Fixes#2720 and 2711
This changes the default behavior of `linkerd inject` to not inject the
proxy but just the `linkerd.io/inject: enabled` annotation for the
auto-injector to pick it up (regardless of any namespace annotation).
A new `--manual` mode was added, which behaves as before, injecting
the proxy in the command output.
The unit tests are running with `--manual` to avoid any changes in the
fixtures.
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>
This is an initial change to separate out config-specific k8s objects
from the control-plane components. The eventual goal will be rendering
these configs as the first stage of a multi-stage install.
Part of #2337
Signed-off-by: Andrew Seigner <siggy@buoyant.io>
92f15e78a9 incorrectly removed the config
version override when patching a config from options, which caused
upgrade to stop updating the config version.
Fixes#2660
Add validation webhook for service profiles
Fixes#2075
Todo in a follow-up PRs: remove the SP check from the CLI check.
Signed-off-by: Alejandro Pedraza <alejandro@buoyant.io>
When the --ha flag is set, we currently set a 10m CPU request, which
corresponds to 1% of a core, which isn't actually enough to keep the
proxy responding to health checks if you have 100 processes on the box.
Let's give ourselves a little more breathing room.
Fixes#2643
This change introduces a basic unit test for the `linkerd upgrade`
command. Given a mock k8s client with linkerd-config and
linkerd-identity-issuer objects, it validates the rendered yaml output
against an expected file.
To enable this testing, most of the logic in the top-level upgrade
command has been moved down into a `validateAndBuild` method.
TODO:
- test individual functions around mutating options, flags, configs, and
values
- enable reading the install information from a manifest rather than k8s
Part of #2637
Signed-off-by: Andrew Seigner <siggy@buoyant.io>
This change introduces integration tests for `linkerd inject`. The tests
perform CLI injection, with and without params, and validates the
output, including annotations.
Also add some known errors in logs to `install_test.go`.
TODO:
- deploy uninjected and injected resources to a default and
auto-injected cluster
- test creation and update
Part of #2459
Signed-off-by: Andrew Seigner <siggy@buoyant.io>
* Define proxy version override annotation
* Don't override global linkerd version during inject
This ensures consistent usages of the config.linkerd.io/linkerd-version and
linkerd.io/proxy-version annotations. The former will only be used to track
overridden version, while the latter shows the cluster's current default
version.
* Rename proxy version config override annotation
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>
`storage.tsdb.retention` is deprecated in favor of
`storage.tsdb.retention.time`.
Replace all occurrences.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Seigner <siggy@buoyant.io>
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
This change moves resource-templating logic into a dedicated template,
creates new values types to model kubernetes resource constraints, and
changes the `--ha` flag's behavior to create these resource templates
instead of hardcoding the resource constraints in the various templates.
Allow the TCP CONNECTIONS column to be shown on all stat queries in the CLI.
This column will now be called TCP_CONN for brevity.
Read/Write bytes will still only be shown on -o wide or -o json
Some of our templates have started to use 'with .Values' scoping to
limit boilerplate within the tempates.
This change makes this uniform in all templates.
When reading a Linkerd configuration, we cannot determine whether
auto-inject should be configured.
This change adds auto-inject configuration to the global config
structure. Currently, this configuration is effectively boolean,
determined by the presence of an empty value (versus a null).
Have the Webhook react to pod creation/update only
This was already working almost out-of-the-box, just had to:
- Change the webhook config so it watches pods instead of deployments
- Grant some extra ClusterRole permissions
- Add the piece that figures what's the OwnerReference and add the label
for it
- Manually inject service account mount paths
- Readd volumes tests
Fixes#2342 and #1751
Signed-off-by: Alejandro Pedraza <alejandro@buoyant.io>
Currently, the install UUID is regenerated each time `install` is run.
When implementing cluster upgrades, it seems most appropriate to reuse
the prior UUID, rather than generate a new one.
To this end, this change stores an "Installation UUID" in the global
linkerd config.
This change reintroduces identity hinting to the destination service.
The Get endpoint includes identities for pods that are injected with an
identity-mode of "default" and have the same linkerd control plane.
A `serviceaccount` label is now also added to destination response
metadata so that it's accessible in prometheus and tap.
This change adds a new `linkerd2-proxy-identity` binary to the `proxy`
container image as well as a `linkerd2-proxy-run` entrypoint script.
The inject process now sets environment variables on pods to support
identity, including identity names for the destination and identity
services.
As the proxy starts, the identity helper creates a key and CSR in a
tmpfs. As the proxy starts, it reads these files, as well as a
serviceaccount token, and provisions a certificate from controller.
The proxy's /ready endpoint will not succeed until a certificate has
been provisioned.
The proxy will not participate in identity with services other than the
controllers until the Destination controller is modified to provide
identities via discovery.
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
https://github.com/linkerd/linkerd2/pull/2521 introduces an "Identity"
controller, but there is no way to include it in linkerd installation.
This change alters the `install` flow as follows:
- An Identity service is _always_ installed;
- Issuer credentials may be specified via the CLI;
- If no Issuer credentials are provided, they are generated each time `install` is called.
- Proxies are NOT configured to use the identity service.
- It's possible to override the credential generation logic---especially
for tests---via install options that can be configured via the CLI.
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.
* Defined the config annotations as new constants in labels.go
* Introduced the getOverride() functions to override configs
* Introduced new accessors to abstract with type casting
Signed-off-by: Ivan Sim <ivan@buoyant.io>
linkerd/linkerd2#1721 introduced a `--single-namespace` install flag,
enabling the control-plane to function within a single namespace. With
the introduction of ServiceProfiles, and upcoming identity changes, this
single namespace mode of operation is becoming less viable.
This change removes the `--single-namespace` install flag, and all
underlying support. The control-plane must have cluster-wide access to
operate.
A few related changes:
- Remove `--single-namespace` from `linkerd check`, this motivates
combining some check categories, as we can always assume cluster-wide
requirements.
- Simplify the `k8s.ResourceAuthz` API, as callers no longer need to
make a decision based on cluster-wide vs. namespace-wide access.
Components either have access, or they error out.
- Modify the web dashboard to always assume ServiceProfiles are enabled.
Reverts #1721
Part of #2337
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.
This ensures that the MWC always picks up the latest config template during version upgrade.
The removed `update()` method and RBAC permissions are superseded by @2163.
Signed-off-by: Ivan Sim <ivan@buoyant.io>
- 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>
linkerd/linkerd2#2349 introduced a `SelfSubjectAccessReview` check at
startup, to determine whether each control-plane component should
establish Kubernetes watches cluster-wide or namespace-wide. If this
check occurs before the linkerd-proxy sidecar is ready, it fails, and
the control-plane component restarts.
This change configures each control-plane pod to skip outbound port 443
when injecting the proxy, allowing the control-plane to connect to
Kubernetes regardless of the `linkerd-proxy` state.
A longer-term fix should involve a more robust control-plane startup,
that is resilient to failed Kubernetes API requests. An even longer-term
fix could involve injecting `linkerd-proxy` as a Kubernetes "sidecar"
container, when that becomes available.
Workaround for #2407
Signed-off-by: Andrew Seigner <siggy@buoyant.io>
As described in #2217, the controller returns TLS identities for results even
when the destination pod may not be able to participate in identity
requester: specifically, the other pod may not have the same controller
namespace or it may not be injected with identity.
This change introduces a new annotation, linkerd.io/identity-mode that is set
when injecting pods (via both CLI and webhook). This annotation is always
added.
The destination service now only returns TLS identities when this annotation
is set to optional on a pod and the destination pod uses the same controller.
These semantics are expected to change before the 2.3 release.
Fixes#2217
The control-plane components relied on a `--single-namespace` param,
passed from `linkerd install` into each individual component, to
determine which namespaces they were authorized to access, and whether
to support ServiceProfiles. This command-line flag was redundant given
the authorization rules encoded in the parent `linkerd install` output,
via [Cluster]Role[Binding]s.
Modify the control-plane components to query Kubernetes at startup to
determine which namespaces they are authorized to access, and whether
ServiceProfile support is available. This allows removal of the
`--single-namespace` flag on the components.
Also update `bin/test-cleanup` to cleanup the ServiceProfile CRD.
TODO:
- Remove `--single-namespace` flag on `linkerd install`, part of #2164
Signed-off-by: Andrew Seigner <siggy@buoyant.io>
Also, some protobuf updates:
* Rename `api_port` to match recent changes in CLI code.
* Remove the `cni` message because it won't be used.
* Remove `registry` field from proto types. This helps to avoid having to workaround edge cases like fully-qualified image name in different format, and overriding user-specified Linkerd version etc.
Signed-off-by: Ivan Sim <ivan@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>
When changing templates, it's can be pretty time-intensive to
repair all test fixtures.
This change instruments CLI tests with two flags, `-update` and
`-pretty-diff` that control how test fixtures are diffed. When the
`-update` flag is set, the tests fixtures are overwritten as tests
execute. The `-pretty-diff` flag causes the full text of the fixture
to be printed on mismatch.