* backport of commit 30051fc5fe
* backport of commit 5b71320100
* backport of commit 9603006e96
---------
Co-authored-by: Morgan Drake <12264057+modrake@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Ronald Ekambi <ronekambi@gmail.com>
* Explicit container test
* remove static resources
* fix passing serviceBindPorts
* WIP
* fix explicit upstream test
* use my image in CI until dataplane is fixed.
* gofmt
* fixing reference to v2beta1 in test-containers
* WIP
* remove bad references
* add missing license headers
* allow access internal/resource/resourcetest
* fix check-allowed-imports to append array items
* use preview image for dataplane
* revert some inadverntent comment updates in peering_topology
* add building local consul-dataplane image to compatibility-tests CI
* fix substitution in CI
* change upstreams to destinations based on incoming change
* fixing use of upstreams in resource update
* remove commented out lines and enable envoy concurrency on dataplane.
* changes to addess PR feedback
* small fixes
---------
Co-authored-by: Eric <eric@haberkorn.co>
update ENVOY_VERSION and documentation of it used in the bats envoy tests.
Co-authored-by: github-team-consul-core <github-team-consul-core@hashicorp.com>
Prevent build failures which may occur when dependencies is
not up to date by updating them with the go get -u flag.
Add the go get -f flag as well, to override the check that
each package has been checked out from the repo implied by
its import path.
Add a vet target in order to catch suspicious constructs
reported by go vet.
Vet has successfully detected problems in the past,
for example, see
c9333b1b9b
Some vet flags are noisy. In particular, the following flags
reports a large amount of generally unharmful constructs:
```
-assign: check for useless assignments
-composites: check that composite literals used field-keyed
elements
-shadow: check for shadowed variables
-shadowstrict: whether to be strict about shadowing
-unreachable: check for unreachable code
```
In order to skip running the flags mentioned above, vet is
invoked on a directory basis with `go tool vet .` since package-
level type-checking with `go vet` doesn't accept flags.
Hence, each file is vetted in isolation, which is weaker than
package-level type-checking. But nevertheless, it might catch
suspicious constructs that pose a real issue.
The vet target runs the following flags on the entire repo:
```
-asmdecl: check assembly against Go declarations
-atomic: check for common mistaken usages of the
sync/atomic package
-bool: check for mistakes involving boolean operators
-buildtags: check that +build tags are valid
-copylocks: check that locks are not passed by value
-methods: check that canonically named methods are canonically
defined
-nilfunc: check for comparisons between functions and nil
-printf: check printf-like invocations
-rangeloops: check that range loop variables are used correctly
-shift: check for useless shifts
-structtags: check that struct field tags have canonical format
and apply to exported fields as needed
-unsafeptr: check for misuse of unsafe.Pointer
```
Now and then, it might make sense to check the output of the
disabled flags manually.
For example, `VETARGS=-unreachable make vet` can detect several
lines of dead code that can be deleted, etc.