #8699, #8735, and #12150) and requires updating
lots of code every time we add a field to volumes or plugins.
In #10202 we introduce encoding improvements for the `Node` struct
that allow a more minimal transformation. Apply this same approach to
serializing `structs.CSIVolume` to API responses.
Also, the original reasoning behind #8590 for plugins no longer holds
because the counts are now denormalized within the state store, so we
can simply remove this transformation entirely.
* 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.