Splitting the immutable and mutable components of the scriptCheck led
to a bug where the environment interpolation wasn't being incorporated
into the check's ID, which caused the UpdateTTL to update for a check
ID that Consul didn't have (because our Consul client creates the ID
from the structs.ServiceCheck each time we update).
Task group services don't have access to a task environment at
creation, so their checks get registered before the check can be
interpolated. Use the original check ID so they can be updated.
In Nomad prior to Consul Connect, all Consul checks work the same
except for Script checks. Because the Task being checked is running in
its own container namespaces, the check is executed by Nomad in the
Task's context. If the Script check passes, Nomad uses the TTL check
feature of Consul to update the check status. This means in order to
run a Script check, we need to know what Task to execute it in.
To support Consul Connect, we need Group Services, and these need to
be registered in Consul along with their checks. We could push the
Service down into the Task, but this doesn't work if someone wants to
associate a service with a task's ports, but do script checks in
another task in the allocation.
Because Nomad is handling the Script check and not Consul anyways,
this moves the script check handling into the task runner so that the
task runner can own the script check's configuration and
lifecycle. This will allow us to pass the group service check
configuration down into a task without associating the service itself
with the task.
When tasks are checked for script checks, we walk back through their
task group to see if there are script checks associated with the
task. If so, we'll spin off script check tasklets for them. The
group-level service and any restart behaviors it needs are entirely
encapsulated within the group service hook.
* connect: add unix socket to proxy grpc for envoy
Fixes#6124
Implement a L4 proxy from a unix socket inside a network namespace to
Consul's gRPC endpoint on the host. This allows Envoy to connect to
Consul's xDS configuration API.
* connect: pointer receiver on structs with mutexes
* connect: warn on all proxy errors
* 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
Fixes#6041
Unlike all other Consul operations, boostrapping requires Consul be
available. This PR tries Consul 3 times with a backoff to account for
the group services being asynchronously registered with Consul.
When rendering a task template, the `plugin` function is no longer
permitted by default and will raise an error. An operator can opt-in
to permitting this function with the new `template.function_blacklist`
field in the client configuration.
When rendering a task template, path parameters for the `file`
function will be treated as relative to the task directory by
default. Relative paths or symlinks that point outside the task
directory will raise an error. An operator can opt-out of this
protection with the new `template.disable_file_sandbox` field in the
client configuration.
When rendering a task consul template, ensure that only task environment
variables are used.
Currently, `consul-template` always falls back to host process
environment variables when key isn't a task env var[1]. Thus, we add
an empty entry for each host process env-var not found in task env-vars.
[1] bfa5d0e133/template/funcs.go (L61-L75)
Adds a new Prerun and Postrun hooks to manage set up of network namespaces
on linux. Work still needs to be done to make the code platform agnostic and
support Docker style network initalization.
Previously, if a channel is closed, we retry the Stats call. But, if that call
fails, we go in a backoff loop without calling Stats ever again.
Here, we use a utility function for calling driverHandle.Stats call that retries
as one expects.
I aimed to preserve the logging formats but made small improvements as I saw fit.
When an alloc runner prestart hook fails, the task runners aren't invoked
and they remain in a pending state.
This leads to terrible results, some of which are:
* Lockup in GC process as reported in https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad/pull/5861
* Lockup in shutdown process as TR.Shutdown() waits for WaitCh to be closed
* Alloc not being restarted/rescheduled to another node (as it's still in
pending state)
* Unexpected restart of alloc on a client restart, potentially days/weeks after
alloc expected start time!
Here, we treat all tasks to have failed if alloc runner prestart hook fails.
This fixes the lockups, and permits the alloc to be rescheduled on another node.
While it's desirable to retry alloc runner in such failures, I opted to treat it
out of scope. I'm afraid of some subtles about alloc and task runners and their
idempotency that's better handled in a follow up PR.
This might be one of the root causes for
https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad/issues/5840 .
This change fixes a bug where nomad would avoid running alloc tasks if
the alloc is client terminal but the server copy on the client isn't
marked as running.
Here, we fix the case by having task runner uses the
allocRunner.shouldRun() instead of only checking the server updated
alloc.
Here, we preserve much of the invariants such that `tr.Run()` is always
run, and don't change the overall alloc runner and task runner
lifecycles.
Fixes https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad/issues/5883
Currently, if killTask results in the termination of a process before
calling WaitTask, Restart() will incorrectly return a TaskNotFound
error when using the raw_exec driver on Windows.
We currently only run cleanup Service Hooks when a task is either
Killed, or Exited. However, due to the implementation of a task runner,
tasks are only Exited if they every correctly started running, which is
not true when you recieve an error early in the task start flow, such as
not being able to pull secrets from Vault.
This updates the service hook to also call consul deregistration
routines during a task Stop lifecycle event, to ensure that any
registered checks and services are cleared in such cases.
fixes#5770
When a client is running against an old server (e.g. running 0.8),
`alloc.AllocatedResources` may be nil, and we need to check the
deprecated `alloc.TaskResources` instead.
Fixes https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad/issues/5810
This fixes an issue where batch and service workloads would never be
restarted due to indefinitely blocking on a nil channel.
It also raises the restoration logging message to `Info` to simplify log
analysis.
Registration and restoring allocs don't share state or depend on each
other in any way (syncing allocs with servers is done outside of
registration).
Since restoring is synchronous, start the registration goroutine first.
For nodes with lots of allocs to restore or close to their heartbeat
deadline, this could be the difference between becoming "lost" or not.
Refactoring of 104067bc2b2002a4e45ae7b667a476b89addc162
Switch the MarkLive method for a chan that is closed by the client.
Thanks to @notnoop for the idea!
The old approach called a method on most existing ARs and TRs on every
runAllocs call. The new approach does a once.Do call in runAllocs to
accomplish the same thing with less work. Able to remove the gate
abstraction that did much more than was needed.
Fixes#1795
Running restored allocations and pulling what allocations to run from
the server happen concurrently. This means that if a client is rebooted,
and has its allocations rescheduled, it may restart the dead allocations
before it contacts the server and determines they should be dead.
This commit makes tasks that fail to reattach on restore wait until the
server is contacted before restarting.
Related to #4280
This PR adds
`client.allocs.<job>.<group>.<alloc>.<task>.memory.allocated` as a gauge
in bytes to metrics to ease calculating how close a task is to OOMing.
```
'nomad.client.allocs.memory.allocated.example.cache.6d98cbaf-d6bc-2a84-c63f-bfff8905a9d8.redis.rusty': 268435456.000
'nomad.client.allocs.memory.cache.example.cache.6d98cbaf-d6bc-2a84-c63f-bfff8905a9d8.redis.rusty': 5677056.000
'nomad.client.allocs.memory.kernel_max_usage.example.cache.6d98cbaf-d6bc-2a84-c63f-bfff8905a9d8.redis.rusty': 0.000
'nomad.client.allocs.memory.kernel_usage.example.cache.6d98cbaf-d6bc-2a84-c63f-bfff8905a9d8.redis.rusty': 0.000
'nomad.client.allocs.memory.max_usage.example.cache.6d98cbaf-d6bc-2a84-c63f-bfff8905a9d8.redis.rusty': 8908800.000
'nomad.client.allocs.memory.rss.example.cache.6d98cbaf-d6bc-2a84-c63f-bfff8905a9d8.redis.rusty': 876544.000
'nomad.client.allocs.memory.swap.example.cache.6d98cbaf-d6bc-2a84-c63f-bfff8905a9d8.redis.rusty': 0.000
'nomad.client.allocs.memory.usage.example.cache.6d98cbaf-d6bc-2a84-c63f-bfff8905a9d8.redis.rusty': 8208384.000
```
Currently, when logmon fails to reattach, we will retry reattachment to
the same pid until the task restart specification is exhausted.
Because we cannot clear hook state during error conditions, it is not
possible for us to signal to a future restart that it _shouldn't_
attempt to reattach to the plugin.
Here we revert to explicitly detecting reattachment seperately from a
launch of a new logmon, so we can recover from scenarios where a logmon
plugin has failed.
This is a net improvement over the current hard failure situation, as it
means in the most common case (the pid has gone away), we can recover.
Other reattachment failure modes where the plugin may still be running
could potentially cause a duplicate process, or a subsequent failure to launch
a new plugin.
If there was a duplicate process, it could potentially cause duplicate
logging. This is better than a production workload outage.
If there was a subsequent failure to launch a new plugin, it would fail
in the same (retry until restarts are exhausted) as the current failure
mode.
Remove runLaunched tracking as Run is *always* called for killable
TaskRunners. TaskRunners which fail before Run can be called (during
NewTaskRunner or Restore) are not killable as they're never added to the
client's alloc map.
I chose to make them more of integration tests since there's a lot more
plumbing involved. The internal implementation details of how we craft
task envs can now change and these tests will still properly assert the
task runtime environment is setup properly.
Builds upon earlier commit that cleans up restored handles of terminal
allocs by also emitting terminated events and calling exited hooks when
appropriate.
The test is sadly quite complicated and peeks into things (logmon's
reattach config) AR doesn't normally have access to.
However, I couldn't find another way of asserting logmon got cleaned up
without resorting to smaller unit tests. Smaller unit tests risk
re-implementing dependencies in an unrealistic way, so I opted for an
ugly integration test.
This commit is a significant change. TR.Run is now always executed, even
for terminal allocations. This was changed to allow TR.Run to cleanup
(run stop hooks) if a handle was recovered.
This is intended to handle the case of Nomad receiving a
DesiredStatus=Stop allocation update, persisting it, but crashing before
stopping AR/TR.
The commit also renames task runner hook data as it was very easy to
accidently set state on Requests instead of Responses using the old
field names.
This code chooses to be conservative as opposed to optimal: when failing
to reattach to logmon simply return a recoverable error instead of
immediately trying to restart logmon.
The recoverable error will cause the task's restart policy to be
applied and a new logmon will be launched upon restart.
Trying to do the optimal approach of simply starting a new logmon
requires error string comparison and should be tested against a task
actively logging to assert the behavior (are writes blocked? dropped?).
There were multiple bugs here:
1. Reattach unmarshalling always returned an error because you can't
unmarshal into a nil pointer.
2. The hook data wasn't being saved because it was put on the request
struct, not the response struct.
3. The plugin configuration should only have reattach *or* a command
set. Not both.
4. Setting Done=true meant the hook was never re-run on agent restart so
reattaching was never attempted.
Track the download status of each artifact independently so that if only
one of many artifacts fails to download, completed artifacts aren't
downloaded again.
0.9.0beta2 contains a regression where artifact download errors would
not cause a task restart and instead immediately fail the task.
This restores the pre-0.9 behavior of retrying all artifact errors and
adds missing tests.
Fixes an issue where if a task was restarted after restating the client,
the task dir environment variables would not be populated. This PR fixes
this for both upgrades from 0.8.X and for normal 0.9 restarts.
Added ability to adjust the number of events the TaskRunner keeps as
there's no way to observe all events otherwise.
Task events differ slightly from 0.8 because 0.9 emits Terminated every
time a task exits instead of only when it exits on its own (not due to
restart or kill).
0.9 does not emit Killing/Killed for restarts like 0.8 which seems fine
as `Restart Signaled/Terminated/Restarting` is more descriptive.
Original v0.8 events emitted:
```
expected := []string{
"Received",
"Task Setup",
"Started",
"Restart Signaled",
"Killing",
"Killed",
"Restarting",
"Started",
"Restart Signaled",
"Killing",
"Killed",
"Restarting",
"Started",
"Restart Signaled",
"Killing",
"Killed",
"Not Restarting",
}
```
v0.9.0-dev started emitting a Terminated event every time a task process
exited. While this wasn't true in previous versions, it's a useful task
event because it's the only place for job operators to view the task's
exit code.
This behavior is asserted in the e2e/taskevents tests.
Track current memory usage, `memory.usage_in_bytes`, in addition to
`memory.max_memory_usage_in_bytes` and friends. This number is closer
what Docker reports.
Related to https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad/issues/5165 .
plugins/driver: update driver interface to support streaming stats
client/tr: use streaming stats api
TODO:
* how to handle errors and closed channel during stats streaming
* prevent tight loop if Stats(ctx) returns an error
drivers: update drivers TaskStats RPC to handle streaming results
executor: better error handling in stats rpc
docker: better control and error handling of stats rpc
driver: allow stats to return a recoverable error
This PR improves how killing a task is handled. Before the kill function
directly orchestrated the killing and was only valid while the task was
running. The new behavior is to mark the desired state and wait for the
task runner to converge to that state.
We were just emitting Killed/Terminated events before. In v0.8 we
emitted Killing/Killed, but lacked Terminated when explicitly stopping
a task. This change makes it so Terminated is always included, whether
explicitly stopping a task or it exiting on its own.
New output:
2019-01-04T14:58:51-08:00 Killed Task successfully killed
2019-01-04T14:58:51-08:00 Terminated Exit Code: 130, Signal: 2
2019-01-04T14:58:51-08:00 Killing Sent interrupt
2019-01-04T14:58:51-08:00 Leader Task Dead Leader Task in Group dead
2019-01-04T14:58:49-08:00 Started Task started by client
2019-01-04T14:58:49-08:00 Task Setup Building Task Directory
2019-01-04T14:58:49-08:00 Received Task received by client
Old (v0.8.6) output:
2019-01-04T22:14:54Z Killed Task successfully killed
2019-01-04T22:14:54Z Killing Sent interrupt. Waiting 5s before force killing
2019-01-04T22:14:54Z Leader Task Dead Leader Task in Group dead
2019-01-04T22:14:53Z Started Task started by client
2019-01-04T22:14:53Z Task Setup Building Task Directory
2019-01-04T22:14:53Z Received Task received by client
Simplify allocDir.Build() function to avoid depending on client/structs,
and remove a parameter that's always set to `false`.
The motivation here is to avoid a dependency cycle between
drivers/cstructs and alloc_dir.