This is a preparatory PR to add additional APIs (Pinning Service API) easily
to cluster.
Instead of copy-pasting most of what the REST API does, I have refactored so
that the whole configuration, routing and request-handling utilities can be
re-used.
The worst part has been to divide the test between tests that test core
(common.API) functionality and tests that test specific REST API endpoint
functionality. I could not get away without an additional common/test package
to provide functions that are used from both places. This is a side effect of
testing both http and libp2p endpoints for every request etc.
* add ipv6 listening addresses to the default config
* ipfsproxy: support multiple listeners. Add default ipv6.
* mm
* restapi: support multiple listen addresses. enable ipv6
* cluster_config: format default listen addresses
* commands: update for multiple listeners. Fix randomports for udp and ipv6.
* ipfs-cluster-service: fix randomports test
* multiple listeners: fix remaining tests
* golint
* Disable ipv6 in defaults
It is not supported by docker by default. It is not supported in travis-CI
build environments. User can enable it now manually.
* proxy: disable ipv6 in test
* ipfshttp: fix test
Co-authored-by: @RubenKelevra <cyrond@gmail.com>
- Instead of using a boolean config element(send logs to std out or
file), use a string element that would store path of the log file.
That way user has freedom to choose the filepath. Use std out if this
path is empty.
This commit introduces logging for Cluster HTTP APIs.
It adds a config element `send_logs_to_file`, which tells whether logs
should be saved in a file or shown in standard output.
Requests are logged as per Apache Common Log Format (CLF)
http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/logs.html#commonFixes#574
Get jsonConfig from Config, apply env vars to it, load jsonConfig
back into Config.
License: MIT
Signed-off-by: Robert Ignat <robert.ignat91@gmail.com>
* cluster and restapi configs can also get values from environment variables
* other config components don't read any values from the environment
License: MIT
Signed-off-by: Robert Ignat <robert.ignat91@gmail.com>
This commit adds support for OpenCensus tracing
and metrics collection. This required support for
context.Context propogation throughout the cluster
codebase, and in particular, the ipfscluster component
interfaces.
The tracing propogates across RPC and HTTP boundaries.
The current default tracing backend is Jaeger.
The metrics currently exports the metrics exposed by
the opencensus http plugin as well as the pprof metrics
to a prometheus endpoint for scraping.
The current default metrics backend is Prometheus.
Metrics are currently exposed by default due to low
overhead, can be turned off if desired, whereas tracing
is off by default as it has a much higher performance
overhead, though the extent of the performance hit can be
adjusted with smaller sampling rates.
License: MIT
Signed-off-by: Adrian Lanzafame <adrianlanzafame92@gmail.com>
This adds support for handling preflight requests in the REST API
and fixes currently mostly broken CORS.
Before we just let the user add custom response headers to the
configuration "headers" key but this is not the best way because
CORs headers and requests need special handling and doing it wrong
has security implications.
Therefore, I have added specific CORS-related configuration options
which control CORS behavour. We are forced to change the "headers"
defaults and will notify the users about this in the changelog.
License: MIT
Signed-off-by: Hector Sanjuan <code@hector.link>
By default, CORS headers allowing GET requests from everywhere are
set. This should facilitate the IPFS Web UI integration with the
Cluster API.
This commit refactors the sendResponse methods in the API, merging
them into one as it was difficult to follow the flows that actually
send something to the client. All tests now check the presence of
the configured headers too, to make sure no route was missed.
License: MIT
Signed-off-by: Hector Sanjuan <code@hector.link>
This adds support for parameters to create a libp2p host
in the REST API configuration: ID, PrivateKey and ListenMultiaddr.
These parameters default to nil/empty and are ommited in the default
configuration. They are only supposed to be used when the user wants
the REST API to use a different libp2p host than a provided one (upcoming
changes).
Pnet protector not supported yet in this case. Underlying basic auth
should cover that front. Will implement if someone has a usecase.
License: MIT
Signed-off-by: Hector Sanjuan <code@hector.link>
The following commit reimplements ipfs-cluster configuration under
the following premises:
* Each component is initialized with a configuration object
defined by its module
* Each component decides how the JSON representation of its
configuration looks like
* Each component parses and validates its own configuration
* Each component exposes its own defaults
* Component configurations are make the sections of a
central JSON configuration file (which replaces the current
JSON format)
* Component configurations implement a common interface
(config.ComponentConfig) with a set of common operations
* The central configuration file is managed by a
config.ConfigManager which:
* Registers ComponentConfigs
* Assigns the correspondent sections from the JSON file to each
component and delegates the parsing
* Delegates the JSON generation for each section
* Can be notified when the configuration is updated and must be
saved to disk
The new service.json would then look as follows:
```json
{
"cluster": {
"id": "QmTVW8NoRxC5wBhV7WtAYtRn7itipEESfozWN5KmXUQnk2",
"private_key": "<...>",
"secret": "00224102ae6aaf94f2606abf69a0e278251ecc1d64815b617ff19d6d2841f786",
"peers": [],
"bootstrap": [],
"leave_on_shutdown": false,
"listen_multiaddress": "/ip4/0.0.0.0/tcp/9096",
"state_sync_interval": "1m0s",
"ipfs_sync_interval": "2m10s",
"replication_factor": -1,
"monitor_ping_interval": "15s"
},
"consensus": {
"raft": {
"heartbeat_timeout": "1s",
"election_timeout": "1s",
"commit_timeout": "50ms",
"max_append_entries": 64,
"trailing_logs": 10240,
"snapshot_interval": "2m0s",
"snapshot_threshold": 8192,
"leader_lease_timeout": "500ms"
}
},
"api": {
"restapi": {
"listen_multiaddress": "/ip4/127.0.0.1/tcp/9094",
"read_timeout": "30s",
"read_header_timeout": "5s",
"write_timeout": "1m0s",
"idle_timeout": "2m0s"
}
},
"ipfs_connector": {
"ipfshttp": {
"proxy_listen_multiaddress": "/ip4/127.0.0.1/tcp/9095",
"node_multiaddress": "/ip4/127.0.0.1/tcp/5001",
"connect_swarms_delay": "7s",
"proxy_read_timeout": "10m0s",
"proxy_read_header_timeout": "5s",
"proxy_write_timeout": "10m0s",
"proxy_idle_timeout": "1m0s"
}
},
"monitor": {
"monbasic": {
"check_interval": "15s"
}
},
"informer": {
"disk": {
"metric_ttl": "30s",
"metric_type": "freespace"
},
"numpin": {
"metric_ttl": "10s"
}
}
}
```
This new format aims to be easily extensible per component. As such,
it already surfaces quite a few new options which were hardcoded
before.
Additionally, since Go API have changed, some redundant methods have been
removed and small refactoring has happened to take advantage of the new
way.
License: MIT
Signed-off-by: Hector Sanjuan <hector@protocol.ai>