When a resource has no tap events being streamed to the Tap UI, and a user hits the "Stop" button in the Tap page, the tap stream is left open due to the WebSocket connection not being closed.
It looks like the web server's tap client that is created to stream events from the tap server blocks the main request thread in the web server. This causes the web server to stop receiving any subsequent close frames from the UI i.e. when the "Stop" button is clicked.
This PR moves the tapClient initialization code to a separate goroutine, specifically, the goroutine that reads tap events from the incoming grpc tap stream. This allows the main thread to continue reading messages from the WebSocket connection and allow it to receive close frames.
fixes#1665
Signed-off-by: Dennis Adjei-Baah <dennis@buoyant.io>
Previously, WebSocket error messages would appear with the first
couple characters cut off. I've fixed this by using ws.WriteControl
instead of ws.WriteMessage to write errors, as gorilla does in
their example app.
- Use writeControl to write error messages to the client
- Stop the spinner if there is an error present
Increase the MaxRps on the tap server to 100 RPS.
The max RPS for tap/top was increased in for the CLI #1531, but we were
still manually setting this to 1 RPS in the Web UI and Web server.
Remove the pervasive setting of MaxRps to 1 in the web frontend and server
* Make use of the Web UI to render tap events in a table
- Return JSON tap events instead of the command line output
- Experiment with a different way of rendering the EventList
- changed the default width back to 100% of the screen because this
table does not look great squished
Adds a tap endpoint in the web api that communicates with the dashboard
via websockets.
I've moved a bunch of code from the cli tap.go into utils so that the code
can be shared between web and CLI. I think we should consider making the
display more suited to web, but in the short term, reusing the CLI's
rendering of tap events works.
Adds a Tap page in the Web UI that you can use to make tap requests.
The form currently only allows you to enter a resource and namespace,
other filters coming in a follow-up branch.
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.
- Return pod uptimes from the GetPods endpoint
- Adds filtering by namespace to api.GetPods
- Adds a --namespace filter to conduit get pods
- Adds pod uptimes to the controller component toolitps on the ServiceMesh page
- Moves the ServiceMesh page back to using /api/pods
Don't allow the CLI or Web UI to request named resources if --all-namespaces is used.
This follows kubectl, which also does not allow requesting named resources
over all namespaces.
This PR also updates the Web API's behaviour to be in line with the CLI's.
Both will now default to the default namespace if no namespace is specified.
* Add namespace as a resource type in public-api
The cli and public-api only supported deployments as a resource type.
This change adds support for namespace as a resource type in the cli and
public-api. This also change includes:
- cli statsummary now prints `-`'s when objects are not in the mesh
- cli statsummary prints `No resources found.` when applicable
- removed `out-` from cli statsummary flags, and analagous proto changes
- switched public-api to use native prometheus label types
- misc error handling and logging fixes
Part of #627
Signed-off-by: Andrew Seigner <siggy@buoyant.io>
* Refactor filter and groupby label formulation
Signed-off-by: Kevin Lingerfelt <kl@buoyant.io>
* Rename stat_summary.go to stat.go in cli
Signed-off-by: Kevin Lingerfelt <kl@buoyant.io>
* Update rbac privileges for namespace stats
Signed-off-by: Kevin Lingerfelt <kl@buoyant.io>
Start implementing new conduit stat summary endpoint.
Changes the public-api to call prometheus directly instead of the
telemetry service. Wired through to `api/stat` on the web server,
as well as `conduit statsummary` on the CLI. Works for deployments only.
Current implementation just retrieves requests and mesh/total pod count
(so latency stats are always 0).
Uses API defined in #663
Example queries the stat endpoint will eventually satisfy in #627
This branch includes commits from @klingerf
* run ./bin/dep ensure
* run ./bin/update-go-deps-shas
Follow-up from #315.
Now that the UIs don't report per-path metrics, we can remove the path label from Prometheus, the path aggregation and filtering options from the telemetry API, and the path field from the proxy report API.
I've modified the tests to no longer expect the removed fields, and manually verified that Conduit still works after making these changes.
Closes#265
Signed-off-by: Eliza Weisman <eliza@buoyant.io>
This PR updates the web UI to remove the pod detail page, and to remove the links to that page from pod names in metrics tables. It also removes the `pods` option from `conduit stat`, and the `sourcePod` and `targetPod` fields from the controller API proto's `MetricMetadata` message.
I've updated the `conduit stat` tests to reflect these changes, and manually verified the web UI changes.
Closes#261
Signed-off-by: Eliza Weisman <eliza@buoyant.io>
* Add support for path stats in cli and web api
The cli stat command supports grouping by pod and deployment. With this
change, it will also support grouping by path, in order to facilitate a
summary stats per individual endpoint.
* Right-align numeric columns in stat output
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.