This PR:
* Uses Go 1.8 executable lookup
* Stores any err message from stats init method
* Allows overriding of Cpu Compute for hosts where it can't be detected
Previously, this value was guarded against running on Windows
because it called the `uname` command which is unlikely to
be there.
This change now sets the value from gopsutil, which might
well be an empty string.
Signed-off-by: Dave Walker (Daviey) <email@daviey.com>
Previously with client fingerprinting, sys/exec's Command
function was being used to execute `uname -r` and the return
string processed into the kernel.version node attribute.
This change uses gopsutil/host KernelVersion function
instead. This means we can drop the os/exec, strings and
fmt imports... and not execute an external binary.
Signed-off-by: Dave Walker (Daviey) <email@daviey.com>
This PR:
* Makes AWS network speeds more granular
* Makes `network_speed` an override and not a default
* Adds a default of 1000 MBits if no network link speed is detected.
Fixes#1985
If someone wants to extend or reuse Cgroup detenction in the future they
can move `cgroup_linux.go` to `cgroup.go` and add the relevant build
tags.
Requested by: @dadgar
Conditionalize the network fingerprinter test so that it works when a
user is offline. Similarly, when the network fingerprint test fails in
the future pass a HINT to the user to set an env var to allow the test
to be skipped in the future.
Change the logic from `!linux` to an empty build tag so that *if*
another platform picks up Cgroups support they can add themselves to the
necessary build tags for this fingerprinter and be on their way.
Because this technology isn't inherently Linux-specific and isn't
mutually exclusive of other resource isolation containers, resist the
urge to rename the Cgroup fingerprinter to something generic like the
ResourceContainerFingerprinter.
Change the unit test to only test if the consul link exists, not the
value of the link. The old test was hostname specific and therefore
would always be different based on the environment running the tests.