Commit Graph

8 Commits (2274f64cab78cb878f93a724fd741b2543f79142)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Freddy fdd10dd8b8
Expose HTTP-based paths through Connect proxy (#6446)
Fixes: #5396

This PR adds a proxy configuration stanza called expose. These flags register
listeners in Connect sidecar proxies to allow requests to specific HTTP paths from outside of the node. This allows services to protect themselves by only
listening on the loopback interface, while still accepting traffic from non
Connect-enabled services.

Under expose there is a boolean checks flag that would automatically expose all
registered HTTP and gRPC check paths.

This stanza also accepts a paths list to expose individual paths. The primary
use case for this functionality would be to expose paths for third parties like
Prometheus or the kubelet.

Listeners for requests to exposed paths are be configured dynamically at run
time. Any time a proxy, or check can be registered, a listener can also be
created.

In this initial implementation requests to these paths are not
authenticated/encrypted.
2019-09-25 20:55:52 -06:00
R.B. Boyer 8e22d80e35
connect: fix failover through a mesh gateway to a remote datacenter (#6259)
Failover is pushed entirely down to the data plane by creating envoy
clusters and putting each successive destination in a different load
assignment priority band. For example this shows that normally requests
go to 1.2.3.4:8080 but when that fails they go to 6.7.8.9:8080:

- name: foo
  load_assignment:
    cluster_name: foo
    policy:
      overprovisioning_factor: 100000
    endpoints:
    - priority: 0
      lb_endpoints:
      - endpoint:
          address:
            socket_address:
              address: 1.2.3.4
              port_value: 8080
    - priority: 1
      lb_endpoints:
      - endpoint:
          address:
            socket_address:
              address: 6.7.8.9
              port_value: 8080

Mesh gateways route requests based solely on the SNI header tacked onto
the TLS layer. Envoy currently only lets you configure the outbound SNI
header at the cluster layer.

If you try to failover through a mesh gateway you ideally would
configure the SNI value per endpoint, but that's not possible in envoy
today.

This PR introduces a simpler way around the problem for now:

1. We identify any target of failover that will use mesh gateway mode local or
   remote and then further isolate any resolver node in the compiled discovery
   chain that has a failover destination set to one of those targets.

2. For each of these resolvers we will perform a small measurement of
   comparative healths of the endpoints that come back from the health API for the
   set of primary target and serial failover targets. We walk the list of targets
   in order and if any endpoint is healthy we return that target, otherwise we
   move on to the next target.

3. The CDS and EDS endpoints both perform the measurements in (2) for the
   affected resolver nodes.

4. For CDS this measurement selects which TLS SNI field to use for the cluster
   (note the cluster is always going to be named for the primary target)

5. For EDS this measurement selects which set of endpoints will populate the
   cluster. Priority tiered failover is ignored.

One of the big downsides to this approach to failover is that the failover
detection and correction is going to be controlled by consul rather than
deferring that entirely to the data plane as with the prior version. This also
means that we are bound to only failover using official health signals and
cannot make use of data plane signals like outlier detection to affect
failover.

In this specific scenario the lack of data plane signals is ok because the
effectiveness is already muted by the fact that the ultimate destination
endpoints will have their data plane signals scrambled when they pass through
the mesh gateway wrapper anyway so we're not losing much.

Another related fix is that we now use the endpoint health from the
underlying service, not the health of the gateway (regardless of
failover mode).
2019-08-05 13:30:35 -05:00
R.B. Boyer c395affc93
connect: expose an API endpoint to compile the discovery chain (#6248)
In addition to exposing compilation over the API cleaned up the structures that would be exchanged to be cleaner and easier to support and understand.

Also removed ability to configure the envoy OverprovisioningFactor.
2019-08-02 15:34:54 -05:00
Matt Keeler a7421c160f Implement mesh gateway management of service subsets
Fixup some error handling
2019-07-02 10:29:37 -04:00
R.B. Boyer 4bdb690a25
activate most discovery chain features in xDS for envoy (#6024) 2019-07-01 22:10:51 -05:00
Matt Keeler 8d953f5840 Implement Mesh Gateways
This includes both ingress and egress functionality.
2019-07-01 16:28:30 -04:00
Matt Keeler 813e009a2d
Prepare for having different service kinds that are all generic… (#6013)
Default to internal error when service kind is unknown
2019-06-24 15:05:36 -04:00
Paul Banks 0f27ffd163 Proxy Config Manager (#4729)
* Proxy Config Manager

This component watches for local state changes on the agent and ensures that each service registered locally with Kind == connect-proxy has it's state being actively populated in the cache.

This serves two purposes:
 1. For the built-in proxy, it ensures that the state needed to accept connections is available in RAM shortly after registration and likely before the proxy actually starts accepting traffic.
 2. For (future - next PR) xDS server and other possible future proxies that require _push_ based config discovery, this provides a mechanism to subscribe and be notified about updates to a proxy instance's config including upstream service discovery results.

* Address review comments

* Better comments; Better delivery of latest snapshot for slow watchers; Embed Config

* Comment typos

* Add upstream Stringer for funsies
2018-10-10 16:55:34 +01:00