This PR started out as a PR to link to our Resource Detail dashboard in
addition to grafana in the resource list pages, but I decided to refactor
the way we deal with our svgs since I was here.
This branch:
- modifies the GrafanaLink component to consist of the grafana icon
that links to grafana adds links to the ResourceDetail page in all our metrics tables
- adds a jsx component we can use to wrap svgs so that we don't get
annoying 404s on images that we have to handle
- remove the relative paths hack for images
- removes unused svg files in /img
- Remove a conduit image from our img folder
- Add a linkerd favicon, should no longer get the favicon not found console error
- Configure webpack to not hash image names
Make the sidebar icon based and collapsed by default
I had to move the call to version check into the sidebar component, indicator
when the sidebar was minimized if there was a conduit update.
Currently I just have letters representing the icons for Deployments, RCs and Pods,
but we can change this in the future.
* Link to Grafana from Conduit Dashboard
Previously the only way to access the Grafana dashboards was via direct
link, provided by the `conduit dashboard` command.
Add Grafana links throughout the Conduit Dashboard, next to all
Deployment objects. This change also modifies the behavior of the
ConduitLink helper, to enable linking to other deployments proxied by
the `conduit dashboard` command.
Part of #420
Signed-off-by: Andrew Seigner <siggy@buoyant.io>
* review feedback
Signed-off-by: Andrew Seigner <siggy@buoyant.io>
* review feedback, fix console, remove absolute
Signed-off-by: Andrew Seigner <siggy@buoyant.io>
We’ve built Conduit from the ground up to be the fastest, lightest,
simplest, and most secure service mesh in the world. It features an
incredibly fast and safe data plane written in Rust, a simple yet
powerful control plane written in Go, and a design that’s focused on
performance, security, and usability. Most importantly, Conduit
incorporates the many lessons we’ve learned from over 18 months of
production service mesh experience with Linkerd.
This repository contains a few tightly-related components:
- `proxy` -- an HTTP/2 proxy written in Rust;
- `controller` -- a control plane written in Go with gRPC;
- `web` -- a UI written in React, served by Go.