Add config.linkerd.io/disable-identity annotation
First part of #2540
We'll tackle support for `--disable-identity` in `linkerd install` in a
separate commit.
Signed-off-by: Alejandro Pedraza <alejandro@buoyant.io>
* The 'linkerd-version' CLI flag is renamed to 'control-plane-version'
* Add version field to proxy config
* Add the control plane version to the global config
* Unit test for init image version
* Use more specific control plane and proxy versions in unit tests
Signed-off-by: Ivan Sim <ivan@buoyant.io>
* Disable external profiles by default
* Rename the --disable-external-profiles flag to --enable-external-profiles
Signed-off-by: Ivan Sim <ivan@buoyant.io>
The `install` command errors when the deploy target contains an existing
Linkerd deployment. The `upgrade` command is introduced to reinstall or
reconfigure the Linkerd control plane.
Upgrade works as follows:
1. The controller config is fetched from the Kubernetes API. The Public
API is not used, because we need to be able to reinstall the control
plane when the Public API is not available; and we are not concerned
about RBAC restrictions preventing the installer from reading the
config (as we are for inject).
2. The install configuration is read, particularly the flags used during
the last install/upgrade. If these flags were not set again during the
upgrade, the previous values are used as if they were passed this time.
The configuration is updated from the combination of these values,
including the install configuration itself.
Note that some flags, including the linkerd-version, are omitted
since they are stored elsewhere in the configurations and don't make
sense to track as overrides..
3. The issuer secrets are read from the Kubernetes API so that they can
be re-used. There is currently no way to reconfigure issuer
certificates. We will need to create _another_ workflow for
updating these credentials.
4. The install rendering is invoked with values and config fetched from
the cluster, synthesized with the new configuration.
When installing Linkerd, a user may override default settings, or may
explicitly configure defaults. Consider install options like `--ha
--controller-replicas=4` -- the `--ha` flag sets a new default value for
the controller-replicas, and then we override it.
When we later upgrade this cluster, how can we know how to configure the
cluster?
We could store EnableHA and ControllerReplicas configurations in the
config, but what if, in a later upgrade, the default value changes? How
can we know whether the user specified an override or just used the
default?
To solve this, we add an `Install` message into a new config.
This message includes (at least) the CLI flags used to invoke
install.
upgrade does not specify defaults for install/proxy-options fields and,
instead, uses the persisted install flags to populate default values,
before applying overrides from the upgrade invocation.
This change breaks the protobuf compatibility by altering the
`installation_uuid` field introduced in 9c442f6885.
Because this change was not yet released (even in an edge release), we
feel that it is safe to break.
Fixes https://github.com/linkerd/linkerd2/issues/2574
Because the linkerd-config resource is created after pods that require
it, they can be started before the files are mounted, causing the pods
to restart integration tests to fail.
If we extract the config into its own template file, it can be inserted
before pods are created.
The introduction of identity in 0626fa37 created new state in the
control plane's configuration that must be considered when re-installing
the control plane or when injecting pods.
This change alters `install` to fail if it would seem to conflict with
an existing installation. This behavior may be disabled with the
`--ignore-cluster` flag.
Furthermore, `inject` now _requires_ that it can fetch a configuration
from the control plane in order to operate. Otherwise the
`--ignore-cluster` and `--disable-identity` flags must be specified.
This change does not actually instrument pods to use identity yet---it
lays the framework for proxy identity without changing the test fixture
output (besides a change to how identity HA is configured).
Fixes#2531
Currently, cli/cmd/root.go provides a couple of utilities for building
clients to Linkerd's Public API; however these utilities are infallible,
execute health checks, etc.
There are a class of API clients---for instance, when an inject command
wants to acquire configuration from the API---where these checks are
undesirable. The version CLI built such a client, for example.
This change consolidates the various utilities into a single file.
Furthermore, it renames these utilities to clarify they differ.
The new proxy has changed its configuration as follows:
- `LISTENER` urls are now `LISTEN_ADDR` addresses;
- `CONTROL_URL` is now `DESTINATION_SVC_ADDR`;
- `*_NAMESPACE` vars are no longer needed;
- The `PROXY_ID` is now the `DESTINATION_CONTEXT`;
- The "metrics" port is now the "admin" port, since it serves more than
just metrics;
- A readiness probe now checks a dedicated /ready endpoint eagerly.
Identity injection is **NOT** configured by this branch.
The proxy's TLS implementation has changed to use a new _Identity_ controller.
In preparation for this, the `--tls=optional` CLI flag has been removed
from install and inject; and the `ca` controller has been deleted. Metrics
and UI treatments for TLS have **not** been removed, as they will continue to
be valuable for the new Identity system.
With the removal of the old identity scheme, the Destination service's proxy
ID field is now set with an opaque string (e.g. `ns:emojivoto`) to enable
locality awareness.
It's sometimes helpful to spotcheck proxy metrics from a specific pod,
but doing so with kubectl requires a few steps.
Introduce a new `linkerd metrics` command. When given a pod name and
namespace, returns a dump of the proxy's /metrics endpoint.
Also modify the k8s.portforward module to accept initialized k8s config
and client objects, to enable testing.
Fixes#2350.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Seigner <siggy@buoyant.io>
* Changed the protobuf definition to take out destinationApiPort entirely
* Store destinationAPIPort as a constant in pkg/inject.go
Fixes#2351
Signed-off-by: Aditya Sharma <hello@adi.run>
Show TCP stats in the linkerd stat output. They are not shown by default, but
will be queried when using -o wide or -o json.
Also display read/write bytes as bytes per sec in the CLI and dashboard.
- Created the pkg/inject package to hold the new injection shared lib.
- Extracted from `/cli/cmd/inject.go` and `/cli/cmd/inject_util.go`
the core methods doing the workload parsing and injection, and moved them into
`/pkg/inject/inject.go`. The CLI files should now deal only with
strictly CLI concerns, and applying the json patch returned by the new
lib.
- Proceeded analogously with `/cli/cmd/uninject.go` and
`/pkg/inject/uninject.go`.
- The `InjectReport` struct and helping methods were moved into
`/pkg/inject/report.go`
- Refactored webhook to use the new injection lib
- Removed linkerd-proxy-injector-sidecar-config ConfigMap
- Added the ability to add pod labels and annotations without having to
specify the already existing ones
Fixes#1748, #2289
Signed-off-by: Alejandro Pedraza <alejandro.pedraza@gmail.com>
goconst finds repeated strings that could be replaced by a constant:
https://github.com/jgautheron/goconst
Part of #217
Signed-off-by: Andrew Seigner <siggy@buoyant.io>
gosimple is a Go linter that specializes in simplifying code
Also fix one spelling error in `cred_test.go`
Part of #217
Signed-off-by: Andrew Seigner <siggy@buoyant.io>
Add options in CLI for setting proxy CPU and memory limits
- Deprecated `proxy-cpu` and `proxy-memory` in favor of `proxy-cpu-limit` and `proxy-memory-limit`
- Updated validations and tests to reflect new options
Signed-off-by: TwinProduction <twin@twinnation.org>
Up until now, the proxy-api controller service has been the sole service
that the proxy communicates with, implementing the majoriry of the API
defined in the `linkerd2-proxy-api` repo. But this is about to change:
linkerd/linkerd2-proxy-api#25 introduces a new Identity service; and
this service must be served outside of the existing proxy-api service
in the linkerd-controller deployment (so that it may run under a
distinct service account).
With this change, the "proxy-api" name becomes less descriptive. It's no
longer "the service that serves the API for the proxy," it's "the
service that serves the Destination API to the proxy." Therefore, it
seems best to bite the bullet and rename this to be the "destination"
service (i.e. because it only serves the
`io.linkerd.proxy.destination.Destination` service).
Co-authored-by: Kevin Lingerfelt <kl@buoyant.io>
Signed-off-by: Kevin Lingerfelt <kl@buoyant.io>
The Proxy API service lacked introspection of its internal state.
Introduce a new gRPC Discovery API, implemented by two servers:
1) Proxy API Server: returns a snapshot of discovery state
2) Public API Server: pass-through to the Proxy API Server
Also wire up a new `linkerd endpoints` command.
Fixes#2165
Signed-off-by: Andrew Seigner <siggy@buoyant.io>
In linkerd/linkerd2-proxy#186, the proxy supports configuration of TCP
keepalive values.
This change sets `LINKERD2_PROXY_INBOUND_ACCEPT_KEEPALIVE` and
`LINKERD2_PROXY_OUTBOUND_CONNECT_KEEPALIVE` to 10s when injecting the
proxy, so that remote connections are configured with a keepalive.
This configuration is NOT yet exposed through the CLI. This may be done
in a followup, if necessary.
Fixes#1949
* Export RootOptions and BuildFirewallConfiguration so that the cni-plugin can use them.
* Created the cni-plugin based on istio-cni implementation
* Create skeleton files that need to be filled out.
* Create the install scripts and finish up plugin to write iptables
* Added in an integration test around the install_cni.sh and updated the script to handle the case where it isn't the only plugin. Removed the istio kubernetes.go file in favor of pkg/k8s; initial usage of this package; found and fixed the typo in the ClusterRole and ClusterRoleBinding; found the docker-build-cni-plugin script
* Corrected an incorrect name in the docker build file for cni-plugin
* Rename linkerd2-cni to linkerd-cni
* Fixup Dockerfile and clean up code a bit as well as logging statements.
* Update Gopkg.lock after master merge.
* Update test file to remove temporary tag.
* Fixed the command to run during the test while building up the docker run.
* Added attributions to applicable files; in the test file, use a different container for each test scenario and also print the docker logs to stdout when there is an error;
* Add the --no-init-container flag to install and inject. This flag will not output the initContainer and will add an annotation assuming that the cni will be used in this case.
* Update .travis.yml to build the cni-plugin docker image before running the tests.
* Workaround golint warnings.
* Create a new command to install the linkerd-cni plugin.
* Add the --no-init-container option to linkerd inject
* Use the setup ip tables annotation during the proxy auto inject webhook prevent/allow addition of an init container; move cni-plugin tests to the integration-test section of travis
* gate the cni-plugin tests with the -integration-tests flag; remove unnecessary deployment .yaml file.
* Incorporate PR Cleanup suggestions.
* Remove the SetupIPTablesLabel annotation and use config flags and the presence of the init container to determine whether the cni-plugin writes ip tables.
* Fix a logic bug in the cni-plugin code that prevented the iptables from being written; Address PR comments; make tests pass.
* Update go deps shas
* Changed the single file install-cni plugin filename to be .conf vs .conflist; Incorporated latest PR comments around spacing with the new renderer among others.
* Fix an issue with renaming .conf to .conflist when needed.
* Renamed some of the variables to try to make it more clear what is going on.
* Address final PR comments.
* Hide cni flags for the time being.
Signed-off-by: Cody Vandermyn <cody.vandermyn@nordstrom.com>
This branch removes the `--proxy-bind-timeout` flag from the
`linkerd inject` and `linkerd install` CLI commands, and the
`LINKERD2_PROXY_BIND_TIMEOUT` environment variable from their output.
This is in preparation for removing that timeout from the proxy (as
described in #2013).
I thought it was prudent to remove this from the CLIs before removing it
from the proxy, so we can't create a situation where the CLIs produce
output that results in broken proxy containers.
Fixes#2013
Signed-off-by: Eliza Weisman <eliza@buoyant.io>
This introduces a `linkerd install-sp` command to install service
profiles into the linkerd control plane. It installs one service profile
for each of controller-api, proxy-api, prometheus, and grafana.
Fixes#1901
Signed-off-by: Andrew Seigner <siggy@buoyant.io>
The default font in Windows console did not support the Unicode
characters recently added to check and inject commands. Also the color
library the linkerd cli depends on was not being used in a
cross-platform way.
Replace the existing Unicode characters used in `check` and `inject`
with characters available in most fonts, including Windows console.
Similarly replace the spinner used in `check` with one that uses
characters available in most fonts.
Modify `check` and `inject` to use `color.Output` and `color.Error`,
which wrap `os.Stdout` and `os.Stderr`, and perform special
tranformations when on Windows.
Add a `--no-color` option to `linkerd logs`. While stern uses the same
color library that `check`/`inject` use, it is not yet using the
`color.Output` API for Windows support. That issue is tracked at:
https://github.com/wercker/stern/issues/69
Relates to https://github.com/linkerd/linkerd2/pull/2087
Signed-off-by: Andrew Seigner <siggy@buoyant.io>
When debugging control plane issues or issues pertaining to a linkerd proxy, it can be cumbersome to get logs from affected containers quickly.
This PR adds a new `logs` command to the Linkerd CLI to surface log lines from any container within linkerd's control plane. This feature relies heavily on [stern](https://github.com/wercker/stern), which already provides this behavior. This PR integrates this package into the Linkerd CLI to allow users to quickly retrieve logs whenever they run into issues when using Linkerd.
Signed-off-by: Dennis Adjei-Baah <dennis@buoyant.io>
The outputs of the `check` and `inject` commands did not vary much
between successful and failed executions, and were a bit verbose and
challenging to parse.
Reorganize output of `check` and `inject` commands, to provide more
output when errors occur, and less output when successful.
Specific changes:
`linkerd check`
- visually group checks by category
- introduce `hintURL`'s, to provide doc links when checks fail
- add spinners when retrying, remove additional retry lines
- colored unicode characters to indicate success/warning/failure
`linkerd inject`
- modify default output to mirror `kubectl apply`
- only output non-successful inject reports
- support `--verbose` flag to output all inject reports
Fixes#1471, #1653, #1656, #1739
Signed-off-by: Andrew Seigner <siggy@buoyant.io>
The linkerd check command organized the various checks via loosely
coupled category IDs, category names, and checkers themselves, all with
ordering defined by consumers of this code.
This change removes category IDs in favor of category names, groups all
checkers by category, and enforces ordering at the HealthChecker
level.
Part of #1471, depends on #2078.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Seigner <siggy@buoyant.io>
Add `linkerd uninject` command
uninject.go iterates through the resources annotations, labels,
initContainers and Containers, removing what we know was injected by
linkerd.
The biggest part of this commit is the refactoring of inject.go, to make
it more generic and reusable by uninject.
The idea is that in a following PR this functionality will get reused by
`linkerd inject` to uninject as as preliminary step to injection, as a
solution to #1970.
This was tested successfully on emojivoto with:
```
1) inject:
kubectl get -n emojivoto deployment -o yaml | bin/linkerd inject - |
kubectl apply -f -
2) uninject:
kubectl get -n emojivoto deployment -o yaml | bin/linkerd uninject - |
kubectl apply -f -
```
Also created unit tests for uninject.go. The fixture files from the inject
tests could be reused. But as now the input files act as outputs, they
represent existing resources and required these changes (that didn't
affect inject):
- Rearranged fields in alphabetical order.
- Added fields that are only relevant for existing resources (e.g.
creationTimestamp and status.replicas in StatefulSets)
Signed-off-by: Alejandro Pedraza <alejandro@buoyant.io>
This is a followup branch from #2023:
- delete `proxy/client.go`, move code to `destination-client`
- move `RenderTapEvent` and stat functions from `util` to `cmd`
Signed-off-by: Andrew Seigner <siggy@buoyant.io>
* add securityContext with runAsUser: {{.ProxyUID}} to the various containers in the install template
* Update golden to reflect new additions
* changed to a different user id than the proxy user id
* Added a controller-uid install option
* change the port that the proxy-injector runs
* The initContainers needs to be run as the root user.
* move security contexts to container level
Signed-off-by: Cody Vandermyn <cody.vandermyn@nordstrom.com>
Add support for service profiles created on external (non-service) authorities. For example, this allows you to create a service profile named `linkerd.io` which will apply to calls made to `linkerd.io`.
This is done by changing the `LINKERD2_PROXY_DESTINATION_PROFILE_SUFFIXES` to `.` so that the proxy will attempt to lookup a service profile for any authority. We provide the `--disable-external-profiles` proxy flag to revert this behavior in case it is a problem.
We also refactor the proxy-api implementation of GetProfiles so that it does the profile lookup, regardless of if the authority looks like a Kubernetes service name or not. To simplify this, support for multiple resolves (which was unused) was removed.
Signed-off-by: Alex Leong <alex@buoyant.io>
Add a routes command which displays per-route stats for services that have service profiles defined.
This change has three parts:
* A new public-api RPC called `TopRoutes` which serves per-route stat data about a service
* An implementation of TopRoutes in the public-api service. This implementation reads per-route data from Prometheus. This is very similar to how the StatSummaries RPC and much of the code was able to be refactored and shared.
* A new CLI command called `routes` which displays the per-route data in a tabular or json format. This is very similar to the `stat` command and much of the code was able to be refactored and shared.
Note that as of the currently targeted proxy version, only outbound route stats are supported so the `--from` flag must be included in order to see data. This restriction will be lifted in an upcoming change once we add support for inbound route stats as well.
Signed-off-by: Alex Leong <alex@buoyant.io>
The existence of an invalid service profile causes `linkerd check` to fail. This means that it is not possible to open the Linkerd dashboard with the `linkerd dashboard` command. While service profile validation is useful, it should not lock users out.
Add the ability to designate health checks as warnings. A failed warning health check will display a warning output in `linkerd check` but will not affect the overall success of the command. Switch the service profile validation to be a warning.
Signed-off-by: Alex Leong <alex@buoyant.io>
Add a new CLI command: `linkerd profile --template` which outputs a sample service profile yaml. Users can edit this sample and then `kubectl apply` it to add a service profile. The sample serves as "documentation by example" of what service profiles may contain.
Example usage:
```bash
linkerd profile -n emojivoto --template web-svc > web-svc-profile.yaml
# edit web-svc-profile.yaml in your favorite editor
kubectl apply -f web-svc-profile.yaml
```
Signed-off-by: Alex Leong <alex@buoyant.io>
* Support auto sidecar-injection
1. Add proxy-injector deployment spec to cli/install/template.go
2. Inject the Linkerd CA bundle into the MutatingWebhookConfiguration
during the webhook's start-up process.
3. Add a new handler to the CA controller to create a new secret for the
webhook when a new MutatingWebhookConfiguration is created.
4. Declare a config map to store the proxy and proxy-init container
specs used during the auto-inject process.
5. Ignore namespace and pods that are labeled with
linkerd.io/auto-inject: disabled or linkerd.io/auto-inject: completed
6. Add new flag to `linkerd install` to enable/disable proxy
auto-injection
Proposed implementation for #561.
* Resolve missing packages errors
* Move the auto-inject label to the pod level
* PR review items
* Move proxy-injector to its own deployment
* Ignore pods that already have proxy injected
This ensures the webhook doesn't error out due to proxy that are injected using the command
* PR review items on creating/updating the MWC on-start
* Replace API calls to ConfigMap with file reads
* Fixed post-rebase broken tests
* Don't mutate the auto-inject label
Since we started using healhcheck.HasExistingSidecars() to ensure pods with
existing proxies aren't mutated, we don't need to use the auto-inject label as
an indicator.
This resolves a bug which happens with the kubectl run command where the deployment
is also assigned the auto-inject label. The mutation causes the pod auto-inject
label to not match the deployment label, causing kubectl run to fail.
* Tidy up unit tests
* Include proxy resource requests in sidecar config map
* Fixes to broken YAML in CLI install config
The ignore inbound and outbound ports are changed to string type to
avoid broken YAML caused by the string conversion in the uint slice.
Also, parameterized the proxy bind timeout option in template.go.
Renamed the sidecar config map to
'linkerd-proxy-injector-webhook-config'.
Signed-off-by: ihcsim <ihcsim@gmail.com>
* Added --context flag to specify the context to use to talk to the Kubernetes apiserver
* Fix tests that are failing
* Updated context flag description
Signed-off-by: Darko Radisic <ffd2subroutine@users.noreply.github.com>
Horizontal Pod Autoscaling does not work when container definitions in pods do not all have resource requests, so here's the ability to add CPU + Memory requests to install + inject commands by proving proxy options --proxy-cpu + --proxy-memory
Fixes#1480
Signed-off-by: Ben Lambert <ben@blam.sh>