Commit graph

32 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Holt Wilkins c3b2a72ac4 Enable parsing of terminating gateways 2021-06-30 05:34:16 +00:00
Seth Hoenig 40dccde1df
consul/connect: use range on upstream canonicalize
Co-authored-by: Tim Gross <tgross@hashicorp.com>
2021-06-04 08:55:05 -05:00
Seth Hoenig 839c0cc360 consul/connect: fix upstream mesh gateway default mode setting
This PR fixes the API to _not_ set the default mesh gateway mode. Before,
the mode would be set to "none" in Canonicalize, which is incorrect. We
should pass through the empty string so that folks can make use of Consul
service-defaults Config entries to configure the default mode.
2021-06-04 08:53:12 -05:00
Seth Hoenig d026ff1f66 consul/connect: add support for connect mesh gateways
This PR implements first-class support for Nomad running Consul
Connect Mesh Gateways. Mesh gateways enable services in the Connect
mesh to make cross-DC connections via gateways, where each datacenter
may not have full node interconnectivity.

Consul docs with more information:
https://www.consul.io/docs/connect/gateways/mesh-gateway

The following group level service block can be used to establish
a Connect mesh gateway.

service {
  connect {
    gateway {
      mesh {
        // no configuration
      }
    }
  }
}

Services can make use of a mesh gateway by configuring so in their
upstream blocks, e.g.

service {
  connect {
    sidecar_service {
      proxy {
        upstreams {
          destination_name = "<service>"
          local_bind_port  = <port>
          datacenter       = "<datacenter>"
          mesh_gateway {
            mode = "<mode>"
          }
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

Typical use of a mesh gateway is to create a bridge between datacenters.
A mesh gateway should then be configured with a service port that is
mapped from a host_network configured on a WAN interface in Nomad agent
config, e.g.

client {
  host_network "public" {
    interface = "eth1"
  }
}

Create a port mapping in the group.network block for use by the mesh
gateway service from the public host_network, e.g.

network {
  mode = "bridge"
  port "mesh_wan" {
    host_network = "public"
  }
}

Use this port label for the service.port of the mesh gateway, e.g.

service {
  name = "mesh-gateway"
  port = "mesh_wan"
  connect {
    gateway {
      mesh {}
    }
  }
}

Currently Envoy is the only supported gateway implementation in Consul.
By default Nomad client will run the latest official Envoy docker image
supported by the local Consul agent. The Envoy task can be customized
by setting `meta.connect.gateway_image` in agent config or by setting
the `connect.sidecar_task` block.

Gateways require Consul 1.8.0+, enforced by the Nomad scheduler.

Closes #9446
2021-06-04 08:24:49 -05:00
Mahmood Ali 102763c979
Support disabling TCP checks for connect sidecar services 2021-05-07 12:10:26 -04:00
Nick Spain 653d84ef68 Add a 'body' field to the check stanza
Consul allows specifying the HTTP body to send in a health check. Nomad
uses Consul for health checking so this just plumbs the value through to
where the Consul API is called.

There is no validation that `body` is not used with an incompatible
check method like GET.
2021-04-13 09:15:35 -04:00
Andre Ilhicas f45fc6c899
consul/connect: enable setting local_bind_address in upstream 2021-02-26 11:37:31 +00:00
Drew Bailey 8507d54e3b
e2e test for on_update service checks
check_restart not compatible with on_update=ignore

reword caveat
2021-02-08 08:32:40 -05:00
Drew Bailey 82f971f289
OnUpdate configuration for services and checks
Allow for readiness type checks by configuring nomad to ignore warnings
or errors reported by a service check. This allows the deployment to
progress and while Consul handles introducing the sercive into a
resource pool once the check passes.
2021-02-08 08:32:40 -05:00
Seth Hoenig 8b05efcf88 consul/connect: Add support for Connect terminating gateways
This PR implements Nomad built-in support for running Consul Connect
terminating gateways. Such a gateway can be used by services running
inside the service mesh to access "legacy" services running outside
the service mesh while still making use of Consul's service identity
based networking and ACL policies.

https://www.consul.io/docs/connect/gateways/terminating-gateway

These gateways are declared as part of a task group level service
definition within the connect stanza.

service {
  connect {
    gateway {
      proxy {
        // envoy proxy configuration
      }
      terminating {
        // terminating-gateway configuration entry
      }
    }
  }
}

Currently Envoy is the only supported gateway implementation in
Consul. The gateay task can be customized by configuring the
connect.sidecar_task block.

When the gateway.terminating field is set, Nomad will write/update
the Configuration Entry into Consul on job submission. Because CEs
are global in scope and there may be more than one Nomad cluster
communicating with Consul, there is an assumption that any terminating
gateway defined in Nomad for a particular service will be the same
among Nomad clusters.

Gateways require Consul 1.8.0+, checked by a node constraint.

Closes #9445
2021-01-25 10:36:04 -06:00
Seth Hoenig f213b8c51b consul/connect: always set gateway proxy default timeout
If the connect.proxy stanza is left unset, the connection timeout
value is not set but is assumed to be, and may cause a non-fatal NPE
on job submission.
2021-01-19 11:23:41 -06:00
Seth Hoenig e81e9223ef consul/connect: enable setting datacenter in connect upstream
Before, upstreams could only be defined using the default datacenter.
Now, the `datacenter` field can be set in a connect upstream definition,
informing consul of the desire for an instance of the upstream service
in the specified datacenter. The field is optional and continues to
default to the local datacenter.

Closes #8964
2020-11-30 10:38:30 -06:00
Mahmood Ali 618388d1c3 api: parse service gateway name
Adding gateway name eases HCLv2 parsing. This field is only used for parsing the
job and is ignored for any other pruposes
2020-10-21 14:05:46 -04:00
Mahmood Ali 58df967c3a Tag Job spec with HCLv2 tags 2020-10-21 14:05:46 -04:00
Seth Hoenig c4fa644315 consul/connect: remove envoy dns option from gateway proxy config 2020-08-24 09:11:55 -05:00
Seth Hoenig 5b072029f2 consul/connect: add initial support for ingress gateways
This PR adds initial support for running Consul Connect Ingress Gateways (CIGs) in Nomad. These gateways are declared as part of a task group level service definition within the connect stanza.

```hcl
service {
  connect {
    gateway {
      proxy {
        // envoy proxy configuration
      }
      ingress {
        // ingress-gateway configuration entry
      }
    }
  }
}
```

A gateway can be run in `bridge` or `host` networking mode, with the caveat that host networking necessitates manually specifying the Envoy admin listener (which cannot be disabled) via the service port value.

Currently Envoy is the only supported gateway implementation in Consul, and Nomad only supports running Envoy as a gateway using the docker driver.

Aims to address #8294 and tangentially #8647
2020-08-21 16:21:54 -05:00
Seth Hoenig fd4804bf26 consul: able to set pass/fail thresholds on consul service checks
This change adds the ability to set the fields `success_before_passing` and
`failures_before_critical` on Consul service check definitions. This is a
feature added to Consul v1.7.0 and later.
  https://www.consul.io/docs/agent/checks#success-failures-before-passing-critical

Nomad doesn't do much besides pass the fields through to Consul.

Fixes #6913
2020-08-10 14:08:09 -05:00
Seth Hoenig 6c5ab7f45e consul/connect: split connect native flag and task in service 2020-06-23 10:22:22 -05:00
Seth Hoenig 4d71f22a11 consul/connect: add support for running connect native tasks
This PR adds the capability of running Connect Native Tasks on Nomad,
particularly when TLS and ACLs are enabled on Consul.

The `connect` stanza now includes a `native` parameter, which can be
set to the name of task that backs the Connect Native Consul service.

There is a new Client configuration parameter for the `consul` stanza
called `share_ssl`. Like `allow_unauthenticated` the default value is
true, but recommended to be disabled in production environments. When
enabled, the Nomad Client's Consul TLS information is shared with
Connect Native tasks through the normal Consul environment variables.
This does NOT include auth or token information.

If Consul ACLs are enabled, Service Identity Tokens are automatically
and injected into the Connect Native task through the CONSUL_HTTP_TOKEN
environment variable.

Any of the automatically set environment variables can be overridden by
the Connect Native task using the `env` stanza.

Fixes #6083
2020-06-22 14:07:44 -05:00
Seth Hoenig f136afc04f api: canonicalize connect components
Add `Canonicalize` methods to the connect components of a service
definition in the `api` package. Without these, we have been relying
on good input for the connect stanza.

Fixes #7993
2020-05-19 11:47:22 -06:00
Seth Hoenig 14c7cebdea connect: enable automatic expose paths for individual group service checks
Part of #6120

Building on the support for enabling connect proxy paths in #7323, this change
adds the ability to configure the 'service.check.expose' flag on group-level
service check definitions for services that are connect-enabled. This is a slight
deviation from the "magic" that Consul provides. With Consul, the 'expose' flag
exists on the connect.proxy stanza, which will then auto-generate expose paths
for every HTTP and gRPC service check associated with that connect-enabled
service.

A first attempt at providing similar magic for Nomad's Consul Connect integration
followed that pattern exactly, as seen in #7396. However, on reviewing the PR
we realized having the `expose` flag on the proxy stanza inseperably ties together
the automatic path generation with every HTTP/gRPC defined on the service. This
makes sense in Consul's context, because a service definition is reasonably
associated with a single "task". With Nomad's group level service definitions
however, there is a reasonable expectation that a service definition is more
abstractly representative of multiple services within the task group. In this
case, one would want to define checks of that service which concretely make HTTP
or gRPC requests to different underlying tasks. Such a model is not possible
with the course `proxy.expose` flag.

Instead, we now have the flag made available within the check definitions themselves.
By making the expose feature resolute to each check, it is possible to have
some HTTP/gRPC checks which make use of the envoy exposed paths, as well as
some HTTP/gRPC checks which make use of some orthongonal port-mapping to do
checks on some other task (or even some other bound port of the same task)
within the task group.

Given this example,

group "server-group" {
  network {
    mode = "bridge"
    port "forchecks" {
      to = -1
    }
  }

  service {
    name = "myserver"
    port = 2000

    connect {
      sidecar_service {
      }
    }

    check {
      name     = "mycheck-myserver"
      type     = "http"
      port     = "forchecks"
      interval = "3s"
      timeout  = "2s"
      method   = "GET"
      path     = "/classic/responder/health"
      expose   = true
    }
  }
}

Nomad will automatically inject (via job endpoint mutator) the
extrapolated expose path configuration, i.e.

expose {
  path {
    path            = "/classic/responder/health"
    protocol        = "http"
    local_path_port = 2000
    listener_port   = "forchecks"
  }
}

Documentation is coming in #7440 (needs updating, doing next)

Modifications to the `countdash` examples in https://github.com/hashicorp/demo-consul-101/pull/6
which will make the examples in the documentation actually runnable.

Will add some e2e tests based on the above when it becomes available.
2020-03-31 17:15:50 -06:00
Seth Hoenig 41244c5857 jobspec: parse multi expose.path instead of explicit slice 2020-03-31 17:15:27 -06:00
Seth Hoenig 0266f056b8 connect: enable proxy.passthrough configuration
Enable configuration of HTTP and gRPC endpoints which should be exposed by
the Connect sidecar proxy. This changeset is the first "non-magical" pass
that lays the groundwork for enabling Consul service checks for tasks
running in a network namespace because they are Connect-enabled. The changes
here provide for full configuration of the

  connect {
    sidecar_service {
      proxy {
        expose {
          paths = [{
		path = <exposed endpoint>
                protocol = <http or grpc>
                local_path_port = <local endpoint port>
                listener_port = <inbound mesh port>
	  }, ... ]
       }
    }
  }

stanza. Everything from `expose` and below is new, and partially implements
the precedent set by Consul:
  https://www.consul.io/docs/connect/registration/service-registration.html#expose-paths-configuration-reference

Combined with a task-group level network port-mapping in the form:

  port "exposeExample" { to = -1 }

it is now possible to "punch a hole" through the network namespace
to a specific HTTP or gRPC path, with the anticipated use case of creating
Consul checks on Connect enabled services.

A future PR may introduce more automagic behavior, where we can do things like

1) auto-fill the 'expose.path.local_path_port' with the default value of the
   'service.port' value for task-group level connect-enabled services.

2) automatically generate a port-mapping

3) enable an 'expose.checks' flag which automatically creates exposed endpoints
   for every compatible consul service check (http/grpc checks on connect
   enabled services).
2020-03-31 17:15:27 -06:00
Seth Hoenig 0e44094d1a client: enable configuring enable_tag_override for services
Consul provides a feature of Service Definitions where the tags
associated with a service can be modified through the Catalog API,
overriding the value(s) configured in the agent's service configuration.

To enable this feature, the flag enable_tag_override must be configured
in the service definition.

Previously, Nomad did not allow configuring this flag, and thus the default
value of false was used. Now, it is configurable.

Because Nomad itself acts as a state machine around the the service definitions
of the tasks it manages, it's worth describing what happens when this feature
is enabled and why.

Consider the basic case where there is no Nomad, and your service is provided
to consul as a boring JSON file. The ultimate source of truth for the definition
of that service is the file, and is stored in the agent. Later, Consul performs
"anti-entropy" which synchronizes the Catalog (stored only the leaders). Then
with enable_tag_override=true, the tags field is available for "external"
modification through the Catalog API (rather than directly configuring the
service definition file, or using the Agent API). The important observation
is that if the service definition ever changes (i.e. the file is changed &
config reloaded OR the Agent API is used to modify the service), those
"external" tag values are thrown away, and the new service definition is
once again the source of truth.

In the Nomad case, Nomad itself is the source of truth over the Agent in
the same way the JSON file was the source of truth in the example above.
That means any time Nomad sets a new service definition, any externally
configured tags are going to be replaced. When does this happen? Only on
major lifecycle events, for example when a task is modified because of an
updated job spec from the 'nomad job run <existing>' command. Otherwise,
Nomad's periodic re-sync's with Consul will now no longer try to restore
the externally modified tag values (as long as enable_tag_override=true).

Fixes #2057
2020-02-10 08:00:55 -06:00
Nick Ethier 5cbb94e16e consul: add support for canary meta 2020-01-27 09:53:30 -05:00
Seth Hoenig 039fbd3f3b connect: enable setting tags on consul connect sidecar service in jobspec (#6415) 2019-10-17 19:25:20 +00:00
Tim Gross cd9c23617f
client/connect: ConsulProxy LocalServicePort/Address (#6358)
Without a `LocalServicePort`, Connect services will try to use the
mapped port even when delivering traffic locally. A user can override
this behavior by pinning the port value in the `service` stanza but
this prevents us from using the Consul service name to reach the
service.

This commits configures the Consul proxy with its `LocalServicePort`
and `LocalServiceAddress` fields.
2019-09-23 14:30:48 -04:00
Jerome Gravel-Niquet cbdc1978bf Consul service meta (#6193)
* adds meta object to service in job spec, sends it to consul

* adds tests for service meta

* fix tests

* adds docs

* better hashing for service meta, use helper for copying meta when registering service

* tried to be DRY, but looks like it would be more work to use the
helper function
2019-08-23 12:49:02 -04:00
Tim Gross a0e923f46c add optional task field to group service checks 2019-08-20 09:35:31 -04:00
Nick Ethier 24f5a4c276
sidecar_task override in connect admission controller (#6140)
* structs: use seperate SidecarTask struct for sidecar_task stanza and add merge

* nomad: merge SidecarTask into proxy task during connect Mutate hook
2019-08-20 01:22:46 -04:00
Nick Ethier 1871c1edbc
Add sidecar_task stanza parsing (#6104)
* jobspec: breakup parse.go into smaller files

* add sidecar_task parsing to jobspec and api

* jobspec: combine service parsing logic for task and group service stanzas

* api: use slice of ConsulUpstream values instead of pointers
2019-08-09 15:18:53 -04:00
Michael Schurter 17fd82d6ad consul: add Connect structs
Refactor all Consul structs into {api,structs}/services.go because
api/tasks.go didn't make sense anymore and structs/structs.go is
gigantic.
2019-08-06 08:15:07 -07:00