Missed the need to add support for unix domain socket config via
api/command line. This is a variant of the problems described in
it is easy to drop one.
Signed-off-by: Mark Anderson <manderson@hashicorp.com>
This was necessary in older versions of Consul, but was obsoleted by
making Consul add the port number itself when constructing the Envoy
configuration.
* Use CodeTabs for examples in multiple formats.
* Ensure correct language on code fences.
* Use CodeBlockConfig for examples with filenames, or which need
highlighted content.
This commit adds example JSON configs for several config entry
resources were missing examples in this language.
The examples have been updated to use the new CodeTabs resource
instead of the Tab component.
Consul 1.10 (PR #9792) introduced the ability to specify a prefix when
importing KV's. This however introduced a regression on Windows
systems which breaks `kv import`. The key name is joined with
specified`-prefix` using `filepath.Join()` which uses a forward slash
(/) to delimit values on Unix-based systems, and a backslash (\) to
delimit values on Windows – the latter of which is incompatible with
Consul KV paths.
This commit replaces filepath.Join() with path.Join() which uses a
forward slash as the delimiter, providing consistent key join behavior
across supported operating systems.
Fixes#10583
Replace call to /agent/self with /status/leader to verify agent
reachability before initializing a watch. This endpoint is not guarded
by ACLs, and as such can be queried by any API client regardless of
their permissions.
Fixes#9353
The constructor for Server is not at all the appropriate place to be setting default
values for a config struct that was passed in.
In production this value is always set from agent/config. In tests we should set the
default in a test helper.
This field has been unnecessary for a while now. It was always set to the same value
as PrimaryDatacenter. So we can remove the duplicate field and use PrimaryDatacenter
directly.
This change was made by GoLand refactor, which did most of the work for me.
This method suffered from similar naming to a couple other methods on Server, and had not great
re-use (2 callers). By copying a few of the lines into one of the callers we can move the
implementation into the second caller.
Once moved, we can see that ResolveTokenAndDefaultMeta is identical in both Client and Server, and
likely should be further refactored, possibly into ACLResolver.
This change is being made to make ACL resolution easier to trace.
This method was an alias for ACLResolver.ResolveTokenToIdentityAndAuthorizer. By removing the
method that does nothing the code becomes easier to trace.
ACL filtering only needs an authorizer and a logger. We can decouple filtering from
the ACLResolver by passing in the necessary logger.
This change is being made in preparation for moving the ACLResolver into an acl package
filterACLWithAuthorizer could never return an error. This change moves us a little bit
closer to being able to enable errcheck and catch problems caused by unhandled error
return values.
These functions are moved to the one place they are called to improve code locality.
They are being moved out of agent/consul/acl.go in preparation for moving
ACLResolver to an acl package.
These functions are used in only one place. Move the functions next to their one caller
to improve code locality.
This change is being made in preparation for moving the ACLResolver into an
acl package. The moved functions were previously in the same file as the ACLResolver.
By moving them out of that file we may be able to move the entire file
with fewer modifications.
* defer setting the state before returning to avoid being stuck in `INITIALIZING` state
* add changelog
* move comment with the right if statement
* ca: report state transition error from setSTate
* update comment to reflect state transition
Co-authored-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@hashicorp.com>
Follow up to: https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/pull/10738#discussion_r680190210
Previously we were passing an Authorizer that would always allow the
operation, then later checking the authorization using vetServiceTxnOp.
On the surface this seemed strange, but I think it was actually masking
a bug as well. Over time `servicePreApply` was changed to add additional
authorization for `service.Proxy.DestinationServiceName`, but because
we were passing a nil Authorizer, that authorization was not handled on
the txn_endpoint.
`TxnServiceOp.FillAuthzContext` has some special handling in enterprise,
so we need to make sure to continue to use that from the Txn endpoint.
This commit removes the `vetServiceTxnOp` function, and passes in the
`FillAuthzContext` function so that `servicePreApply` can be used by
both the catalog and txn endpoints. This should be much less error prone
and prevent bugs like this in the future.
Follow up to https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/pull/10737#discussion_r680134445
Move the check for the Intention.DestinationName into the Authorizer to remove the
need to check what kind of Authorizer is being used.
It sounds like this check is only for legacy ACLs, so is probably just a safeguard
.
1. do not emit the metric if Query fails
2. properly check for PrimaryUsersIntermediate, the logic was inverted
Also improve the logging by including the metric name in the log message