Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Dennis Adjei-Baah ad42f2f8ab
Retry k8s watch endpoints on error (#510)
Shortly after conduit is installed in k8s environment. The control plane component that establishes a watch endpoint with k8s run in to networking issues during proxy initialization. During failure, each watcher fails to retry its connection to k8s watch endpoint which leads to timeouts and eventually, multiple controller pod restarts.

This PR adds retry logic to each "watch" enabled package.

fixes #478

Signed-off-by: Dennis Adjei-Baah <dennis@buoyant.io>
2018-03-07 13:40:43 -08:00
Kevin Lingerfelt 8e2ef9d658
Handle ExternalName-type svcs in destination service (#490)
* Handle ExternalName-type svcs in destination service

* Move refresh interval to a global var

Signed-off-by: Kevin Lingerfelt <kl@buoyant.io>
2018-03-02 11:30:53 -08:00
Phil Calçado 9410da471a
Better error handling for Tap (#177)
Previously, running `$conduit tap` would return a `Unexpected EOF` error when the server wasn't available. This was due to a few problems with the way we were handling errors all the way down the tap server. This change fixes that and cleans some of the protobuf-over-HTTP code.

- first step towards #49
- closes #106
2018-01-25 11:49:38 -05:00
Kevin Lingerfelt e56be9bf0e
Bump k8s watch intialization timeout, cleanup logging (#166)
Signed-off-by: Kevin Lingerfelt <kl@buoyant.io>
2018-01-17 15:31:01 -08:00
Kevin Lingerfelt 1dc1c00a2a
Upgrade k8s.io/client-go to v6.0.0 (#122)
* Sort imports

Signed-off-by: Kevin Lingerfelt <kl@buoyant.io>

* Upgrade k8s.io/client-go to v6.0.0

Signed-off-by: Kevin Lingerfelt <kl@buoyant.io>

* Make k8s store initialization blocking with timeout

Signed-off-by: Kevin Lingerfelt <kl@buoyant.io>
2018-01-11 10:22:37 -08:00
Christopher Schmidt ce69c2e534 returns rs name in case of there's no deployment runconduit/conduit#80 (#81)
Signed-off-by: Christopher Schmidt <fakod666@googlemail.com>
2018-01-02 11:24:09 -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