Fixes#6594#6711#6714#7567
e2e testing is still TBD in #6502
Before, we only passed the Nomad agent's configured Consul HTTP
address onto the `consul connect envoy ...` bootstrap command.
This meant any Consul setup with TLS enabled would not work with
Nomad's Connect integration.
This change now sets CLI args and Environment Variables for
configuring TLS options for communicating with Consul when doing
the envoy bootstrap, as described in
https://www.consul.io/docs/commands/connect/envoy.html#usage
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).
* nomad/structs/structs: new NodeEventSubsystemCSI
* client/client: pass triggerNodeEvent in the CSIConfig
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/instance: add eventer to instanceManager
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/manager: pass triggerNodeEvent
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume: node event on [un]mount
* nomad/structs/structs: use storage, not CSI
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume: use storage, not CSI
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume_test: eventer
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume: event on error
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume_test: check event on error
* command/node_status: remove an extra space in event detail format
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume: use snake_case for details
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume_test: snake_case details
The CSI Specification defines various gRPC Errors and how they may be retried. After auditing all our CSI RPC calls in #6863, this changeset:
* adds retries and backoffs to the where they were needed but not implemented
* annotates those CSI RPCs that do not need retries so that we don't wonder whether it's been left off accidentally
* added a timeout and cancellation context to the `Probe` call, which didn't have one.
The test inserts an alloc in the server state, but expect the client to
start the alloc runner for it almost immediately.
Here, we add a retry loop to check that the client start all expected
alloc runners eventually.
Fix a regression where we accidentally started treating non-AWS
environments as AWS environments, resulting in bad networking settings.
Two factors some at play:
First, in [1], we accidentally switched the ultimate AWS test from
checking `ami-id` to `instance-id`. This means that nomad started
treating more environments as AWS; e.g. Hetzner implements `instance-id`
but not `ami-id`.
Second, some of these environments return empty values instead of
errors! Hetzner returns empty 200 response for `local-ipv4`, resulting
into bad networking configuration.
This change fix the situation by restoring the check to `ami-id` and
ensuring that we only set network configuration when the ip address is
not-empty. Also, be more defensive around response whitespace input.
[1] https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad/pull/6779
Add mount_options to both the volume definition on registration and to the volume block in the group where the volume is requested. If both are specified, the options provided in the request replace the options defined in the volume. They get passed to the NodePublishVolume, which causes the node plugin to actually mount the volume on the host.
Individual tasks just mount bind into the host mounted volume (unchanged behavior). An operator can mount the same volume with different options by specifying it twice in the group context.
closes#7007
* nomad/structs/volumes: add MountOptions to volume request
* jobspec/test-fixtures/basic.hcl: add mount_options to volume block
* jobspec/parse_test: add expected MountOptions
* api/tasks: add mount_options
* jobspec/parse_group: use hcl decode not mapstructure, mount_options
* client/allocrunner/csi_hook: pass MountOptions through
client/allocrunner/csi_hook: add a VolumeMountOptions
client/allocrunner/csi_hook: drop Options
client/allocrunner/csi_hook: use the structs options
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/interface: UsageOptions.MountOptions
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume: pass MountOptions in capabilities
* plugins/csi/plugin: remove todo 7007 comment
* nomad/structs/csi: MountOptions
* api/csi: add options to the api for parsing, match structs
* plugins/csi/plugin: move VolumeMountOptions to structs
* api/csi: use specific type for mount_options
* client/allocrunner/csi_hook: merge MountOptions here
* rename CSIOptions to CSIMountOptions
* client/allocrunner/csi_hook
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume
* nomad/structs/csi
* plugins/csi/fake/client: add PrevVolumeCapability
* plugins/csi/plugin
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume_test: remove debugging
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume: fix odd merging logic
* api: rename CSIOptions -> CSIMountOptions
* nomad/csi_endpoint: remove a 7007 comment
* command/alloc_status: show mount options in the volume list
* nomad/structs/csi: include MountOptions in the volume stub
* api/csi: add MountOptions to stub
* command/volume_status_csi: clean up csiVolMountOption, add it
* command/alloc_status: csiVolMountOption lives in volume_csi_status
* command/node_status: display mount flags
* nomad/structs/volumes: npe
* plugins/csi/plugin: npe in ToCSIRepresentation
* jobspec/parse_test: expand volume parse test cases
* command/agent/job_endpoint: ApiTgToStructsTG needs MountOptions
* command/volume_status_csi: copy paste error
* jobspec/test-fixtures/basic: hclfmt
* command/volume_status_csi: clean up csiVolMountOption
Run the plugin fingerprint one last time with a closed client during
instance manager shutdown. This will return quickly and will give us a
correctly-populated `PluginInfo` marked as unhealthy so the Nomad
client can update the server about plugin health.
Allow for faster updates to plugin status when allocations become
terminal by listening for register/deregister events from the dynamic
plugin registry (which in turn are triggered by the plugin supervisor
hook).
The deregistration function closures that we pass up to the CSI plugin
manager don't properly close over the name and type of the
registration, causing monolith-type plugins to deregister only one of
their two plugins on alloc shutdown. Rebind plugin supervisor
deregistration targets to fix that.
Includes log message and comment improvements
This changeset implements the remaining controller detach RPCs: server-to-client and client-to-controller. The tests also uncovered a bug in our RPC for claims which is fixed here; the volume claim RPC is used for both claiming and releasing a claim on a volume. We should only submit a controller publish RPC when the claim is new and not when it's being released.
In order to correctly fingerprint dynamic plugins on client restarts,
we need to persist a handle to the plugin (that is, connection info)
to the client state store.
The dynamic registry will sync automatically to the client state
whenever it receives a register/deregister call.
* nomad/structs/csi: new RemoteID() uses the ExternalID if set
* nomad/csi_endpoint: pass RemoteID to volume request types
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/volume: pass RemoteID to NodePublishVolume
Fix some docstring typos and fix noisy log message during client restarts.
A log for the common case where the plugin socket isn't ready yet
isn't actionable by the operator so having it at info is just noise.
* client/allocrunner/csi_hook: tag errors
* nomad/client_csi_endpoint: tag errors
* nomad/client_rpc: remove an unnecessary error tag
* nomad/state/state_store: ControllerRequired fix intent
We use ControllerRequired to indicate that a volume should use the
publish/unpublish workflow, rather than that it has a controller. We
need to check both RequiresControllerPlugin and SupportsAttachDetach
from the fingerprint to check that.
* nomad/csi_endpoint: tag errors
* nomad/csi_endpoint_test: longer error messages, mock fingerprints
Derive a provider name and version for plugins (and the volumes that
use them) from the CSI identity API `GetPluginInfo`. Expose the vendor
name as `Provider` in the API and CLI commands.
* structs: CSIInfo include AllocID, CSIPlugins no Jobs
* state_store: eliminate plugin Jobs, delete an empty plugin
* nomad/structs/csi: detect empty plugins correctly
* client/allocrunner/taskrunner/plugin_supervisor_hook: option AllocID
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/instance: allocID
* client/pluginmanager/csimanager/fingerprint: set AllocID
* client/node_updater: split controller and node plugins
* api/csi: remove Jobs
The CSI Plugin API will map plugins to allocations, which allows
plugins to be defined by jobs in many configurations. In particular,
multiple plugins can be defined in the same job, and multiple jobs can
be used to define a single plugin.
Because we now map the allocation context directly from the node, it's
no longer necessary to track the jobs associated with a plugin
directly.
* nomad/csi_endpoint_test: CreateTestPlugin & register via fingerprint
* client/dynamicplugins: lift AllocID into the struct from Options
* api/csi_test: remove Jobs test
* nomad/structs/csi: CSIPlugins has an array of allocs
* nomad/state/state_store: implement CSIPluginDenormalize
* nomad/state/state_store: CSIPluginDenormalize npe on missing alloc
* nomad/csi_endpoint_test: defer deleteNodes for clarity
* api/csi_test: disable this test awaiting mocks:
https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad/issues/7123
Currently the handling of CSINode RPCs does not correctly handle
forwarding RPCs to Nodes.
This commit fixes this by introducing a shim RPC
(nomad/client_csi_enpdoint) that will correctly forward the request to
the owning node, or submit the RPC to the client.
In the process it also cleans up handling a little bit by adding the
`CSIControllerQuery` embeded struct for required forwarding state.
The CSIControllerQuery embeding the requirement of a `PluginID` also
means we could move node targetting into the shim RPC if wanted in the
future.
CSI Plugins that manage devices need not just access to the CSI
directory, but also to manage devices inside `/dev`.
This commit introduces a `/dev:/dev` mount to the container so that they
may do so.
This commit is the initial implementation of claiming volumes from the
server and passes through any publishContext information as appropriate.
There's nothing too fancy here.
The CSI Spec requires us to attach and stage volumes based on different
types of usage information when it may effect how they are bound. Here
we pass through some basic usage options in the CSI Hook (specifically
the volume aliases ReadOnly field), and the attachment/access mode from
the volume. We pass the attachment/access mode seperately from the
volume as it simplifies some handling and doesn't necessarily force
every attachment to use the same mode should more be supported (I.e if
we let each `volume "foo" {}` specify an override in the future).