Commit Graph

8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Kevin Leimkuhler 67bcd8f642
Add `gosec` and `errcheck` lints (#7954)
Closes #7826

This adds the `gosec` and `errcheck` lints to the `golangci` configuration. Most significant lints have been fixed my individual changes, but this enables them by default so that all future changes are caught ahead of time.

A significant amount of these lints are been exluced by the various `exclude-rules` rules added to `.golangci.yml`. These include operations are files that generally do not fail such as `Copy`, `Flush`, or `Write`. We also choose to ignore most errors when cleaning up functions via the `defer` keyword.

Aside from those, there are several other rules added that all have comments explaining why it's okay to ignore the errors that they cover.

Finally, several smaller fixes in the code have been made where it seems necessary to catch errors or at least log them.

Signed-off-by: Kevin Leimkuhler <kleimkuhler@icloud.com>
2022-03-03 10:09:51 -07:00
Alex Leong 167c823297
Add support for CLI extensions (#5762)
As described in https://github.com/linkerd/linkerd2/pull/5692, this PR adds support for CLI extensions.

Calling `linkerd foo` (if `foo` is not an existing Linkerd command) will now search the current PATH for an executable named `linkerd-foo` and invoke it with the current arguments.

* All arguments and flags will be passed to the extension command
* The Linkerd command itself will not process any flags
* To simplify parsing, flags are not allowed before the extension name

e.g. with an executable called `linkerd-foo` on my PATH:

```console
> linkerd foo install
Welcome to Linkerd foo!
Got: install
> linkerd foo --context=prod install
Welcome to Linkerd foo!
Got: --context=prod install
> linkerd --context=prod foo install
Cannot accept flags before Linkerd extension name
> linkerd bar install
Error: unknown command "bar" for "linkerd"
Run 'linkerd --help' for usage.
```

We also update `linkerd check` to invoke `linkerd <extension> check` for each extension found installed on the current cluster.  A check warning is emitted if the extension command is not found on the path.

e.g. with both `linkerd.io/extension=foo` and `linkerd.io/extension=bar` extensions installed on the cluster:

```console
> linkerd check
[...]
Linkerd extensions checks
=========================

Welcome to Linkerd foo!
Got: check --as-group=[] --cni-namespace=linkerd-cni --help=false --linkerd-cni-enabled=false --linkerd-namespace=linkerd --output=table --pre=false --proxy=false --verbose=false --wait=5m0s

linkerd-bar
-----------
‼ Linkerd extension command linkerd-bar exists

Status check results are ‼
```

Signed-off-by: Alex Leong <alex@buoyant.io>
2021-02-24 13:26:21 -08:00
Alejandro Pedraza 3ae653ae92
Refactor proxy injection to use Helm charts (#3200)
* Refactor proxy injection to use Helm charts

Fixes #3128

A new chart `/charts/patch` was created, that generates the JSON patch
payload that is to be returned to the k8s API when doing the injection
through the proxy injector, and it's also leveraged by the `linkerd
inject --manual` CLI.

The VFS was used by `linkerd install` to access the old chart under
`/chart`. Now the proxy injection also uses the Helm charts to generate
the JSON patch (see above) so we've moved the VFS from `cli/static` to a
new common place under `/pkg/charts/static`, and the new root for the VFS is
now `/charts`.

`linkerd install` hasn't yet migrated to use the new charts (that'll
happen in #3127), so the only change in that regard was the creation of
`/charts/chart` which is a symlink pointing to `/chart` that
`install.go` now uses, so that the VFS contains both the old and new
charts, as a temporary measure.

You can see that `/bin/Dockerfile-bin`, `/controller/Dockerfile` and
`/bin/build-cli-bin` do now `go generate` pointing to the new location
(and the `go generate` annotation was moved from `/cli/main.go` to
`pkg/charts/static/templates.go`).

The symlink trick doesn't work when building the binaries through
Docker, so `/bin/Dockerfile-bin` replaces the symlink with an actual
copy of `/chart`.

Also note that in `/controller/Dockerfile` we now need to include the
`prod` tag in `go install` like we do in `/bin/Dockerfile-bin` so that
the proxy injector does use the VFS instead of the local file system.

- The common logic to parse a chart has been moved from `install.go` to
`/pkg/charts/util.go`.
- The special ENV var in the proxy for "outbound router capacity" that
only applies to the Prometheus pod is now handled directly in the proxy
partial and all the associated go code could be removed.
- The `patch.go` lib for generating the JSON patch in go along
with its tests `patch_test.go` are no longer needed.
- Lots of functions in `/pkg/inject/inject.go` got removed/simplified
with their logic being moved into the charts themselves. As a
consequence lots of things in `inject_test.go` became irrelevant.
- Moved `template-values.go` from `/pkg/inject` to `pkg/charts` as that
contains the go structs representation of the chart variables that
will be leveraged in #3127.

Don't forget to run `/bin/helm.sh` whenever you make changes to charts
;-)

Signed-off-by: Alejandro Pedraza <alejandro@buoyant.io>
2019-08-07 17:32:37 -05:00
Kevin Leimkuhler 66070c26f4
Introduce go generate to embed static templates (#2189)
# Problem
In order to switch Linkerd template rendering to use `.yaml` files, static
assets must be bundled in the Go binary for use by `linkerd install`.

# Solution
The solution should not affect the local development process of building and
testing.

[vfsgen](https://github.com/shurcooL/vfsgen) generates Go code that statically
implements the provided `http.FileSystem`. Paired with `go generate` and Go
[build tags](https://golang.org/pkg/go/build/), we can continue to use the
template files on disk when developing with no change required.

In `!prod` Go builds, the `cli/static/templates.go` file provides a
`http.FileSystem` to the local templates. In `prod` Go builds, `go generate
./cli` generates `cli/static/generated_templates.gogen.go` that statically
provides the template files.

When built with `-tags prod`, the executable will be built with the staticlly
generated file instead of the local files.

# Validation
The binaries were compiled locally with `bin/docker-build`. The binaries were
then tested with `bin/test-run (pwd)/target/cli/darwin/linkerd`. All tests
passed.

No change was required to successfully run `bin/go-run cli install`. No change
was required to run `bin/linkerd install`.

Fixes #2153

Signed-off-by: Kevin Leimkuhler <kevin@kleimkuhler.com>
2019-02-04 18:09:47 -08:00
Oliver Gould 941cad4a9c
Migrate build infrastructure to linkerd2 (#1298)
This PR begins to migrate Conduit to Linkerd2:
* The proxy has been completely removed from this repo, and is now located at
  github.com/linkerd/linkerd2-proxy.
* A `Dockerfile-proxy` has been added to fetch the most-recently published proxy
  binary from build.l5d.io.
* Proxy-specific protobuf bindings have been moved to
  github.com/linkerd/linkerd2-proxy-api.
* All docker images now use the gcr.io/linkerd-io registry.
* `inject` now uses `LINKERD2_PROXY_` environment variables
* Go paths have been updated to reflect the new (future) repo location.
2018-07-09 15:38:38 -07:00
Andrew Seigner 9a40d984ff
Replace shelling out with kubernetes proxy (#249)
The conduit dashboard command asychronously shells out and runs "kubectl
proxy".

This change replaces the shelling out with calls to kubernetes proxy
APIs. It also allows us to enable race detection in our go tests, as the
shell out code tests did not pass race detection.

Fixes #173

Signed-off-by: Andrew Seigner <siggy@buoyant.io>
2018-02-02 10:31:59 -08:00
Dennis Adjei-Baah 63e2fbb97b Refactor each CLI command to silently exit on uncaught errors (#54)
* add silent exits on all conduit commands

* Revert "add silent exits on all conduit commands"

This reverts commit 07488ca

* adds back a change that was accidentally removed on revert

* Stop printing errors to stderr
2017-12-19 17:24:38 -08:00
Oliver Gould b104bd0676 Introducing Conduit, the ultralight service mesh
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.
2017-12-05 00:24:55 +00:00