* use msgtype in upsert node
adds message type to signature for upsert node, update tests, remove placeholder method
* UpsertAllocs msg type test setup
* use upsertallocs with msg type in signature
update test usage of delete node
delete placeholder msgtype method
* add msgtype to upsert evals signature, update test call sites with test setup msg type
handle snapshot upsert eval outside of FSM and ignore eval event
remove placeholder upsertevalsmsgtype
handle job plan rpc and prevent event creation for plan
msgtype cleanup upsertnodeevents
updatenodedrain msgtype
msg type 0 is a node registration event, so set the default to the ignore type
* fix named import
* fix signature ordering on upsertnode to match
* consul: advertise cni and multi host interface addresses
* structs: add service/check address_mode validation
* ar/groupservices: fetch networkstatus at hook runtime
* ar/groupservice: nil check network status getter before calling
* consul: comment network status can be nil
The MaxQueryTime value used in QueryOptions.HasTimedOut() can be set to
an invalid value that would throw off how RPC requests are retried.
This fix uses the same logic that enforces the MaxQueryTime bounds in the
blockingRPC() call.
properly wire up durable event count
move newline responsibility
moves newline creation from NDJson to the http handler, json stream only encodes and sends now
ignore snapshot restore if broker is disabled
enable dev mode to access event steam without acl
use mapping instead of switch
use pointers for config sizes, remove unused ttl, simplify closed conn logic
Fixes#9017
The ?resources=true query parameter includes resources in the object
stub listings. Specifically:
- For `/v1/nodes?resources=true` both the `NodeResources` and
`ReservedResources` field are included.
- For `/v1/allocations?resources=true` the `AllocatedResources` field is
included.
The ?task_states=false query parameter removes TaskStates from
/v1/allocations responses. (By default TaskStates are included.)
* Node Drain events and Node Events (#8980)
Deployment status updates
handle deployment status updates (paused, failed, resume)
deployment alloc health
generate events from apply plan result
txn err check, slim down deployment event
one ndjson line per index
* consolidate down to node event + type
* fix UpdateDeploymentAllocHealth test invocations
* fix test
This Commit adds an /v1/events/stream endpoint to stream events from.
The stream framer has been updated to include a SendFull method which
does not fragment the data between multiple frames. This essentially
treats the stream framer as a envelope to adhere to the stream framer
interface in the UI.
If the `encode` query parameter is omitted events will be streamed as
newline delimted JSON.
* Node Register/Deregister event sourcing
example upsert node with context
fill in writetxnwithctx
ctx passing to handle event type creation, wip test
node deregistration event
drop Node from registration event
* node batch deregistration
adds an event buffer to hold events from raft changes.
update events to use event buffer
fix append call
provide way to prune buffer items after TTL
event publisher tests
basic publish test
wire up max item ttl
rename package to stream, cleanup exploratory work
subscription filtering
subscription plumbing
allow subscribers to consume events, handle closing subscriptions
back out old exploratory ctx work
fix lint
remove unused ctx bits
add a few comments
fix test
stop publisher on abandon
As newer versions of Consul are released, the minimum version of Envoy
it supports as a sidecar proxy also gets bumped. Starting with the upcoming
Consul v1.9.X series, Envoy v1.11.X will no longer be supported. Current
versions of Nomad hardcode a version of Envoy v1.11.2 to be used as the
default implementation of Connect sidecar proxy.
This PR introduces a change such that each Nomad Client will query its
local Consul for a list of Envoy proxies that it supports (https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/pull/8545)
and then launch the Connect sidecar proxy task using the latest supported version
of Envoy. If the `SupportedProxies` API component is not available from
Consul, Nomad will fallback to the old version of Envoy supported by old
versions of Consul.
Setting the meta configuration option `meta.connect.sidecar_image` or
setting the `connect.sidecar_task` stanza will take precedence as is
the current behavior for sidecar proxies.
Setting the meta configuration option `meta.connect.gateway_image`
will take precedence as is the current behavior for connect gateways.
`meta.connect.sidecar_image` and `meta.connect.gateway_image` may make
use of the special `${NOMAD_envoy_version}` variable interpolation, which
resolves to the newest version of Envoy supported by the Consul agent.
Addresses #8585#7665
Stop coercing version of new job to 0 in the state_store, so that we can add
regions to a multi-region deployment. Send new version, rather than existing
version, to MRD to accomodate version-choosing logic changes in ENT.
Co-authored-by: Chris Baker <1675087+cgbaker@users.noreply.github.com>
If a volume GC and a `nomad volume detach` command land concurrently, we can
end up with multiple claims without an allocation, which results in extra
no-op work when finding claims to collect as past claims.
Volumes using attachment mode `file-system` use the CSI filesystem API when
they're mounted, and can be passed mount options. But `block-device` mode
volumes don't have this option. When RPCs are made to plugins, we are silently
dropping the mount options we don't expect to see, but this results in a poor
operator experience when the mount options aren't honored. This changeset
makes passing mount options to a `block-device` volume a validation error.
Fixes a bug where CSI volumes with the `MULTI_NODE_MULTI_WRITER` access mode
were using the same logic as `MULTI_NODE_SINGLE_WRITER` to determine whether
the volume had writer claims available for scheduling.
Extends CSI claim endpoint test to exercise multi-reader and make sure `WriteFreeClaims`
is exercised for multi-writer in feasibility test.
This PR fixes a long standing bug where submitting jobs with changes
to connect services would not trigger updates as expected. Previously,
service blocks were not considered as sources of destructive updates
since they could be synced with consul non-destructively. With Connect,
task group services that have changes to their connect block or to
the service port should be destructive, since the network plumbing of
the alloc is going to need updating.
Fixes#8596#7991
Non-destructive half in #7192
Since CPU resources are usually a soft limit it is desirable to allow
setting it as low as possible to allow tasks to run only in "idle" time.
Setting it to 0 is still not allowed to avoid potential unintentional
side effects with allowing a zero value. While there may not be any side
effects this commit attempts to minimize risk by avoiding the issue.
This does *not* change the defaults.
When defining a script-check in a group-level service, Nomad needs to
know which task is associated with the check so that it can use the
correct task driver to execute the check.
This PR fixes two bugs:
1) validate service.task or service.check.task is configured
2) make service.check.task inherit service.task if it is itself unset
Fixes#8952
Noticed this error in some production logs, and they were far from
helpful. Changes:
1. Include job ID in logs
2. Wrap errors and log once instead of double log lines
3. Test fsm error handling behavior
The current implementation measures RPC request timeout only against
config.RPCHoldTimeout, which is fine for non-blocking requests but will
almost surely be exceeded by long-poll requests that block for minutes
at a time.
This adds an HasTimedOut method on the RPCInfo interface that takes into
account whether the request is blocking, its maximum wait time, and the
RPCHoldTimeout.
In #7800, Nomad would automatically generate a port label for service
checks making use of the expose feature, if the port was not already
set. This change assumed the group network would be correctly defined
(as is checked in a validation hook later). If the group network was
not definied, a panic would occur on job submisssion. This change
re-uses the group network validation helper to make sure the network
is correctly definied before adding ports to it.
Fixes#8875
This commit wraps memdb.DB with a changeTrackerDB, which is a thin
wrapper around memdb.DB which enables go-memdb's TrackChanges on all write
transactions. When the transaction is comitted the changes are sent to
an eventPublisher which will be used to create and emit change events.
debugging TestFSM_ReconcileSummaries
wip
revert back rebase
revert back rebase
fix snapshot to actually use a snapshot
Fix CSIMountOptions.Copy() and VolumeRequest.Copy() where they
accidentally returned a reference to self rather than a deep copy.
`&(*ref)` in Golang apparently equivalent to plain `&ref`.
The initial implementation of global job stop for MRD looped over all the
regions in the CLI for expedience. This changeset includes the OSS parts of
moving this into the RPC layer so that API consumers don't have to implement
this logic themselves.
Multiregion deployments use the `NomadTokenID` to allow the deploymentwatcher
to send RPCs between regions with the original submitter's ACL token. This ID
should be filtered from diffs so that it doesn't cause a difference for
purposes of job plans.
When consul.allow_unauthenticated is set to false, the job_endpoint hook validates
that a `-consul-token` is provided and validates the token against the privileges
inherent to a Consul Service Identity policy for all the Connect enabled services
defined in the job.
Before, the check was assuming the service was of type sidecar-proxy. This fixes the
check to use the type of the task so we can distinguish between the different connect
types.
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
This change fixes a bug where lost/failed allocations are replaced by
allocations with the latest versions, even if the version hasn't been
promoted yet.
Now, when generating a plan for lost/failed allocations, the scheduler
first checks if the current deployment is in Canary stage, and if so, it
ensures that any lost/failed allocations is replaced one with the latest
promoted version instead.
If a core job fails more than the delivery limit, the leader will create a new
eval with the TriggeredBy field set to `failed-follow-up`.
Evaluations for core jobs have the leader's ACL, which is not valid on another
leader after an election. The `failed-follow-up` evals do not have ACLs, so
core job evals that fail more than the delivery limit or core job evals that
span leader elections will never succeed and will be re-enqueued forever. So
we should not retry with a `failed-follow-up`.
The soundness guarantees of the CSI specification leave a little to be desired
in our ability to provide a 100% reliable automated solution for managing
volumes. This changeset provides a new command to bridge this gap by providing
the operator the ability to intervene.
The command doesn't take an allocation ID so that the operator doesn't have to
keep track of alloc IDs that may have been GC'd. Handle this case in the
unpublish RPC by sending the client RPC for all the terminal/nil allocs on the
selected node.
The CSI client RPC uses error wrapping to detect the type of error bubbling up
from plugins, but if the errors we get aren't wrapped at each layer, we can't
unwrap the inner error.
Also eliminates some unused args.
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
When deregistering a client, CSI plugins running on that client may not get a
chance to fingerprint before being stopped. Account for the case where a
plugin allocation is the last instance of the plugin and has been deleted from
the state store to avoid errors during node deregistration.
When the client-side actions of a CSI client RPC succeed but we get
disconnected during the RPC or we fail to checkpoint the claim state, we want
to be able to retry the client RPC without getting blocked by the client-side
state (ex. mount points) already having been cleaned up in previous calls.
Using the count of node claims from earlier in the `CSIVolume.Unpublish RPC
doesn't correctly account for cases where the RPC was interrupted but
checkpointed. Instead, we'll check the current allocation count and status to
determine whether we need to send a controller unpublish.
Add a Postrun hook to send the `CSIVolume.Unpublish` RPC to the server. This
may forward client RPCs to the node plugins or to the controller plugins,
depending on whether other allocations on this node have claims on this
volume.
By making clients responsible for running the `CSIVolume.Unpublish` RPC (and
making the RPC available to a `nomad volume detach` command), the
volumewatcher becomes only used by the core GC job and we no longer need
async volume GC from job deregister and node update.
This changeset updates `nomad/volumewatcher` to take advantage of the
`CSIVolume.Unpublish` RPC. This lets us eliminate a bunch of code and
associated tests. The raft batching code can be safely dropped, as the
characteristic times of the CSI RPCs are on the order of seconds or even
minutes, so batching up raft RPCs added complexity without any real world
performance wins.
Includes refactor w/ test cleanup and dead code elimination in volumewatcher