In addition to supporting sampling support for streaming logs,
cloudflared tail also supports this via `--sample 0.5` to sample 50%
of your log events.
To help accommodate web browser interactions with websockets, when a
streaming logs session is requested for the same actor while already
serving a session for that user in a separate request, the original
request will be closed and the new request start streaming logs
instead. This should help with rogue sessions holding on for too long
with no client on the other side (before idle timeout or connection
close).
It might make sense for users to sometimes name their cloudflared
connectors to make identification easier than relying on hostnames that
TUN-7360 provides. This PR provides a new --label option to cloudflared
tunnel that a user could provide to give custom names to their
connectors.
With the management tunnels work, we allow calls to our edge service
using an access JWT provided by Tunnelstore. Given a connector ID,
this request is then proxied to the appropriate Cloudflare Tunnel.
This PR takes advantage of this flow and adds a new host_details
endpoint. Calls to this endpoint will result in cloudflared gathering
some details about the host: hostname (os.hostname()) and ip address
(localAddr in a dial).
Note that the mini spec lists 4 alternatives and this picks alternative
3 because:
1. Ease of implementation: This is quick and non-intrusive to any of our
code path. We expect to change how connection tracking works and
regardless of the direction we take, it may be easy to keep, morph
or throw this away.
2. The cloudflared part of this round trip takes some time with a
hostname call and a dial. But note that this is off the critical path
and not an API that will be exercised often.
Previously allowing the reconnect signal forcibly close the connection
caused a race condition on which error was returned by the errgroup
in the tunnel connection. Allowing the signal to return and provide
a context cancel to the connection provides a safer shutdown of the
tunnel for this test-only scenario.
cloudflared falls back aggressively to HTTP/2 protocol if a connection
attempt with QUIC failed. This was done to ensure that machines with UDP
egress disabled did not stop clients from connecting to the cloudlfare
edge. This PR improves on that experience by having cloudflared remember
if a QUIC connection was successful which implies UDP egress works. In
this case, cloudflared does not fallback to HTTP/2 and keeps trying to
connect to the edge with QUIC.
This parameterizes relevant component tests by transport protocol
where applicable.
The motivation is to have coverage for (graceful or not) shutdown
that was broken in QUIC. That logic (as well as reconnect) is
different depending on the transport, so we should have it
parameterized. In fact, the test is failing for QUIC (and passing
for others) right now, which is expected until we roll out some
edge fixes for QUIC. So we could have caught this earlier on.