Ingress validate currently validates config from a file. This PR adds a
new --json/-j flag to provide the ingress/config data as a plaintext
command line argument.
This is a cherry-pick of 157f5d1412
followed by build/CI changes so that amd64/linux FIPS compliance is
provided by new/separate binaries/artifacts/packages.
The reasoning being that FIPS compliance places excessive requirements
in the encryption algorithms used for regular users that do not care
about that. This can cause cloudflared to reject HTTPS origins that
would otherwise be accepted without FIPS checks.
This way, by having separate binaries, existing ones remain as they
were, and only FIPS-needy users will opt-in to the new FIPS binaries.
* `max-fetch-size` can now be set up in the config YAML
* we no longer pass that to filter commands that filter by name
* flag changed to signed int since altsrc does not support UInt flags
* we now look up each non UUID (to convert it to a UUID) when needed, separately
This can be useful/important for accounts with many tunnels that exceed
the 1000 default page size.
There are various tunnel subcommands that use listing underneath, so we make
that flag a tunnel one, rather than adding it to each subcommand.
This maximum grace period will be honored by Cloudflare edge such that
either side will close the connection after unregistration at most
by this time (3min as of this commit):
- If the connection is unused, it is already closed as soon as possible.
- If the connection is still used, it is closed on the cloudflared configured grace-period.
Even if cloudflared does not close the connection by the grace-period time,
the edge will do so.
This change has two parts:
1. Update to newer version of the urfave/cli fork that correctly sets flag value along the context hierarchy while respecting config file overide behavior of the most specific instance of the flag.
2. Redefine --credentials-file flag so that create and delete subcommand don't use value from the config file.
- Move packages the provide generic functionality (such as config) from `cmd` subtree to top level.
- Remove all dependencies on `cmd` subtree from top level packages.
- Consolidate all code dealing with token generation and transfer to a single cohesive package.
- extracted ResponseWriter from proxyConnection
- added bastion tests over websocket
- removed HTTPResp()
- added some docstrings
- Renamed some ingress clients as proxies
- renamed instances of client to proxy in connection and origin
- Stream no longer takes a context and logger.Service
* Add max upstream connections dns-proxy option
Allows defining a limit to the number of connections that can be
established with the upstream DNS host.
If left unset, there may be situations where connections fail to
establish, which causes the Transport to create an influx of connections
causing upstream to throttle our requests and triggering a runaway
effect resulting in high CPU usage. See https://github.com/cloudflare/cloudflared/issues/91
* Code review with proposed changes
* Add max upstream connections flag to tunnel flags
* Reduce DNS proxy max upstream connections default value
Reduce the default value of maximum upstream connections on the DNS
proxy to guarantee it works on single-core and other low-end hardware.
Further testing could allow for a safe increase of this value.
* Update dns-proxy flag name
Also remove `MaxUpstreamConnsFlag` const as it's no longer referenced in more than one place and to make things more consistent with how the other flags are referenced.
Co-authored-by: Adam Chalmers <achalmers@cloudflare.com>
The following UInt flags:
* Uint64 - heartbeat-count, compression-quality
* Uint - retries, port, proxy-port
were not being correctly picked from the configuration YAML
since the multi origin refactor
This is due to a limitation of the ufarve library, which we
overcome for now with handling those as Int flags.
Not doing so was causing cloudflared to become stuck after
some time. This would happen because the Observer pattern
was sending events to the UI channel (that has 16 slots) but
no one was consuming those when the UI is not enabled (which
is the default case).
Hence, events (such as connection disconnect / reconnect) would
cause that buffer to be full and cause cloudflared to become
apparently stuck, in the sense that the connections would not be
reconnected.
Tunnel delete is successful even if we don't find the credentials
file in the user's filesystem. We no longer "error" indicating this
is a problem. This fix also enables chaining of the delete command
by removing a pre-mature return if the credentials file is not found.