Compare commits

..

53 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
bc9ddf2601 *: bump to v2.2.5 2016-02-01 11:59:45 -08:00
e7285f5626 *: updates for gRPC Godeps update 2016-02-01 11:28:39 -08:00
4613a7e61b Godeps: update gRPC 2016-02-01 11:28:29 -08:00
31d1fa20bf Godeps: update boltdb 2016-01-28 10:48:22 -08:00
259f89d59a etcdserver, auth: not cache a flag of auth status
This commit removes a flag that indicates auth is enabled or disabled
because it doesn't have an invalidation mechanism.

Fixes https://github.com/coreos/etcd/issues/3601 and https://github.com/coreos/etcd/issues/3964

Conflicts (Resolved):
	etcdserver/auth/auth.go
2016-01-27 15:36:16 -08:00
756d701f13 client: do not timeout when wait is true
Current V2 watch waits by encoding URL with wait=true.
When a client sets 'no-sync', it requests directly to
proxy and the proxy redirects it by cloning the request
object, which leads to cancel the original request when
it times out and the cloned request gets closed prematurely.

This fixes coreos#3894 by querying
the original client request in order to not use context timeout
when 'wait=true'.
2016-01-27 15:29:56 -08:00
d14a673ace etcdmain: proxy should only lookup srv if there is no existing cluster file 2016-01-27 15:29:54 -08:00
4abb231505 *: bump to v2.2.4+git 2016-01-13 14:22:16 -08:00
bdee27b19e *: bump to v2.2.4 2016-01-13 14:07:39 -08:00
7f684641a3 Godeps: remove golang.org/x/net/netutil
Now using our own LimitListener to support KeepAlives.
2016-01-13 13:32:38 -08:00
d54cf26bed etcdmain: support keep alive listeners on limit listener connections
Fixes #4171
2016-01-13 13:32:26 -08:00
d3e73aadab etcdmain: tls listener MUST be at the outer layer of all listeners
go HTTP library uses type assertion to determine if a connection
is a TLS connection. If we wrapper TLS Listener with any customized
Listener that can create customized Conn, HTTPs will be broken.

This commit fixes the issue.
2016-01-13 13:32:08 -08:00
e340928988 etcdctl: ignore value in updatedir command
Fixes coreos#4145.
client.KeysAPI ignores value if SetOptions.Dir is true.
2016-01-13 13:31:49 -08:00
e6ffe22e16 *: bump to v2.2.3+git 2015-12-30 13:54:57 -08:00
05b564a394 *: bump to v2.2.3 2015-12-30 13:41:16 -08:00
cb779b2305 etcdctl: fix syncWithPeerAPI by breaking the loop when there is no error 2015-12-30 11:24:27 -08:00
22c3208fb3 etcdserver: always check if the data dir is writable before starting etcd 2015-12-30 10:22:52 -08:00
e44372e430 etcdsever: avoid creating member dir before finishing validate bootstrap
This commit fixes the issue of creating member dir before validating
the configuration. When member dir exists, it indicates the local etcd
process is a valid etcd member. So we should only create member dir
after we finish configuration validation, joining validation or
discovery validation.
2015-12-30 10:19:51 -08:00
05a90bc1e5 etcdmain: fix incomplete proxy config file
etcd might generate incomplete proxy config file after a power failure.
It is because we use ioutil.WriteFile. And iotuile.WriteFile does
not call Sync before closing the file.
2015-12-22 12:30:39 -08:00
6751727809 etcdctl: support basic operations with etcd 0.4.
For CoreOS users, they will get a updated version of etcdctl without updating
the etcd server version. And the users cannot really control this behavior.
We do not want to suddenly break them without enough communication.

So we still want the most basic opeartions like get, set, watch of etcdctl2 work
with etcd 0.4. This patches solve the incompability issue.
2015-12-22 12:29:16 -08:00
916106c3a2 client: support reset Endpoints.
ResetEndpoints is useful when the there is a scheduled cluster
changes or when manually manage the cluster without auto-sync
enabled.
2015-12-22 12:25:59 -08:00
e0c7768f94 store: fix data race when modify event in watchHub.
The event got from watchHub should be considered as readonly.
To modify it, we first need to get a clone of it or there might
be a data race.
2015-12-14 14:08:39 -08:00
0fb2d5d4d3 client: fix goroutine leak in unreleased context
If headerTimeout is not zero then two context are created but only one is released.
cancelCtx in this case is never released which leads to goroutine leak inside it.
2015-12-14 13:58:43 -08:00
fc61fc7c7a etcdctl: cluster health exit with non-zero when cluster is unhealthy 2015-12-14 13:58:10 -08:00
09b81bad15 *: bump to v2.2.2+git 2015-11-19 14:24:59 -08:00
b4bddf685b *: bump to v2.2.2 2015-11-19 14:24:35 -08:00
af1c711270 auth: use canonical path for pre-defined guest role 2015-11-19 13:41:27 -08:00
c269426be8 *: fix various data races detected by race detector
Conflicts:
	rafthttp/transport.go
2015-11-19 13:38:28 -08:00
20b7df3c12 rafthttp: fix data races detected by go race detector
Conflicts:
	rafthttp/pipeline.go
2015-11-19 13:34:49 -08:00
e342de3cc5 etcdmain: fix parsing discovery error
The discovery error is wrapped into a struct now, and cannot be compared
to predefined errors. Correct the comparison behavior to fix the
problem.
2015-11-19 13:26:50 -08:00
26cc2111cd etcdmain: improve log when join discovery fails
Before this PR, the log is

```
2015/09/1 13:18:31 etcdmain: client: etcd cluster is unavailable or
misconfigured
```

It is quite hard for people to understand what happens.

Now we print out the exact reason for the failure, and explains the way
to handle it.
2015-11-19 13:26:42 -08:00
5d6457e658 godeps: bump coreos/pkg/capnslog
Update to catch coreos/pkg#43 which should fix SYSLOG_IDENTIFIER getting
set when etcd is logging to the journal.
2015-11-19 13:26:29 -08:00
53bc644168 client: regenerate code to unmarshal key response
Regenerate code for unmarshaling key response with a new version of
ugorji/go/codec.
2015-11-19 13:26:19 -08:00
ad3bb484ca Godeps: update ugorji/go/codec dependency
Update ugorji/go/codec dependency to the newer version.
2015-11-19 13:26:08 -08:00
15f7b736e4 etcdctl:fix health check condition 2015-11-19 13:25:57 -08:00
4dc835c718 *: bump to v2.2.1+git 2015-10-15 21:59:15 -07:00
75f8282eef *: bump to v2.2.1 2015-10-15 21:31:51 -07:00
45c86af0eb etcdctl/command: mk command with PrevNoExist
This attempts to fix #3676. `PrevNoExist` checks if the key previously exists
and if so, it returns an error, which is how `mk` command is supposed to work.
The previous code ignores the previous key and overwrites with the later value.

/cc @yichengq
2015-10-15 15:26:52 -07:00
71e5467807 Godeps: update prometheus dependency
prometheus updates its directory layout
(https://github.com/prometheus/client_golang#where-is-model-extraction-and-text)
and makes Godeps restore/save unable to work.

Remove all prometheus dependency manually and godep save again to fix
this problem.
2015-10-15 15:26:42 -07:00
0169fec873 client: regenerate code to unmarshal key response
Regenerate code for unmarshaling key response with a new version of
ugorji/go/codec
2015-10-15 15:24:21 -07:00
766023b1b0 Godeps: update ugorji/go/codec dependency
Update ugorji/go/codec dependency to the newer version (a bunch of fixed were made).
2015-10-15 15:24:12 -07:00
ca9e63dde2 pkg/types: fix unwanted unescape in NewURLsMap
We use url.ParseQuery to parse names-to-urls string, but it has side
effect that unescape the string. If the initial-cluster string has ipv6
which contains `%25`, it will unescape it to `%` and make further url
parse failed.

Fix it by modifiying the parse process.

Go1.4 doesn't support literal IPv6 address w/ zone in
URI(https://github.com/golang/go/issues/6530), so we only enable tests
in Go1.5+.
2015-10-15 15:24:00 -07:00
7659bbb1b2 etcdmain: print out error and suggestion for fixing notify issue 2015-10-15 15:23:49 -07:00
f8b98d3925 etcdhttp: add Content-Type: application/json header to version handler 2015-10-15 15:23:34 -07:00
9ee3ed777b etcdmain: exit after print out ErrDuplicateID
etcd should exit after printing log for unhandlable error.
2015-10-15 15:23:24 -07:00
c9bd125490 etcdsever: mismatch error uses the same format as the corresponding flags 2015-10-15 15:22:52 -07:00
ec49496111 proxy: improve log for retrying an unavailable endpoint
Fixes #3541

Signed-off-by: Guohua ouyang <guohuaouyang@gmail.com>
2015-10-15 15:22:40 -07:00
baaefd18e2 etcdmain: better logging when user forget to set initial flags 2015-10-15 15:22:29 -07:00
72c18eb7ba etcdctl: use a context with -total-timeout in simple commands
Like the commit 8ebc933111, this commit lets simple etcdctl commands
use a context with timeout value passed via -total-timeout.

This commit doesn't change complex commands like watch,
cluster-health, and import because it is not obvious that using the
context in the commands is good or not.
2015-10-15 15:22:13 -07:00
2e87d71bc6 etcdctl: use user specified timeout value for entire command execution
etcdctl should be capable to use a user specified timeout value for
total command execution, not only per request timeout. This commit
adds a new option --total-timeout to the command. The value passed via
this option is used as a timeout value of entire command execution.

Fixes coreos#3517
2015-10-15 15:21:38 -07:00
217dccd617 raft: improve panic error message
Give a human being some insight into how we might have gotten to this
state based on feedback from #3504.
2015-10-15 15:20:12 -07:00
3ceb5dd270 client: add Nodes to codecgen and regenerate 2015-10-15 15:19:58 -07:00
49b77a59cf client: add Nodes type to faciliate sorting
This helps users to sort easily.
2015-10-15 15:19:52 -07:00
2647 changed files with 360655 additions and 257150 deletions

1
.dockerignore Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1 @@
.git

View File

@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
Please read https://etcd.io/docs/latest/reporting_bugs/

View File

@ -1,28 +0,0 @@
---
name: Distributors Application
title: Distributors Application for <YOUR DISTRIBUTION HERE>
about: Apply for membership of security@etcd.io
---
<!--
Please answer the following questions and provide supporting evidence for
meeting the membership criteria.
-->
**Actively monitored security email alias for our project:**
**1. Have a user base not limited to your own organization.**
**2. Have a publicly verifiable track record up to present day of fixing security issues.**
**3. Not be a downstream or rebuild of another distribution.**
**4. Be a participant and active contributor in the community.**
**5. Accept the Embargo Policy.**
<!-- https://github.com/etcd-io/etcd/blob/main/security/security-release-process.md#disclosures -->
**6. Be willing to contribute back.**
<!-- Per https://github.com/etcd-io/etcd/blob/main/security/security-release-process.md#patch-release-and-public-communication -->
**7. Have someone already on the list vouch for the person requesting membership on behalf of your distribution.**

View File

@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
Please read https://github.com/etcd-io/etcd/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.md#contribution-flow.

2
.github/SECURITY.md vendored
View File

@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
Please read https://github.com/etcd-io/etcd/blob/main/security/README.md.

60
.github/stale.yml vendored
View File

@ -1,60 +0,0 @@
# Configuration for probot-stale - https://github.com/probot/stale
# Number of days of inactivity before an Issue or Pull Request becomes stale
daysUntilStale: 90
# Number of days of inactivity before an Issue or Pull Request with the stale label is closed.
# Set to false to disable. If disabled, issues still need to be closed manually, but will remain marked as stale.
daysUntilClose: 21
# Only issues or pull requests with all of these labels are check if stale. Defaults to `[]` (disabled)
onlyLabels: []
# Issues or Pull Requests with these labels will never be considered stale. Set to `[]` to disable
exemptLabels:
- "area/security"
- "Investigating"
# Set to true to ignore issues in a project (defaults to false)
exemptProjects: false
# Set to true to ignore issues in a milestone (defaults to false)
exemptMilestones: false
# Set to true to ignore issues with an assignee (defaults to false)
exemptAssignees: false
# Label to use when marking as stale
staleLabel: stale
# Comment to post when marking as stale. Set to `false` to disable
markComment: >
This issue has been automatically marked as stale because it has not had
recent activity. It will be closed after 21 days if no further activity
occurs. Thank you for your contributions.
# Comment to post when removing the stale label.
# unmarkComment: >
# Your comment here.
# Comment to post when closing a stale Issue or Pull Request.
# closeComment: >
# Your comment here.
# Limit the number of actions per hour, from 1-30. Default is 30
limitPerRun: 30
# Limit to only `issues` or `pulls`
# only: issues
# Optionally, specify configuration settings that are specific to just 'issues' or 'pulls':
# pulls:
# daysUntilStale: 30
# markComment: >
# This pull request has been automatically marked as stale because it has not had
# recent activity. It will be closed if no further activity occurs. Thank you
# for your contributions.
# issues:
# exemptLabels:
# - confirmed

View File

@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
name: Publish Release Assets to Asset Transparency Log
on:
release:
types: [published, created, edited, released]
jobs:
github_release_asset_transparency_log_publish_job:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
name: Publish GitHub release asset digests to https://beta-asset.transparencylog.net
steps:
- name: Gather URLs from GitHub release and publish
id: asset-transparency
uses: transparencylog/github-releases-asset-transparency-verify-action@v11
- name: List verified and published URLs
run: echo "Verified URLs ${{ steps.asset-transparency.outputs.verified }}"
- name: List failed URLs
run: echo "Failed URLs ${{ steps.asset-transparency.outputs.failed }}"

View File

@ -1,67 +0,0 @@
# For most projects, this workflow file will not need changing; you simply need
# to commit it to your repository.
#
# You may wish to alter this file to override the set of languages analyzed,
# or to provide custom queries or build logic.
#
# ******** NOTE ********
# We have attempted to detect the languages in your repository. Please check
# the `language` matrix defined below to confirm you have the correct set of
# supported CodeQL languages.
#
name: "CodeQL"
on:
push:
branches: [ main, release-0.4, release-2.0, release-2.1, release-2.2, release-2.3, release-3.0, release-3.1 ]
pull_request:
# The branches below must be a subset of the branches above
branches: [ main ]
schedule:
- cron: '20 14 * * 5'
jobs:
analyze:
name: Analyze
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
strategy:
fail-fast: false
matrix:
language: [ 'go' ]
# CodeQL supports [ 'cpp', 'csharp', 'go', 'java', 'javascript', 'python' ]
# Learn more:
# https://docs.github.com/en/free-pro-team@latest/github/finding-security-vulnerabilities-and-errors-in-your-code/configuring-code-scanning#changing-the-languages-that-are-analyzed
steps:
- name: Checkout repository
uses: actions/checkout@v2
# Initializes the CodeQL tools for scanning.
- name: Initialize CodeQL
uses: github/codeql-action/init@v1
with:
languages: ${{ matrix.language }}
# If you wish to specify custom queries, you can do so here or in a config file.
# By default, queries listed here will override any specified in a config file.
# Prefix the list here with "+" to use these queries and those in the config file.
# queries: ./path/to/local/query, your-org/your-repo/queries@main
# Autobuild attempts to build any compiled languages (C/C++, C#, or Java).
# If this step fails, then you should remove it and run the build manually (see below)
- name: Autobuild
uses: github/codeql-action/autobuild@v1
# Command-line programs to run using the OS shell.
# 📚 https://git.io/JvXDl
# ✏️ If the Autobuild fails above, remove it and uncomment the following three lines
# and modify them (or add more) to build your code if your project
# uses a compiled language
#- run: |
# make bootstrap
# make release
- name: Perform CodeQL Analysis
uses: github/codeql-action/analyze@v1

View File

@ -1,38 +0,0 @@
name: E2E
on: [push, pull_request]
jobs:
goversion:
uses: ./.github/workflows/go-version.yaml
test:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
needs: goversion
strategy:
fail-fast: true
matrix:
target:
- linux-amd64-e2e
- linux-386-e2e
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- uses: actions/setup-go@v2
with:
go-version: ${{ needs.goversion.outputs.goversion }}
- run: date
- env:
TARGET: ${{ matrix.target }}
run: |
set -euo pipefail
echo "${TARGET}"
case "${TARGET}" in
linux-amd64-e2e)
PASSES='build release e2e' MANUAL_VER=v3.4.7 CPU='4' EXPECT_DEBUG='true' COVER='false' RACE='true' ./test.sh
;;
linux-386-e2e)
GOARCH=386 PASSES='build e2e' CPU='4' EXPECT_DEBUG='true' COVER='false' RACE='true' ./test.sh
;;
*)
echo "Failed to find target"
exit 1
;;
esac

View File

@ -1,34 +0,0 @@
name: functional-tests
on: [push, pull_request]
jobs:
goversion:
uses: ./.github/workflows/go-version.yaml
test:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
needs: goversion
strategy:
fail-fast: true
matrix:
target:
- linux-amd64-functional
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- uses: actions/setup-go@v2
with:
go-version: ${{ needs.goversion.outputs.goversion }}
- run: date
- env:
TARGET: ${{ matrix.target }}
run: |
set -euo pipefail
echo "${TARGET}"
case "${TARGET}" in
linux-amd64-functional)
GO_BUILD_FLAGS='-v -mod=readonly' ./build && GOARCH=amd64 PASSES='functional' ./test
;;
*)
echo "Failed to find target"
exit 1
;;
esac

View File

@ -1,21 +0,0 @@
name: Go version setup
on:
workflow_call:
outputs:
goversion:
value: ${{ jobs.version.outputs.goversion }}
jobs:
version:
name: Set Go version variable for all the workflows
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
outputs:
goversion: ${{ steps.goversion.outputs.goversion }}
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@8e5e7e5ab8b370d6c329ec480221332ada57f0ab # v3.5.2
- id: goversion
run: |
GO_VERSION=$(cat .go-version)
echo "Go Version: $GO_VERSION"
echo "goversion=$GO_VERSION" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT

View File

@ -1,34 +0,0 @@
name: grpcProxy-tests
on: [push, pull_request]
jobs:
goversion:
uses: ./.github/workflows/go-version.yaml
test:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
needs: goversion
strategy:
fail-fast: true
matrix:
target:
- linux-amd64-grpcproxy
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- uses: actions/setup-go@v2
with:
go-version: ${{ needs.goversion.outputs.goversion }}
- run: date
- env:
TARGET: ${{ matrix.target }}
run: |
set -euo pipefail
echo "${TARGET}"
case "${TARGET}" in
linux-amd64-grpcproxy)
PASSES='build grpcproxy' CPU='4' COVER='false' RACE='true' ./test.sh
;;
*)
echo "Failed to find target"
exit 1
;;
esac

View File

@ -1,33 +0,0 @@
name: Release
on: [push, pull_request]
jobs:
goversion:
uses: ./.github/workflows/go-version.yaml
main:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
needs: goversion
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- uses: actions/setup-go@v2
with:
go-version: ${{ needs.goversion.outputs.goversion }}
- name: release
run: |
set -euo pipefail
git config --global user.email "github-action@etcd.io"
git config --global user.name "Github Action"
gpg --batch --gen-key <<EOF
%no-protection
Key-Type: 1
Key-Length: 2048
Subkey-Type: 1
Subkey-Length: 2048
Name-Real: Github Action
Name-Email: github-action@etcd.io
Expire-Date: 0
EOF
DRY_RUN=true ./scripts/release --no-upload --no-docker-push --in-place 3.5.99
- name: test-image
run: |
VERSION=3.5.99 ./scripts/test_images.sh

View File

@ -1,66 +0,0 @@
name: Tests
on: [push, pull_request]
jobs:
goversion:
uses: ./.github/workflows/go-version.yaml
test:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
needs: goversion
strategy:
fail-fast: false
matrix:
target:
- linux-amd64-fmt
- linux-amd64-integration-1-cpu
- linux-amd64-integration-2-cpu
- linux-amd64-integration-4-cpu
- linux-amd64-unit-4-cpu-race
- all-build
- linux-386-unit-1-cpu
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- uses: actions/setup-go@v2
with:
go-version: ${{ needs.goversion.outputs.goversion }}
- run: date
- env:
TARGET: ${{ matrix.target }}
run: |
set -euo pipefail
echo "${TARGET}"
case "${TARGET}" in
linux-amd64-fmt)
GOARCH=amd64 PASSES='fmt bom dep' ./test.sh
;;
linux-amd64-integration-1-cpu)
GOARCH=amd64 CPU=1 PASSES='integration' RACE='false' ./test.sh
;;
linux-amd64-integration-2-cpu)
GOARCH=amd64 CPU=2 PASSES='integration' RACE='false' ./test.sh
;;
linux-amd64-integration-4-cpu)
GOARCH=amd64 CPU=4 PASSES='integration' RACE='false' ./test.sh
;;
linux-amd64-unit-4-cpu-race)
GOARCH=amd64 PASSES='unit' RACE='true' CPU='4' ./test.sh -p=2
;;
all-build)
GOARCH=amd64 PASSES='build' ./test.sh
GOARCH=386 PASSES='build' ./test.sh
GO_BUILD_FLAGS='-v -mod=readonly' GOOS=darwin GOARCH=amd64 ./build.sh
GO_BUILD_FLAGS='-v -mod=readonly' GOOS=darwin GOARCH=arm64 ./build.sh
GO_BUILD_FLAGS='-v -mod=readonly' GOOS=windows GOARCH=amd64 ./build.sh
GO_BUILD_FLAGS='-v -mod=readonly' GOARCH=arm ./build.sh
GO_BUILD_FLAGS='-v -mod=readonly' GOARCH=arm64 ./build.sh
GO_BUILD_FLAGS='-v -mod=readonly' GOARCH=ppc64le ./build.sh
GO_BUILD_FLAGS='-v -mod=readonly' GOARCH=s390x ./build.sh
;;
linux-386-unit-1-cpu)
GOARCH=386 PASSES='unit' RACE='false' CPU='1' ./test -p=4
;;
*)
echo "Failed to find target"
exit 1
;;
esac

View File

@ -1,37 +0,0 @@
name: Trivy Nightly Scan
on:
schedule:
- cron: '0 2 * * *' # run at 2 AM UTC
permissions: read-all
jobs:
nightly-scan:
name: Trivy Scan nightly
strategy:
fail-fast: false
matrix:
# maintain the versions of etcd that need to be actively
# security scanned
versions: [v3.5.6]
permissions:
security-events: write # for github/codeql-action/upload-sarif to upload SARIF results
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout code
uses: actions/checkout@93ea575cb5d8a053eaa0ac8fa3b40d7e05a33cc8 # v3.1.0
with:
ref: release-3.5
- name: Run Trivy vulnerability scanner
uses: aquasecurity/trivy-action@9ab158e8597f3b310480b9a69402b419bc03dbd5 # master
with:
image-ref: 'gcr.io/etcd-development/etcd:${{ matrix.versions }}'
severity: 'CRITICAL,HIGH'
format: 'template'
template: '@/contrib/sarif.tpl'
output: 'trivy-results-3-5.sarif'
- name: Upload Trivy scan results to GitHub Security tab
uses: github/codeql-action/upload-sarif@a669cc5936cc5e1b6a362ec1ff9e410dc570d190 # v2.1.36
with:
sarif_file: 'trivy-results-3-5.sarif'

20
.gitignore vendored
View File

@ -1,23 +1,11 @@
/agent-*
/coverage
/covdir
/gopath
/gopath.proto
/release
/go-bindata
/machine*
/bin
.vagrant
*.etcd
*.log
*.swp
/etcd
*.swp
/hack/insta-discovery/.env
*.coverprofile
*.test
hack/tls-setup/certs
.idea
/contrib/raftexample/raftexample
/contrib/raftexample/raftexample-*
/vendor
/tests/e2e/default.proxy
*.tmp
*.bak
.gobincache/

View File

@ -1 +0,0 @@
1.19.9

1
.godir Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1 @@
github.com/coreos/etcd

View File

@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
// Copyright 2016 The etcd Authors
// Copyright 2014 CoreOS, Inc.
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.

11
.travis.yml Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
language: go
sudo: false
go:
- 1.4
- 1.5
install:
- go get github.com/barakmich/go-nyet
script:
- INTEGRATION=y ./test

116
.words
View File

@ -1,116 +0,0 @@
accessors
addrConns
args
atomics
backoff
BackoffFunc
BackoffLinearWithJitter
Balancer
BidiStreams
blackhole
blackholed
CallOptions
cancelable
cancelation
ccBalancerWrapper
clientURLs
clusterName
cluster_proxy
consistentIndex
ConsistentIndexGetter
DefaultMaxRequestBytes
defragment
defragmenting
deleter
dev
/dev/null
dev/null
DNS
errClientDisconnected
ErrCodeEnhanceYourCalm
ErrConnClosing
ErrRequestTooLarge
ErrTimeout
etcd
FIXME
github
GoAway
goroutine
goroutines
gRPC
grpcAddr
hasleader
healthcheck
hostname
iff
inflight
InfoLevel
jitter
jitter
jitter
keepalive
Keepalive
KeepAlive
keepalives
keyspace
lexically
lexicographically
linearizable
linearization
linearized
liveness
localhost
__lostleader
MaxRequestBytes
MiB
middleware
mutators
mutex
nils
nondeterministically
nop
OutputWALDir
parsedTarget
passthrough
PermitWithoutStream
prefetching
prometheus
protobuf
racey
rafthttp
rebalanced
reconnection
repin
ResourceExhausted
retriable
retriable
rpc
RPC
RPCs
saveWALAndSnap
serializable
ServerStreams
SHA
SRV
statusError
subConn
subconns
SubConns
teardown
TestBalancerDoNotBlockOnClose
todo
too_many_pings
transactional
transferee
transientFailure
unbuffered
uncontended
unfreed
unlisting
unprefixed
WatchProgressNotifyInterval
WAL
WithBackoff
WithDialer
WithMax
WithRequireLeader

View File

@ -1,55 +1,55 @@
# How to contribute
etcd is Apache 2.0 licensed and accepts contributions via GitHub pull requests. This document outlines some of the conventions on commit message formatting, contact points for developers, and other resources to help get contributions into etcd.
etcd is Apache 2.0 licensed and accepts contributions via GitHub pull requests. This document outlines some of the conventions on commit message formatting, contact points for developers and other resources to make getting your contribution into etcd easier.
# Email and chat
- Email: [etcd-dev](https://groups.google.com/forum/?hl=en#!forum/etcd-dev)
- IRC: #[etcd](irc://irc.freenode.org:6667/#etcd) IRC channel on freenode.org
- Slack: [#etcd](https://kubernetes.slack.com/messages/C3HD8ARJ5/details/)
- IRC: #[coreos](irc://irc.freenode.org:6667/#coreos) IRC channel on freenode.org
## Getting started
- Fork the repository on GitHub
- Read the README.md for build instructions
## Reporting bugs and creating issues
## Reporting Bugs and Creating Issues
Reporting bugs is one of the best ways to contribute. However, a good bug report has some very specific qualities, so please read over our short document on [reporting bugs](https://etcd.io/docs/latest/reporting_bugs) before submitting a bug report. This document might contain links to known issues, another good reason to take a look there before reporting a bug.
Reporting bugs is one of the best ways to contribute. However, a good bug report
has some very specific qualities, so please read over our short document on
[reporting bugs](https://github.com/coreos/etcd/blob/master/Documentation/reporting_bugs.md)
before you submit your bug report. This document might contain links known
issues, another good reason to take a look there, before reporting your bug.
## Contribution flow
This is a rough outline of what a contributor's workflow looks like:
- Create a topic branch from where to base the contribution. This is usually main.
- Create a topic branch from where you want to base your work. This is usually master.
- Make commits of logical units.
- Make sure commit messages are in the proper format (see below).
- Push changes in a topic branch to a personal fork of the repository.
- Submit a pull request to etcd-io/etcd.
- The PR must receive a LGTM from two maintainers found in the MAINTAINERS file.
- Make sure your commit messages are in the proper format (see below).
- Push your changes to a topic branch in your fork of the repository.
- Submit a pull request to coreos/etcd.
- Your PR must receive a LGTM from two maintainers found in the MAINTAINERS file.
Thanks for contributing!
Thanks for your contributions!
### Code style
The coding style suggested by the Golang community is used in etcd. See the [style doc](https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/CodeReviewComments) for details.
The coding style suggested by the Golang community is used in etcd. See the [style doc](https://code.google.com/p/go-wiki/wiki/CodeReviewComments) for details.
Please follow this style to make etcd easy to review, maintain and develop.
### Format of the commit message
### Format of the Commit Message
We follow a rough convention for commit messages that is designed to answer two
questions: what changed and why. The subject line should feature the what and
the body of the commit should describe the why.
```
etcdserver: add grpc interceptor to log info on incoming requests
scripts: add the test-cluster command
To improve debuggability of etcd v3. Added a grpc interceptor to log
info on incoming requests to etcd server. The log output includes
remote client info, request content (with value field redacted), request
handling latency, response size, etc. Uses zap logger if available,
otherwise uses capnslog.
this uses tmux to setup a test cluster that you can easily kill and
start for debugging.
Fixes #38
```
@ -57,38 +57,14 @@ Fixes #38
The format can be described more formally as follows:
```
<package>: <what changed>
<subsystem>: <what changed>
<BLANK LINE>
<why this change was made>
<BLANK LINE>
<footer>
```
The first line is the subject and should be no longer than 70 characters, the second
line is always blank, and other lines should be wrapped at 80 characters. This allows
the message to be easier to read on GitHub as well as in various git tools.
### Pull request across multiple files and packages
If multiple files in a package are changed in a pull request for example:
```
etcdserver/config.go
etcdserver/corrupt.go
```
At the end of the review process if multiple commits exist for a single package they
should be squashed/rebased into a single commit before being merged.
```
etcdserver: <what changed>
[..]
```
If a pull request spans many packages these commits should be squashed/rebased into a single
commit using message with a more generic `*:` prefix.
```
*: <what changed>
[..]
```
The first line is the subject and should be no longer than 70 characters, the
second line is always blank, and other lines should be wrapped at 80 characters.
This allows the message to be easier to read on GitHub as well as in various
git tools.

2
Dockerfile Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
FROM golang:onbuild
EXPOSE 4001 7001 2379 2380

View File

@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
FROM --platform=linux/amd64 gcr.io/distroless/static-debian11
ADD etcd /usr/local/bin/
ADD etcdctl /usr/local/bin/
ADD etcdutl /usr/local/bin/
WORKDIR /var/etcd/
WORKDIR /var/lib/etcd/
EXPOSE 2379 2380
# Define default command.
CMD ["/usr/local/bin/etcd"]

View File

@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
FROM --platform=linux/arm64 gcr.io/distroless/static-debian11
ADD etcd /usr/local/bin/
ADD etcdctl /usr/local/bin/
ADD etcdutl /usr/local/bin/
WORKDIR /var/etcd/
WORKDIR /var/lib/etcd/
EXPOSE 2379 2380
# Define default command.
CMD ["/usr/local/bin/etcd"]

View File

@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
FROM --platform=linux/ppc64le gcr.io/distroless/static-debian11
ADD etcd /usr/local/bin/
ADD etcdctl /usr/local/bin/
ADD etcdutl /usr/local/bin/
WORKDIR /var/etcd/
WORKDIR /var/lib/etcd/
EXPOSE 2379 2380
# Define default command.
CMD ["/usr/local/bin/etcd"]

View File

@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
FROM --platform=linux/s390x gcr.io/distroless/static-debian11
ADD etcd /usr/local/bin/
ADD etcdctl /usr/local/bin/
ADD etcdutl /usr/local/bin/
WORKDIR /var/etcd/
WORKDIR /var/lib/etcd/
EXPOSE 2379 2380
# Define default command.
CMD ["/usr/local/bin/etcd"]

View File

@ -0,0 +1,31 @@
## Snapshot Migration
You can migrate a snapshot of your data from a v0.4.9+ cluster into a new etcd 2.2 cluster using a snapshot migration. After snapshot migration, the etcd indexes of your data will change. Many etcd applications rely on these indexes to behave correctly. This operation should only be done while all etcd applications are stopped.
To get started get the newest data snapshot from the 0.4.9+ cluster:
```
curl http://cluster.example.com:4001/v2/migration/snapshot > backup.snap
```
Now, import the snapshot into your new cluster:
```
etcdctl --endpoint new_cluster.example.com import --snap backup.snap
```
If you have a large amount of data, you can specify more concurrent works to copy data in parallel by using `-c` flag.
If you have hidden keys to copy, you can use `--hidden` flag to specify.
And the data will quickly copy into the new cluster:
```
entering dir: /
entering dir: /foo
entering dir: /foo/bar
copying key: /foo/bar/1 1
entering dir: /
entering dir: /foo2
entering dir: /foo2/bar2
copying key: /foo2/bar2/2 2
```

View File

@ -1,6 +0,0 @@
# The etcd documentation
etcd is a distributed key-value store designed to reliably and quickly preserve and provide access to critical data. It enables reliable distributed coordination through distributed locking, leader elections, and write barriers. An etcd cluster is intended for high availability and permanent data storage and retrieval.
These documents have moved to the [etcd-io/website repo](https://github.com/etcd-io/website/), and can be viewed live at [https://etcd.io/docs/latest/](https://etcd.io/docs/latest/).

View File

@ -0,0 +1,298 @@
## Administration
### Data Directory
#### Lifecycle
When first started, etcd stores its configuration into a data directory specified by the data-dir configuration parameter.
Configuration is stored in the write ahead log and includes: the local member ID, cluster ID, and initial cluster configuration.
The write ahead log and snapshot files are used during member operation and to recover after a restart.
Having a dedicated disk to store wal files can improve the throughput and stabilize the cluster.
It is highly recommended to dedicate a wal disk and set `--wal-dir` to point to a directory on that device for a production cluster deployment.
If a members data directory is ever lost or corrupted then the user should [remove][remove-a-member] the etcd member from the cluster using `etcdctl` tool.
A user should avoid restarting an etcd member with a data directory from an out-of-date backup.
Using an out-of-date data directory can lead to inconsistency as the member had agreed to store information via raft then re-joins saying it needs that information again.
For maximum safety, if an etcd member suffers any sort of data corruption or loss, it must be removed from the cluster.
Once removed the member can be re-added with an empty data directory.
[remove-a-member]: runtime-configuration.md#remove-a-member
#### Contents
The data directory has two sub-directories in it:
1. wal: write ahead log files are stored here. For details see the [wal package documentation][wal-pkg]
2. snap: log snapshots are stored here. For details see the [snap package documentation][snap-pkg]
If `--wal-dir` flag is set, etcd will write the write ahead log files to the specified directory instead of data directory.
[wal-pkg]: http://godoc.org/github.com/coreos/etcd/wal
[snap-pkg]: http://godoc.org/github.com/coreos/etcd/snap
### Cluster Management
#### Lifecycle
If you are spinning up multiple clusters for testing it is recommended that you specify a unique initial-cluster-token for the different clusters.
This can protect you from cluster corruption in case of mis-configuration because two members started with different cluster tokens will refuse members from each other.
#### Monitoring
It is important to monitor your production etcd cluster for healthy information and runtime metrics.
##### Health Monitoring
At lowest level, etcd exposes health information via HTTP at `/health` in JSON format. If it returns `{"health": "true"}`, then the cluster is healthy. Please note the `/health` endpoint is still an experimental one as in etcd 2.2.
```
$ curl -L http://127.0.0.1:2379/health
{"health": "true"}
```
You can also use etcdctl to check the cluster-wide health information. It will contact all the members of the cluster and collect the health information for you.
```
$./etcdctl cluster-health
member 8211f1d0f64f3269 is healthy: got healthy result from http://127.0.0.1:12379
member 91bc3c398fb3c146 is healthy: got healthy result from http://127.0.0.1:22379
member fd422379fda50e48 is healthy: got healthy result from http://127.0.0.1:32379
cluster is healthy
```
##### Runtime Metrics
etcd uses [Prometheus](http://prometheus.io/) for metrics reporting in the server. You can read more through the runtime metrics [doc](metrics.md).
#### Debugging
Debugging a distributed system can be difficult. etcd provides several ways to make debug
easier.
##### Enabling Debug Logging
When you want to debug etcd without stopping it, you can enable debug logging at runtime.
etcd exposes logging configuration at `/config/local/log`.
```
$ curl http://127.0.0.1:2379/config/local/log -XPUT -d '{"Level":"DEBUG"}'
$ # debug logging enabled
$
$ curl http://127.0.0.1:2379/config/local/log -XPUT -d '{"Level":"INFO"}'
$ # debug logging disabled
```
##### Debugging Variables
Debug variables are exposed for real-time debugging purposes. Developers who are familiar with etcd can utilize these variables to debug unexpected behavior. etcd exposes debug variables via HTTP at `/debug/vars` in JSON format. The debug variables contains
`cmdline`, `file_descriptor_limit`, `memstats` and `raft.status`.
`cmdline` is the command line arguments passed into etcd.
`file_descriptor_limit` is the max number of file descriptors etcd can utilize.
`memstats` is well explained [here](http://golang.org/pkg/runtime/#MemStats).
`raft.status` is useful when you want to debug low level raft issues if you are familiar with raft internals. In most cases, you do not need to check `raft.status`.
```json
{
"cmdline": ["./etcd"],
"file_descriptor_limit": 0,
"memstats": {"Alloc":4105744,"TotalAlloc":42337320,"Sys":12560632,"...":"..."},
"raft.status": {"id":"ce2a822cea30bfca","term":5,"vote":"ce2a822cea30bfca","commit":23509,"lead":"ce2a822cea30bfca","raftState":"StateLeader","progress":{"ce2a822cea30bfca":{"match":23509,"next":23510,"state":"ProgressStateProbe"}}}
}
```
#### Optimal Cluster Size
The recommended etcd cluster size is 3, 5 or 7, which is decided by the fault tolerance requirement. A 7-member cluster can provide enough fault tolerance in most cases. While larger cluster provides better fault tolerance the write performance reduces since data needs to be replicated to more machines.
#### Fault Tolerance Table
It is recommended to have an odd number of members in a cluster. Having an odd cluster size doesn't change the number needed for majority, but you gain a higher tolerance for failure by adding the extra member. You can see this in practice when comparing even and odd sized clusters:
| Cluster Size | Majority | Failure Tolerance |
|--------------|------------|-------------------|
| 1 | 1 | 0 |
| 3 | 2 | 1 |
| 4 | 3 | 1 |
| 5 | 3 | **2** |
| 6 | 4 | 2 |
| 7 | 4 | **3** |
| 8 | 5 | 3 |
| 9 | 5 | **4** |
As you can see, adding another member to bring the size of cluster up to an odd size is always worth it. During a network partition, an odd number of members also guarantees that there will almost always be a majority of the cluster that can continue to operate and be the source of truth when the partition ends.
#### Changing Cluster Size
After your cluster is up and running, adding or removing members is done via [runtime reconfiguration](runtime-configuration.md#cluster-reconfiguration-operations), which allows the cluster to be modified without downtime. The `etcdctl` tool has a `member list`, `member add` and `member remove` commands to complete this process.
### Member Migration
When there is a scheduled machine maintenance or retirement, you might want to migrate an etcd member to another machine without losing the data and changing the member ID.
The data directory contains all the data to recover a member to its point-in-time state. To migrate a member:
* Stop the member process
* Copy the data directory of the now-idle member to the new machine
* Update the peer URLs for that member to reflect the new machine according to the [runtime configuration] [change peer url]
* Start etcd on the new machine, using the same configuration and the copy of the data directory
This example will walk you through the process of migrating the infra1 member to a new machine:
|Name|Peer URL|
|------|--------------|
|infra0|10.0.1.10:2380|
|infra1|10.0.1.11:2380|
|infra2|10.0.1.12:2380|
```sh
$ export ETCDCTL_PEERS=http://10.0.1.10:2379,http://10.0.1.11:2379,http://10.0.1.12:2379
```
```sh
$ etcdctl member list
84194f7c5edd8b37: name=infra0 peerURLs=http://10.0.1.10:2380 clientURLs=http://127.0.0.1:2379,http://10.0.1.10:2379
b4db3bf5e495e255: name=infra1 peerURLs=http://10.0.1.11:2380 clientURLs=http://127.0.0.1:2379,http://10.0.1.11:2379
bc1083c870280d44: name=infra2 peerURLs=http://10.0.1.12:2380 clientURLs=http://127.0.0.1:2379,http://10.0.1.12:2379
```
#### Stop the member etcd process
```sh
$ ssh 10.0.1.11
```
```sh
$ kill `pgrep etcd`
```
#### Copy the data directory of the now-idle member to the new machine
```
$ tar -cvzf infra1.etcd.tar.gz %data_dir%
```
```sh
$ scp infra1.etcd.tar.gz 10.0.1.13:~/
```
#### Update the peer URLs for that member to reflect the new machine
```sh
$ curl http://10.0.1.10:2379/v2/members/b4db3bf5e495e255 -XPUT \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"peerURLs":["http://10.0.1.13:2380"]}'
```
Or use `etcdctl member update` command
```sh
$ etcdctl member update b4db3bf5e495e255 http://10.0.1.13:2380
```
#### Start etcd on the new machine, using the same configuration and the copy of the data directory
```sh
$ ssh 10.0.1.13
```
```sh
$ tar -xzvf infra1.etcd.tar.gz -C %data_dir%
```
```
etcd -name infra1 \
-listen-peer-urls http://10.0.1.13:2380 \
-listen-client-urls http://10.0.1.13:2379,http://127.0.0.1:2379 \
-advertise-client-urls http://10.0.1.13:2379,http://127.0.0.1:2379
```
[change peer url]: runtime-configuration.md#update-a-member
### Disaster Recovery
etcd is designed to be resilient to machine failures. An etcd cluster can automatically recover from any number of temporary failures (for example, machine reboots), and a cluster of N members can tolerate up to _(N-1)/2_ permanent failures (where a member can no longer access the cluster, due to hardware failure or disk corruption). However, in extreme circumstances, a cluster might permanently lose enough members such that quorum is irrevocably lost. For example, if a three-node cluster suffered two simultaneous and unrecoverable machine failures, it would be normally impossible for the cluster to restore quorum and continue functioning.
To recover from such scenarios, etcd provides functionality to backup and restore the datastore and recreate the cluster without data loss.
#### Backing up the datastore
**NB:** Windows users must stop etcd before running the backup command.
The first step of the recovery is to backup the data directory on a functioning etcd node. To do this, use the `etcdctl backup` command, passing in the original data directory used by etcd. For example:
```sh
etcdctl backup \
--data-dir %data_dir% \
--backup-dir %backup_data_dir%
```
This command will rewrite some of the metadata contained in the backup (specifically, the node ID and cluster ID), which means that the node will lose its former identity. In order to recreate a cluster from the backup, you will need to start a new, single-node cluster. The metadata is rewritten to prevent the new node from inadvertently being joined onto an existing cluster.
#### Restoring a backup
To restore a backup using the procedure created above, start etcd with the `-force-new-cluster` option and pointing to the backup directory. This will initialize a new, single-member cluster with the default advertised peer URLs, but preserve the entire contents of the etcd data store. Continuing from the previous example:
```sh
etcd \
-data-dir=%backup_data_dir% \
-force-new-cluster \
...
```
Now etcd should be available on this node and serving the original datastore.
Once you have verified that etcd has started successfully, shut it down and move the data back to the previous location (you may wish to make another copy as well to be safe):
```sh
pkill etcd
rm -fr %data_dir%
mv %backup_data_dir% %data_dir%
etcd \
-data-dir=%data_dir% \
...
```
#### Restoring the cluster
Now that if the node is running successfully, you should [change its advertised peer URLs](runtime-configuration.md#update-a-member), as the `--force-new-cluster` has set the peer URL to the default (listening on localhost).
You can then add more nodes to the cluster and restore resiliency. See the [add a new member](runtime-configuration.md#add-a-new-member) guide for more details. **NB:** If you are trying to restore your cluster using old failed etcd nodes, please make sure you have stopped old etcd instances and removed their old data directories specified by the data-dir configuration parameter.
### Client Request Timeout
etcd sets different timeouts for various types of client requests. The timeout value is not tunable now, which will be improved soon (https://github.com/coreos/etcd/issues/2038).
#### Get requests
Timeout is not set for get requests, because etcd serves the result locally in a non-blocking way.
**Note**: QuorumGet request is a different type, which is mentioned in the following sections.
#### Watch requests
Timeout is not set for watch requests. etcd will not stop a watch request until client cancels it, or the connection is broken.
#### Delete, Put, Post, QuorumGet requests
The default timeout is 5 seconds. It should be large enough to allow all key modifications if the majority of cluster is functioning.
If the request times out, it indicates two possibilities:
1. the server the request sent to was not functioning at that time.
2. the majority of the cluster is not functioning.
If timeout happens several times continuously, administrators should check status of cluster and resolve it as soon as possible.
### Best Practices
#### Maximum OS threads
By default, etcd uses the default configuration of the Go 1.4 runtime, which means that at most one operating system thread will be used to execute code simultaneously. (Note that this default behavior [may change in Go 1.5](https://docs.google.com/document/d/1At2Ls5_fhJQ59kDK2DFVhFu3g5mATSXqqV5QrxinasI/edit)).
When using etcd in heavy-load scenarios on machines with multiple cores it will usually be desirable to increase the number of threads that etcd can utilize. To do this, simply set the environment variable `GOMAXPROCS` to the desired number when starting etcd. For more information on this variable, see the Go [runtime](https://golang.org/pkg/runtime) documentation.

1082
Documentation/api.md Normal file

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

434
Documentation/auth_api.md Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,434 @@
# v2 Auth and Security
## etcd Resources
There are three types of resources in etcd
1. permission resources: users and roles in the user store
2. key-value resources: key-value pairs in the key-value store
3. settings resources: security settings, auth settings, and dynamic etcd cluster settings (election/heartbeat)
### Permission Resources
#### Users
A user is an identity to be authenticated. Each user can have multiple roles. The user has a capability (such as reading or writing) on the resource if one of the roles has that capability.
A user named `root` is required before authentication can be enabled, and it always has the ROOT role. The ROOT role can be granted to multiple users, but `root` is required for recovery purposes.
#### Roles
Each role has exact one associated Permission List. An permission list exists for each permission on key-value resources.
The special static ROOT (named `root`) role has a full permissions on all key-value resources, the permission to manage user resources and settings resources. Only the ROOT role has the permission to manage user resources and modify settings resources. The ROOT role is built-in and does not need to be created.
There is also a special GUEST role, named 'guest'. These are the permissions given to unauthenticated requests to etcd. This role will be created automatically, and by default allows access to the full keyspace due to backward compatability. (etcd did not previously authenticate any actions.). This role can be modified by a ROOT role holder at any time, to reduce the capabilities of unauthenticated users.
#### Permissions
There are two types of permissions, `read` and `write`. All management and settings require the ROOT role.
A Permission List is a list of allowed patterns for that particular permission (read or write). Only ALLOW prefixes are supported. DENY becomes more complicated and is TBD.
### Key-Value Resources
A key-value resource is a key-value pairs in the store. Given a list of matching patterns, permission for any given key in a request is granted if any of the patterns in the list match.
Only prefixes or exact keys are supported. A prefix permission string ends in `*`.
A permission on `/foo` is for that exact key or directory, not its children or recursively. `/foo*` is a prefix that matches `/foo` recursively, and all keys thereunder, and keys with that prefix (eg. `/foobar`. Contrast to the prefix `/foo/*`). `*` alone is permission on the full keyspace.
### Settings Resources
Specific settings for the cluster as a whole. This can include adding and removing cluster members, enabling or disabling authentication, replacing certificates, and any other dynamic configuration by the administrator (holder of the ROOT role).
## v2 Auth
### Basic Auth
We only support [Basic Auth](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basic_access_authentication) for the first version. Client needs to attach the basic auth to the HTTP Authorization Header.
### Authorization field for operations
Added to requests to /v2/keys, /v2/auth
Add code 401 Unauthorized to the set of responses from the v2 API
Authorization: Basic {encoded string}
### Future Work
Other types of auth can be considered for the future (eg, signed certs, public keys) but the `Authorization:` header allows for other such types
### Things out of Scope for etcd Permissions
* Pluggable AUTH backends like LDAP (other Authorization tokens generated by LDAP et al may be a possibility)
* Very fine-grained access controls (eg: users modifying keys outside work hours)
## API endpoints
An Error JSON corresponds to:
{
"name": "ErrErrorName",
"description" : "The longer helpful description of the error."
}
#### Enable and Disable Authentication
**Get auth status**
GET /v2/auth/enable
Sent Headers:
Possible Status Codes:
200 OK
200 Body:
{
"enabled": true
}
**Enable auth**
PUT /v2/auth/enable
Sent Headers:
Put Body: (empty)
Possible Status Codes:
200 OK
400 Bad Request (if root user has not been created)
409 Conflict (already enabled)
200 Body: (empty)
**Disable auth**
DELETE /v2/auth/enable
Sent Headers:
Authorization: Basic <RootAuthString>
Possible Status Codes:
200 OK
401 Unauthorized (if not a root user)
409 Conflict (already disabled)
200 Body: (empty)
#### Users
The User JSON object is formed as follows:
```
{
"user": "userName",
"password": "password",
"roles": [
"role1",
"role2"
],
"grant": [],
"revoke": []
}
```
Password is only passed when necessary.
**Get a list of users**
GET/HEAD /v2/auth/users
Sent Headers:
Authorization: Basic <BasicAuthString>
Possible Status Codes:
200 OK
401 Unauthorized
200 Headers:
Content-type: application/json
200 Body:
{
"users": ["alice", "bob", "eve"]
}
**Get User Details**
GET/HEAD /v2/auth/users/alice
Sent Headers:
Authorization: Basic <BasicAuthString>
Possible Status Codes:
200 OK
401 Unauthorized
404 Not Found
200 Headers:
Content-type: application/json
200 Body:
{
"user" : "alice",
"roles" : ["fleet", "etcd"]
}
**Create Or Update A User**
A user can be created with initial roles, if filled in. However, no roles are required; only the username and password fields
PUT /v2/auth/users/charlie
Sent Headers:
Authorization: Basic <BasicAuthString>
Put Body:
JSON struct, above, matching the appropriate name
* Starting password and roles when creating.
* Grant/Revoke/Password filled in when updating (to grant roles, revoke roles, or change the password).
Possible Status Codes:
200 OK
201 Created
400 Bad Request
401 Unauthorized
404 Not Found (update non-existent users)
409 Conflict (when granting duplicated roles or revoking non-existent roles)
200 Headers:
Content-type: application/json
200 Body:
JSON state of the user
**Remove A User**
DELETE /v2/auth/users/charlie
Sent Headers:
Authorization: Basic <BasicAuthString>
Possible Status Codes:
200 OK
401 Unauthorized
403 Forbidden (remove root user when auth is enabled)
404 Not Found
200 Headers:
200 Body: (empty)
#### Roles
A full role structure may look like this. A Permission List structure is used for the "permissions", "grant", and "revoke" keys.
```
{
"role" : "fleet",
"permissions" : {
"kv" : {
"read" : [ "/fleet/" ],
"write": [ "/fleet/" ]
}
},
"grant" : {"kv": {...}},
"revoke": {"kv": {...}}
}
```
**Get a list of Roles**
GET/HEAD /v2/auth/roles
Sent Headers:
Authorization: Basic <BasicAuthString>
Possible Status Codes:
200 OK
401 Unauthorized
200 Headers:
Content-type: application/json
200 Body:
{
"roles": ["fleet", "etcd", "quay"]
}
**Get Role Details**
GET/HEAD /v2/auth/roles/fleet
Sent Headers:
Authorization: Basic <BasicAuthString>
Possible Status Codes:
200 OK
401 Unauthorized
404 Not Found
200 Headers:
Content-type: application/json
200 Body:
{
"role" : "fleet",
"permissions" : {
"kv" : {
"read": [ "/fleet/" ],
"write": [ "/fleet/" ]
}
}
}
**Create Or Update A Role**
PUT /v2/auth/roles/rkt
Sent Headers:
Authorization: Basic <BasicAuthString>
Put Body:
Initial desired JSON state, including the role name for verification and:
* Starting permission set if creating
* Granted/Revoked permission set if updating
Possible Status Codes:
200 OK
201 Created
400 Bad Request
401 Unauthorized
404 Not Found (update non-existent roles)
409 Conflict (when granting duplicated permission or revoking non-existent permission)
200 Body:
JSON state of the role
**Remove A Role**
DELETE /v2/auth/roles/rkt
Sent Headers:
Authorization: Basic <BasicAuthString>
Possible Status Codes:
200 OK
401 Unauthorized
403 Forbidden (remove root)
404 Not Found
200 Headers:
200 Body: (empty)
## Example Workflow
Let's walk through an example to show two tenants (applications, in our case) using etcd permissions.
### Create root role
```
PUT /v2/auth/users/root
Put Body:
{"user" : "root", "password": "betterRootPW!"}
```
### Enable auth
```
PUT /v2/auth/enable
```
### Modify guest role (revoke write permission)
```
PUT /v2/auth/roles/guest
Headers:
Authorization: Basic <root:betterRootPW!>
Put Body:
{
"role" : "guest",
"revoke" : {
"kv" : {
"write": [
"*"
]
}
}
}
```
### Create Roles for the Applications
Create the rkt role fully specified:
```
PUT /v2/auth/roles/rkt
Headers:
Authorization: Basic <root:betterRootPW!>
Body:
{
"role" : "rkt",
"permissions" : {
"kv": {
"read": [
"/rkt/*"
],
"write": [
"/rkt/*"
]
}
}
}
```
But let's make fleet just a basic role for now:
```
PUT /v2/auth/roles/fleet
Headers:
Authorization: Basic <root:betterRootPW!>
Body:
{
"role" : "fleet"
}
```
### Optional: Grant some permissions to the roles
Well, we finally figured out where we want fleet to live. Let's fix it.
(Note that we avoided this in the rkt case. So this step is optional.)
```
PUT /v2/auth/roles/fleet
Headers:
Authorization: Basic <root:betterRootPW!>
Put Body:
{
"role" : "fleet",
"grant" : {
"kv" : {
"read": [
"/rkt/fleet",
"/fleet/*"
]
}
}
}
```
### Create Users
Same as before, let's use rocket all at once and fleet separately
```
PUT /v2/auth/users/rktuser
Headers:
Authorization: Basic <root:betterRootPW!>
Body:
{"user" : "rktuser", "password" : "rktpw", "roles" : ["rkt"]}
```
```
PUT /v2/auth/users/fleetuser
Headers:
Authorization: Basic <root:betterRootPW!>
Body:
{"user" : "fleetuser", "password" : "fleetpw"}
```
### Optional: Grant Roles to Users
Likewise, let's explicitly grant fleetuser access.
```
PUT /v2/auth/users/fleetuser
Headers:
Authorization: Basic <root:betterRootPW!>
Body:
{"user": "fleetuser", "grant": ["fleet"]}
```
#### Start to use fleetuser and rktuser
For example:
```
PUT /v2/keys/rkt/RktData
Headers:
Authorization: Basic <rktuser:rktpw>
Body:
value=launch
```
Reads and writes outside the prefixes granted will fail with a 401 Unauthorized.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,179 @@
# Authentication Guide
**NOTE: The authentication feature is considered experimental. We may change workflow without warning in future releases.**
## Overview
Authentication -- having users and roles in etcd -- was added in etcd 2.1. This guide will help you set up basic authentication in etcd.
etcd before 2.1 was a completely open system; anyone with access to the API could change keys. In order to preserve backward compatibility and upgradability, this feature is off by default.
For a full discussion of the RESTful API, see [the authentication API documentation](auth_api.md)
## Special Users and Roles
There is one special user, `root`, and there are two special roles, `root` and `guest`.
### User `root`
User `root` must be created before security can be activated. It has the `root` role and allows for the changing of anything inside etcd. The idea behind the `root` user is for recovery purposes -- a password is generated and stored somewhere -- and the root role is granted to the administrator accounts on the system. In the future, for troubleshooting and recovery, we will need to assume some access to the system, and future documentation will assume this root user (though anyone with the role will suffice).
### Role `root`
Role `root` cannot be modified, but it may be granted to any user. Having access via the root role not only allows global read-write access (as was the case before 2.1) but allows modification of the authentication policy and all administrative things, like modifying the cluster membership.
### Role `guest`
The `guest` role defines the permissions granted to any request that does not provide an authentication. This will be created on security activation (if it doesn't already exist) to have full access to all keys, as was true in etcd 2.0. It may be modified at any time, and cannot be removed.
## Working with users
The `user` subcommand for `etcdctl` handles all things having to do with user accounts.
A listing of users can be found with
```
$ etcdctl user list
```
Creating a user is as easy as
```
$ etcdctl user add myusername
```
And there will be prompt for a new password.
Roles can be granted and revoked for a user with
```
$ etcdctl user grant myusername -roles foo,bar,baz
$ etcdctl user revoke myusername -roles bar,baz
```
We can look at this user with
```
$ etcdctl user get myusername
```
And the password for a user can be changed with
```
$ etcdctl user passwd myusername
```
Which will prompt again for a new password.
To delete an account, there's always
```
$ etcdctl user remove myusername
```
## Working with roles
The `role` subcommand for `etcdctl` handles all things having to do with access controls for particular roles, as were granted to individual users.
A listing of roles can be found with
```
$ etcdctl role list
```
A new role can be created with
```
$ etcdctl role add myrolename
```
A role has no password; we are merely defining a new set of access rights.
Roles are granted access to various parts of the keyspace, a single path at a time.
Reading a path is simple; if the path ends in `*`, that key **and all keys prefixed with it**, are granted to holders of this role. If it does not end in `*`, only that key and that key alone is granted.
Access can be granted as either read, write, or both, as in the following examples:
```
# Give read access to keys under the /foo directory
$ etcdctl role grant myrolename -path '/foo/*' -read
# Give write-only access to the key at /foo/bar
$ etcdctl role grant myrolename -path '/foo/bar' -write
# Give full access to keys under /pub
$ etcdctl role grant myrolename -path '/pub/*' -readwrite
```
Beware that
```
# Give full access to keys under /pub??
$ etcdctl role grant myrolename -path '/pub*' -readwrite
```
Without the slash may include keys under `/publishing`, for example. To do both, grant `/pub` and `/pub/*`
To see what's granted, we can look at the role at any time:
```
$ etcdctl role get myrolename
```
Revocation of permissions is done the same logical way:
```
$ etcdctl role revoke myrolename -path '/foo/bar' -write
```
As is removing a role entirely
```
$ etcdctl role remove myrolename
```
## Enabling authentication
The minimal steps to enabling auth follow. The administrator can set up users and roles before or after enabling authentication, as a matter of preference.
Make sure the root user is created:
```
$ etcdctl user add root
New password:
```
And enable authentication
```
$ etcdctl auth enable
```
After this, etcd is running with authentication enabled. To disable it for any reason, use the reciprocal command:
```
$ etcdctl -u root:rootpw auth disable
```
It would also be good to check what guests (unauthenticated users) are allowed to do:
```
$ etcdctl -u root:rootpw role get guest
```
And modify this role appropriately, depending on your policies.
## Using `etcdctl` to authenticate
`etcdctl` supports a similar flag as `curl` for authentication.
```
$ etcdctl -u user:password get foo
```
or if you prefer to be prompted:
```
$ etcdctl -u user get foo
```
Otherwise, all `etcdctl` commands remain the same. Users and roles can still be created and modified, but require authentication by a user with the root role.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,71 @@
# Backward Compatibility
The main goal of etcd 2.0 release is to improve cluster safety around bootstrapping and dynamic reconfiguration. To do this, we deprecated the old error-prone APIs and provide a new set of APIs.
The other main focus of this release was a more reliable Raft implementation, but as this change is internal it should not have any notable effects to users.
## Command Line Flags Changes
The major flag changes are to mostly related to bootstrapping. The `initial-*` flags provide an improved way to specify the required criteria to start the cluster. The advertised URLs now support a list of values instead of a single value, which allows etcd users to gracefully migrate to the new set of IANA-assigned ports (2379/client and 2380/peers) while maintaining backward compatibility with the old ports.
- `-addr` is replaced by `-advertise-client-urls`.
- `-bind-addr` is replaced by `-listen-client-urls`.
- `-peer-addr` is replaced by `-initial-advertise-peer-urls`.
- `-peer-bind-addr` is replaced by `-listen-peer-urls`.
- `-peers` is replaced by `-initial-cluster`.
- `-peers-file` is replaced by `-initial-cluster`.
- `-peer-heartbeat-interval` is replaced by `-heartbeat-interval`.
- `-peer-election-timeout` is replaced by `-election-timeout`.
The documentation of new command line flags can be found at
https://github.com/coreos/etcd/blob/master/Documentation/configuration.md.
## Data Directory Naming
The default data dir location has changed from {$hostname}.etcd to {name}.etcd.
## Key-Value API
### Read consistency flag
The consistent flag for read operations is removed in etcd 2.0.0. The normal read operations provides the same consistency guarantees with the 0.4.6 read operations with consistent flag set.
The read consistency guarantees are:
The consistent read guarantees the sequential consistency within one client that talks to one etcd server. Read/Write from one client to one etcd member should be observed in order. If one client write a value to a etcd server successfully, it should be able to get the value out of the server immediately.
Each etcd member will proxy the request to leader and only return the result to user after the result is applied on the local member. Thus after the write succeed, the user is guaranteed to see the value on the member it sent the request to.
Reads do not provide linearizability. If you want linearizable read, you need to set quorum option to true.
**Previous behavior**
We added an option for a consistent read in the old version of etcd since etcd 0.x redirects the write request to the leader. When the user get back the result from the leader, the member it sent the request to originally might not apply the write request yet. With the consistent flag set to true, the client will always send read request to the leader. So one client should be able to see its last write when consistent=true is enabled. There is no order guarantees among different clients.
## Standby
etcd 0.4s standby mode has been deprecated. [Proxy mode][proxymode] is introduced to solve a subset of problems standby was solving.
Standby mode was intended for large clusters that had a subset of the members acting in the consensus process. Overall this process was too magical and allowed for operators to back themselves into a corner.
Proxy mode in 2.0 will provide similar functionality, and with improved control over which machines act as proxies due to the operator specifically configuring them. Proxies also support read only or read/write modes for increased security and durability.
[proxymode]: proxy.md
## Discovery Service
A size key needs to be provided inside a [discovery token][discoverytoken].
[discoverytoken]: clustering.md#custom-etcd-discovery-service
## HTTP Admin API
`v2/admin` on peer url and `v2/keys/_etcd` are unified under the new [v2/member API][memberapi] to better explain which machines are part of an etcd cluster, and to simplify the keyspace for all your use cases.
[memberapi]: other_apis.md
## HTTP Key Value API
- The follower can now transparently proxy write requests to the leader. Clients will no longer see 307 redirections to the leader from etcd.
- Expiration time is in UTC instead of local time.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
# Benchmarks
etcd benchmarks will be published regularly and tracked for each release below:
- [etcd v2.1.0-alpha](./etcd-2-1-0-alpha-benchmarks.md)
- [etcd v2.2.0-rc](./etcd-2-2-0-rc-benchmarks.md)
- [etcd v3 demo](./etcd-3-demo-benchmarks.md)
# Memory Usage Benchmarks
It records expected memory usage in different scenarios.
- [etcd v2.2.0-rc](./etcd-2-2-0-rc-memory-benchmarks.md)

View File

@ -0,0 +1,49 @@
## Physical machines
GCE n1-highcpu-2 machine type
- 1x dedicated local SSD mounted under /var/lib/etcd
- 1x dedicated slow disk for the OS
- 1.8 GB memory
- 2x CPUs
- etcd version 2.1.0 alpha
## etcd Cluster
3 etcd members, each runs on a single machine
## Testing
Bootstrap another machine and use benchmark tool [boom](https://github.com/rakyll/boom) to send requests to each etcd member.
## Performance
### reading one single key
| key size in bytes | number of clients | target etcd server | read QPS | 90th Percentile Latency (ms) |
|-------------------|-------------------|--------------------|----------|---------------|
| 64 | 1 | leader only | 1534 | 0.7 |
| 64 | 64 | leader only | 10125 | 9.1 |
| 64 | 256 | leader only | 13892 | 27.1 |
| 256 | 1 | leader only | 1530 | 0.8 |
| 256 | 64 | leader only | 10106 | 10.1 |
| 256 | 256 | leader only | 14667 | 27.0 |
| 64 | 64 | all servers | 24200 | 3.9 |
| 64 | 256 | all servers | 33300 | 11.8 |
| 256 | 64 | all servers | 24800 | 3.9 |
| 256 | 256 | all servers | 33000 | 11.5 |
### writing one single key
| key size in bytes | number of clients | target etcd server | write QPS | 90th Percentile Latency (ms) |
|-------------------|-------------------|--------------------|-----------|---------------|
| 64 | 1 | leader only | 60 | 21.4 |
| 64 | 64 | leader only | 1742 | 46.8 |
| 64 | 256 | leader only | 3982 | 90.5 |
| 256 | 1 | leader only | 58 | 20.3 |
| 256 | 64 | leader only | 1770 | 47.8 |
| 256 | 256 | leader only | 4157 | 105.3 |
| 64 | 64 | all servers | 1028 | 123.4 |
| 64 | 256 | all servers | 3260 | 123.8 |
| 256 | 64 | all servers | 1033 | 121.5 |
| 256 | 256 | all servers | 3061 | 119.3 |

View File

@ -0,0 +1,67 @@
## Physical machines
GCE n1-highcpu-2 machine type
- 1x dedicated local SSD mounted under /var/lib/etcd
- 1x dedicated slow disk for the OS
- 1.8 GB memory
- 2x CPUs
## etcd Cluster
3 etcd 2.2.0-rc members, each runs on a single machine.
Detailed versions:
```
etcd Version: 2.2.0-alpha.1+git
Git SHA: 59a5a7e
Go Version: go1.4.2
Go OS/Arch: linux/amd64
```
Also, we use 3 etcd 2.1.0 alpha-stage members to form cluster to get base performance. etcd's commit head is at [c7146bd5](https://github.com/coreos/etcd/commits/c7146bd5f2c73716091262edc638401bb8229144), which is the same as the one that we use in [etcd 2.1 benchmark](./etcd-2-1-0-benchmarks.md).
## Testing
Bootstrap another machine and use benchmark tool [boom](https://github.com/rakyll/boom) to send requests to each etcd member. Check [here](../../hack/benchmark/) for instructions.
## Performance
### reading one single key
| key size in bytes | number of clients | target etcd server | read QPS | 90th Percentile Latency (ms) |
|-------------------|-------------------|--------------------|----------|---------------|
| 64 | 1 | leader only | 2804 (-5%) | 0.4 (+0%) |
| 64 | 64 | leader only | 17816 (+0%) | 5.7 (-6%) |
| 64 | 256 | leader only | 18667 (-6%) | 20.4 (+2%) |
| 256 | 1 | leader only | 2181 (-15%) | 0.5 (+25%) |
| 256 | 64 | leader only | 17435 (-7%) | 6.0 (+9%) |
| 256 | 256 | leader only | 18180 (-8%) | 21.3 (+3%) |
| 64 | 64 | all servers | 46965 (-4%) | 2.1 (+0%) |
| 64 | 256 | all servers | 55286 (-6%) | 7.4 (+6%) |
| 256 | 64 | all servers | 46603 (-6%) | 2.1 (+5%) |
| 256 | 256 | all servers | 55291 (-6%) | 7.3 (+4%) |
### writing one single key
| key size in bytes | number of clients | target etcd server | write QPS | 90th Percentile Latency (ms) |
|-------------------|-------------------|--------------------|-----------|---------------|
| 64 | 1 | leader only | 76 (+22%) | 19.4 (-15%) |
| 64 | 64 | leader only | 2461 (+45%) | 31.8 (-32%) |
| 64 | 256 | leader only | 4275 (+1%) | 69.6 (-10%) |
| 256 | 1 | leader only | 64 (+20%) | 16.7 (-30%) |
| 256 | 64 | leader only | 2385 (+30%) | 31.5 (-19%) |
| 256 | 256 | leader only | 4353 (-3%) | 74.0 (+9%) |
| 64 | 64 | all servers | 2005 (+81%) | 49.8 (-55%) |
| 64 | 256 | all servers | 4868 (+35%) | 81.5 (-40%) |
| 256 | 64 | all servers | 1925 (+72%) | 47.7 (-59%) |
| 256 | 256 | all servers | 4975 (+36%) | 70.3 (-36%) |
### performance changes explanation
- read QPS in most scenarios is decreased by 5~8%. The reason is that etcd records store metrics for each store operation. The metrics is important for monitoring and debugging, so this is acceptable.
- write QPS to leader is increased by 20~30%. This is because we decouple raft main loop and entry apply loop, which avoids them blocking each other.
- write QPS to all servers is increased by 30~80% because follower could receive latest commit index earlier and commit proposals faster.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,47 @@
## Physical machine
GCE n1-standard-2 machine type
- 1x dedicated local SSD mounted under /var/lib/etcd
- 1x dedicated slow disk for the OS
- 7.5 GB memory
- 2x CPUs
## etcd
```
etcd Version: 2.2.0-rc.0+git
Git SHA: 103cb5c
Go Version: go1.5
Go OS/Arch: linux/amd64
```
## Testing
Start 3-member etcd cluster, each of which uses 2 cores.
The length of key name is always 64 bytes, which is a reasonable length of average key bytes.
## Memory Maximal Usage
- etcd may use maximal memory if one follower is dead and the leader keeps sending snapshots.
- `max RSS` is the maximal memory usage recorded in 3 runs.
| value bytes | key number | data size(MB) | max RSS(MB) | max RSS/data rate on leader |
|-------------|-------------|---------------|-------------|-----------------------------|
| 128 | 50000 | 6 | 433 | 72x |
| 128 | 100000 | 12 | 659 | 54x |
| 128 | 200000 | 24 | 1466 | 61x |
| 1024 | 50000 | 48 | 1253 | 26x |
| 1024 | 100000 | 96 | 2344 | 24x |
| 1024 | 200000 | 192 | 4361 | 22x |
## Data Size Threshold
- When etcd reaches data size threshold, it may trigger leader election easily and drop part of proposals.
- At most cases, etcd cluster should work smoothly if it doesn't hit the threshold. If it doesn't work well due to insufficient resources, you need to decrease its data size.
| value bytes | key number limitation | suggested data size threshold(MB) | consumed RSS(MB) |
|-------------|-----------------------|-----------------------------------|------------------|
| 128 | 400K | 48 | 2400 |
| 1024 | 300K | 292 | 6500 |

View File

@ -0,0 +1,40 @@
## Physical machines
GCE n1-highcpu-2 machine type
- 1x dedicated local SSD mounted under /var/lib/etcd
- 1x dedicated slow disk for the OS
- 1.8 GB memory
- 2x CPUs
- etcd version 2.2.0
## etcd Cluster
1 etcd member running in v3 demo mode
## Testing
Use [etcd v3 benchmark tool](../../hack/v3benchmark/).
## Performance
### reading one single key
| key size in bytes | number of clients | read QPS | 90th Percentile Latency (ms) |
|-------------------|-------------------|----------|---------------|
| 256 | 1 | 2716 | 0.4 |
| 256 | 64 | 16623 | 6.1 |
| 256 | 256 | 16622 | 21.7 |
The performance is nearly the same as the one with empty server handler.
### reading one single key after putting
| key size in bytes | number of clients | read QPS | 90th Percentile Latency (ms) |
|-------------------|-------------------|----------|---------------|
| 256 | 1 | 2269 | 0.5 |
| 256 | 64 | 13582 | 8.6 |
| 256 | 256 | 13262 | 47.5 |
The performance with empty server handler is not affected by one put. So the
performance downgrade should be caused by storage package.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,24 @@
## Branch Management
### Guide
- New development occurs on the [master branch](https://github.com/coreos/etcd/tree/master)
- Master branch should always have a green build!
- Backwards-compatible bug fixes should target the master branch and subsequently be ported to stable branches
- Once the master branch is ready for release, it will be tagged and become the new stable branch.
The etcd team has adopted a _rolling release model_ and supports one stable version of etcd.
### Master branch
The `master` branch is our development branch. All new features land here first.
If you want to try new features, pull `master` and play with it. Note that `master` may not be stable because new features may introduce bugs.
Before the release of the next stable version, feature PRs will be frozen. We will focus on the testing, bug-fix and documentation for one to two weeks.
### Stable branches
All branches with prefix `release-` are considered _stable_ branches.
After every minor release (http://semver.org/), we will have a new stable branch for that release. We will keep fixing the backwards-compatible bugs for the latest stable release, but not previous releases. The _patch_ release, incorporating any bug fixes, will be once every two weeks, given any patches.

402
Documentation/clustering.md Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,402 @@
# Clustering Guide
## Overview
Starting an etcd cluster statically requires that each member knows another in the cluster. In a number of cases, you might not know the IPs of your cluster members ahead of time. In these cases, you can bootstrap an etcd cluster with the help of a discovery service.
Once an etcd cluster is up and running, adding or removing members is done via [runtime reconfiguration](runtime-configuration.md). To better understand the design behind runtime reconfiguration, we suggest you read [this](runtime-reconf-design.md).
This guide will cover the following mechanisms for bootstrapping an etcd cluster:
* [Static](#static)
* [etcd Discovery](#etcd-discovery)
* [DNS Discovery](#dns-discovery)
Each of the bootstrapping mechanisms will be used to create a three machine etcd cluster with the following details:
|Name|Address|Hostname|
|------|---------|------------------|
|infra0|10.0.1.10|infra0.example.com|
|infra1|10.0.1.11|infra1.example.com|
|infra2|10.0.1.12|infra2.example.com|
## Static
As we know the cluster members, their addresses and the size of the cluster before starting, we can use an offline bootstrap configuration by setting the `initial-cluster` flag. Each machine will get either the following command line or environment variables:
```
ETCD_INITIAL_CLUSTER="infra0=http://10.0.1.10:2380,infra1=http://10.0.1.11:2380,infra2=http://10.0.1.12:2380"
ETCD_INITIAL_CLUSTER_STATE=new
```
```
-initial-cluster infra0=http://10.0.1.10:2380,infra1=http://10.0.1.11:2380,infra2=http://10.0.1.12:2380 \
-initial-cluster-state new
```
Note that the URLs specified in `initial-cluster` are the _advertised peer URLs_, i.e. they should match the value of `initial-advertise-peer-urls` on the respective nodes.
If you are spinning up multiple clusters (or creating and destroying a single cluster) with same configuration for testing purpose, it is highly recommended that you specify a unique `initial-cluster-token` for the different clusters. By doing this, etcd can generate unique cluster IDs and member IDs for the clusters even if they otherwise have the exact same configuration. This can protect you from cross-cluster-interaction, which might corrupt your clusters.
etcd listens on [`listen-client-urls`](configuration.md#-listen-client-urls) to accept client traffic. etcd member advertises the URLs specified in [`advertise-client-urls`](configuration.md#-advertise-client-urls) to other members, proxies, clients. Please make sure the `advertise-client-urls` are reachable from intended clients. A common mistake is setting `advertise-client-urls` to localhost or leave it as default when you want the remote clients to reach etcd.
On each machine you would start etcd with these flags:
```
$ etcd -name infra0 -initial-advertise-peer-urls http://10.0.1.10:2380 \
-listen-peer-urls http://10.0.1.10:2380 \
-listen-client-urls http://10.0.1.10:2379,http://127.0.0.1:2379 \
-advertise-client-urls http://10.0.1.10:2379 \
-initial-cluster-token etcd-cluster-1 \
-initial-cluster infra0=http://10.0.1.10:2380,infra1=http://10.0.1.11:2380,infra2=http://10.0.1.12:2380 \
-initial-cluster-state new
```
```
$ etcd -name infra1 -initial-advertise-peer-urls http://10.0.1.11:2380 \
-listen-peer-urls http://10.0.1.11:2380 \
-listen-client-urls http://10.0.1.11:2379,http://127.0.0.1:2379 \
-advertise-client-urls http://10.0.1.11:2379 \
-initial-cluster-token etcd-cluster-1 \
-initial-cluster infra0=http://10.0.1.10:2380,infra1=http://10.0.1.11:2380,infra2=http://10.0.1.12:2380 \
-initial-cluster-state new
```
```
$ etcd -name infra2 -initial-advertise-peer-urls http://10.0.1.12:2380 \
-listen-peer-urls http://10.0.1.12:2380 \
-listen-client-urls http://10.0.1.12:2379,http://127.0.0.1:2379 \
-advertise-client-urls http://10.0.1.12:2379 \
-initial-cluster-token etcd-cluster-1 \
-initial-cluster infra0=http://10.0.1.10:2380,infra1=http://10.0.1.11:2380,infra2=http://10.0.1.12:2380 \
-initial-cluster-state new
```
The command line parameters starting with `-initial-cluster` will be ignored on subsequent runs of etcd. You are free to remove the environment variables or command line flags after the initial bootstrap process. If you need to make changes to the configuration later (for example, adding or removing members to/from the cluster), see the [runtime configuration](runtime-configuration.md) guide.
### Error Cases
In the following example, we have not included our new host in the list of enumerated nodes. If this is a new cluster, the node _must_ be added to the list of initial cluster members.
```
$ etcd -name infra1 -initial-advertise-peer-urls http://10.0.1.11:2380 \
-listen-peer-urls https://10.0.1.11:2380 \
-listen-client-urls http://10.0.1.11:2379,http://127.0.0.1:2379 \
-advertise-client-urls http://10.0.1.11:2379 \
-initial-cluster infra0=http://10.0.1.10:2380 \
-initial-cluster-state new
etcd: infra1 not listed in the initial cluster config
exit 1
```
In this example, we are attempting to map a node (infra0) on a different address (127.0.0.1:2380) than its enumerated address in the cluster list (10.0.1.10:2380). If this node is to listen on multiple addresses, all addresses _must_ be reflected in the "initial-cluster" configuration directive.
```
$ etcd -name infra0 -initial-advertise-peer-urls http://127.0.0.1:2380 \
-listen-peer-urls http://10.0.1.10:2380 \
-listen-client-urls http://10.0.1.10:2379,http://127.0.0.1:2379 \
-advertise-client-urls http://10.0.1.10:2379 \
-initial-cluster infra0=http://10.0.1.10:2380,infra1=http://10.0.1.11:2380,infra2=http://10.0.1.12:2380 \
-initial-cluster-state=new
etcd: error setting up initial cluster: infra0 has different advertised URLs in the cluster and advertised peer URLs list
exit 1
```
If you configure a peer with a different set of configuration and attempt to join this cluster you will get a cluster ID mismatch and etcd will exit.
```
$ etcd -name infra3 -initial-advertise-peer-urls http://10.0.1.13:2380 \
-listen-peer-urls http://10.0.1.13:2380 \
-listen-client-urls http://10.0.1.13:2379,http://127.0.0.1:2379 \
-advertise-client-urls http://10.0.1.13:2379 \
-initial-cluster infra0=http://10.0.1.10:2380,infra1=http://10.0.1.11:2380,infra3=http://10.0.1.13:2380 \
-initial-cluster-state=new
etcd: conflicting cluster ID to the target cluster (c6ab534d07e8fcc4 != bc25ea2a74fb18b0). Exiting.
exit 1
```
## Discovery
In a number of cases, you might not know the IPs of your cluster peers ahead of time. This is common when utilizing cloud providers or when your network uses DHCP. In these cases, rather than specifying a static configuration, you can use an existing etcd cluster to bootstrap a new one. We call this process "discovery".
There two methods that can be used for discovery:
* etcd discovery service
* DNS SRV records
### etcd Discovery
To better understand the design about discovery service protocol, we suggest you read [this](./discovery_protocol.md).
#### Lifetime of a Discovery URL
A discovery URL identifies a unique etcd cluster. Instead of reusing a discovery URL, you should always create discovery URLs for new clusters.
Moreover, discovery URLs should ONLY be used for the initial bootstrapping of a cluster. To change cluster membership after the cluster is already running, see the [runtime reconfiguration][runtime] guide.
[runtime]: runtime-configuration.md
#### Custom etcd Discovery Service
Discovery uses an existing cluster to bootstrap itself. If you are using your own etcd cluster you can create a URL like so:
```
$ curl -X PUT https://myetcd.local/v2/keys/discovery/6c007a14875d53d9bf0ef5a6fc0257c817f0fb83/_config/size -d value=3
```
By setting the size key to the URL, you create a discovery URL with an expected cluster size of 3.
If you bootstrap an etcd cluster using discovery service with more than the expected number of etcd members, the extra etcd processes will [fall back][fall-back] to being [proxies][proxy] by default.
The URL you will use in this case will be `https://myetcd.local/v2/keys/discovery/6c007a14875d53d9bf0ef5a6fc0257c817f0fb83` and the etcd members will use the `https://myetcd.local/v2/keys/discovery/6c007a14875d53d9bf0ef5a6fc0257c817f0fb83` directory for registration as they start.
Each member must have a different name flag specified. Or discovery will fail due to duplicated name.
Now we start etcd with those relevant flags for each member:
```
$ etcd -name infra0 -initial-advertise-peer-urls http://10.0.1.10:2380 \
-listen-peer-urls http://10.0.1.10:2380 \
-listen-client-urls http://10.0.1.10:2379,http://127.0.0.1:2379 \
-advertise-client-urls http://10.0.1.10:2379 \
-discovery https://myetcd.local/v2/keys/discovery/6c007a14875d53d9bf0ef5a6fc0257c817f0fb83
```
```
$ etcd -name infra1 -initial-advertise-peer-urls http://10.0.1.11:2380 \
-listen-peer-urls http://10.0.1.11:2380 \
-listen-client-urls http://10.0.1.11:2379,http://127.0.0.1:2379 \
-advertise-client-urls http://10.0.1.11:2379 \
-discovery https://myetcd.local/v2/keys/discovery/6c007a14875d53d9bf0ef5a6fc0257c817f0fb83
```
```
$ etcd -name infra2 -initial-advertise-peer-urls http://10.0.1.12:2380 \
-listen-peer-urls http://10.0.1.12:2380 \
-listen-client-urls http://10.0.1.12:2379,http://127.0.0.1:2379 \
-advertise-client-urls http://10.0.1.12:2379 \
-discovery https://myetcd.local/v2/keys/discovery/6c007a14875d53d9bf0ef5a6fc0257c817f0fb83
```
This will cause each member to register itself with the custom etcd discovery service and begin the cluster once all machines have been registered.
#### Public etcd Discovery Service
If you do not have access to an existing cluster, you can use the public discovery service hosted at `discovery.etcd.io`. You can create a private discovery URL using the "new" endpoint like so:
```
$ curl https://discovery.etcd.io/new?size=3
https://discovery.etcd.io/3e86b59982e49066c5d813af1c2e2579cbf573de
```
This will create the cluster with an initial expected size of 3 members. If you do not specify a size, a default of 3 will be used.
If you bootstrap an etcd cluster using discovery service with more than the expected number of etcd members, the extra etcd processes will [fall back][fall-back] to being [proxies][proxy] by default.
[fall-back]: proxy.md#fallback-to-proxy-mode-with-discovery-service
[proxy]: proxy.md
```
ETCD_DISCOVERY=https://discovery.etcd.io/3e86b59982e49066c5d813af1c2e2579cbf573de
```
```
-discovery https://discovery.etcd.io/3e86b59982e49066c5d813af1c2e2579cbf573de
```
Each member must have a different name flag specified. Or discovery will fail due to duplicated name.
Now we start etcd with those relevant flags for each member:
```
$ etcd -name infra0 -initial-advertise-peer-urls http://10.0.1.10:2380 \
-listen-peer-urls http://10.0.1.10:2380 \
-listen-client-urls http://10.0.1.10:2379,http://127.0.0.1:2379 \
-advertise-client-urls http://10.0.1.10:2379 \
-discovery https://discovery.etcd.io/3e86b59982e49066c5d813af1c2e2579cbf573de
```
```
$ etcd -name infra1 -initial-advertise-peer-urls http://10.0.1.11:2380 \
-listen-peer-urls http://10.0.1.11:2380 \
-listen-client-urls http://10.0.1.11:2379,http://127.0.0.1:2379 \
-advertise-client-urls http://10.0.1.11:2379 \
-discovery https://discovery.etcd.io/3e86b59982e49066c5d813af1c2e2579cbf573de
```
```
$ etcd -name infra2 -initial-advertise-peer-urls http://10.0.1.12:2380 \
-listen-peer-urls http://10.0.1.12:2380 \
-listen-client-urls http://10.0.1.12:2379,http://127.0.0.1:2379 \
-advertise-client-urls http://10.0.1.12:2379 \
-discovery https://discovery.etcd.io/3e86b59982e49066c5d813af1c2e2579cbf573de
```
This will cause each member to register itself with the discovery service and begin the cluster once all members have been registered.
You can use the environment variable `ETCD_DISCOVERY_PROXY` to cause etcd to use an HTTP proxy to connect to the discovery service.
#### Error and Warning Cases
##### Discovery Server Errors
```
$ etcd -name infra0 -initial-advertise-peer-urls http://10.0.1.10:2380 \
-listen-peer-urls http://10.0.1.10:2380 \
-listen-client-urls http://10.0.1.10:2379,http://127.0.0.1:2379 \
-advertise-client-urls http://10.0.1.10:2379 \
-discovery https://discovery.etcd.io/3e86b59982e49066c5d813af1c2e2579cbf573de
etcd: error: the cluster doesnt have a size configuration value in https://discovery.etcd.io/3e86b59982e49066c5d813af1c2e2579cbf573de/_config
exit 1
```
##### User Errors
This error will occur if the discovery cluster already has the configured number of members, and `discovery-fallback` is explicitly disabled
```
$ etcd -name infra0 -initial-advertise-peer-urls http://10.0.1.10:2380 \
-listen-peer-urls http://10.0.1.10:2380 \
-listen-client-urls http://10.0.1.10:2379,http://127.0.0.1:2379 \
-advertise-client-urls http://10.0.1.10:2379 \
-discovery https://discovery.etcd.io/3e86b59982e49066c5d813af1c2e2579cbf573de \
-discovery-fallback exit
etcd: discovery: cluster is full
exit 1
```
##### Warnings
This is a harmless warning notifying you that the discovery URL will be
ignored on this machine.
```
$ etcd -name infra0 -initial-advertise-peer-urls http://10.0.1.10:2380 \
-listen-peer-urls http://10.0.1.10:2380 \
-listen-client-urls http://10.0.1.10:2379,http://127.0.0.1:2379 \
-advertise-client-urls http://10.0.1.10:2379 \
-discovery https://discovery.etcd.io/3e86b59982e49066c5d813af1c2e2579cbf573de
etcdserver: discovery token ignored since a cluster has already been initialized. Valid log found at /var/lib/etcd
```
### DNS Discovery
DNS [SRV records](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2052.txt) can be used as a discovery mechanism.
The `-discovery-srv` flag can be used to set the DNS domain name where the discovery SRV records can be found.
The following DNS SRV records are looked up in the listed order:
* _etcd-server-ssl._tcp.example.com
* _etcd-server._tcp.example.com
If `_etcd-server-ssl._tcp.example.com` is found then etcd will attempt the bootstrapping process over SSL.
#### Create DNS SRV records
```
$ dig +noall +answer SRV _etcd-server._tcp.example.com
_etcd-server._tcp.example.com. 300 IN SRV 0 0 2380 infra0.example.com.
_etcd-server._tcp.example.com. 300 IN SRV 0 0 2380 infra1.example.com.
_etcd-server._tcp.example.com. 300 IN SRV 0 0 2380 infra2.example.com.
```
```
$ dig +noall +answer infra0.example.com infra1.example.com infra2.example.com
infra0.example.com. 300 IN A 10.0.1.10
infra1.example.com. 300 IN A 10.0.1.11
infra2.example.com. 300 IN A 10.0.1.12
```
#### Bootstrap the etcd cluster using DNS
etcd cluster members can listen on domain names or IP address, the bootstrap process will resolve DNS A records.
The resolved address in `-initial-advertise-peer-urls` *must match* one of the resolved addresses in the SRV targets. The etcd member reads the resolved address to find out if it belongs to the cluster defined in the SRV records.
```
$ etcd -name infra0 \
-discovery-srv example.com \
-initial-advertise-peer-urls http://infra0.example.com:2380 \
-initial-cluster-token etcd-cluster-1 \
-initial-cluster-state new \
-advertise-client-urls http://infra0.example.com:2379 \
-listen-client-urls http://infra0.example.com:2379 \
-listen-peer-urls http://infra0.example.com:2380
```
```
$ etcd -name infra1 \
-discovery-srv example.com \
-initial-advertise-peer-urls http://infra1.example.com:2380 \
-initial-cluster-token etcd-cluster-1 \
-initial-cluster-state new \
-advertise-client-urls http://infra1.example.com:2379 \
-listen-client-urls http://infra1.example.com:2379 \
-listen-peer-urls http://infra1.example.com:2380
```
```
$ etcd -name infra2 \
-discovery-srv example.com \
-initial-advertise-peer-urls http://infra2.example.com:2380 \
-initial-cluster-token etcd-cluster-1 \
-initial-cluster-state new \
-advertise-client-urls http://infra2.example.com:2379 \
-listen-client-urls http://infra2.example.com:2379 \
-listen-peer-urls http://infra2.example.com:2380
```
You can also bootstrap the cluster using IP addresses instead of domain names:
```
$ etcd -name infra0 \
-discovery-srv example.com \
-initial-advertise-peer-urls http://10.0.1.10:2380 \
-initial-cluster-token etcd-cluster-1 \
-initial-cluster-state new \
-advertise-client-urls http://10.0.1.10:2379 \
-listen-client-urls http://10.0.1.10:2379 \
-listen-peer-urls http://10.0.1.10:2380
```
```
$ etcd -name infra1 \
-discovery-srv example.com \
-initial-advertise-peer-urls http://10.0.1.11:2380 \
-initial-cluster-token etcd-cluster-1 \
-initial-cluster-state new \
-advertise-client-urls http://10.0.1.11:2379 \
-listen-client-urls http://10.0.1.11:2379 \
-listen-peer-urls http://10.0.1.11:2380
```
```
$ etcd -name infra2 \
-discovery-srv example.com \
-initial-advertise-peer-urls http://10.0.1.12:2380 \
-initial-cluster-token etcd-cluster-1 \
-initial-cluster-state new \
-advertise-client-urls http://10.0.1.12:2379 \
-listen-client-urls http://10.0.1.12:2379 \
-listen-peer-urls http://10.0.1.12:2380
```
#### etcd proxy configuration
DNS SRV records can also be used to configure the list of peers for an etcd server running in proxy mode:
```
$ etcd --proxy on -discovery-srv example.com
```
#### Error Cases
You might see the an error like `cannot find local etcd $name from SRV records.`. That means the etcd member fails to find itself from the cluster defined in SRV records. The resolved address in `-initial-advertise-peer-urls` *must match* one of the resolved addresses in the SRV targets.
# 0.4 to 2.0+ Migration Guide
In etcd 2.0 we introduced the ability to listen on more than one address and to advertise multiple addresses. This makes using etcd easier when you have complex networking, such as private and public networks on various cloud providers.
To make understanding this feature easier, we changed the naming of some flags, but we support the old flags to make the migration from the old to new version easier.
|Old Flag |New Flag |Migration Behavior |
|-----------------------|-----------------------|---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
|-peer-addr |-initial-advertise-peer-urls |If specified, peer-addr will be used as the only peer URL. Error if both flags specified.|
|-addr |-advertise-client-urls |If specified, addr will be used as the only client URL. Error if both flags specified.|
|-peer-bind-addr |-listen-peer-urls |If specified, peer-bind-addr will be used as the only peer bind URL. Error if both flags specified.|
|-bind-addr |-listen-client-urls |If specified, bind-addr will be used as the only client bind URL. Error if both flags specified.|
|-peers |none |Deprecated. The -initial-cluster flag provides a similar concept with different semantics. Please read this guide on cluster startup.|
|-peers-file |none |Deprecated. The -initial-cluster flag provides a similar concept with different semantics. Please read this guide on cluster startup.|

View File

@ -0,0 +1,264 @@
## Configuration Flags
etcd is configurable through command-line flags and environment variables. Options set on the command line take precedence over those from the environment.
The format of environment variable for flag `-my-flag` is `ETCD_MY_FLAG`. It applies to all flags.
To start etcd automatically using custom settings at startup in Linux, using a [systemd][systemd-intro] unit is highly recommended.
[systemd-intro]: http://freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/
### Member Flags
##### -name
+ Human-readable name for this member.
+ default: "default"
+ env variable: ETCD_NAME
+ This value is referenced as this node's own entries listed in the `-initial-cluster` flag (Ex: `default=http://localhost:2380` or `default=http://localhost:2380,default=http://localhost:7001`). This needs to match the key used in the flag if you're using [static boostrapping](clustering.md#static).
##### -data-dir
+ Path to the data directory.
+ default: "${name}.etcd"
+ env variable: ETCD_DATA_DIR
##### -wal-dir
+ Path to the dedicated wal directory. If this flag is set, etcd will write the WAL files to the walDir rather than the dataDir. This allows a dedicated disk to be used, and helps avoid io competition between logging and other IO operations.
+ default: ""
+ env variable: ETCD_WAL_DIR
##### -snapshot-count
+ Number of committed transactions to trigger a snapshot to disk.
+ default: "10000"
+ env variable: ETCD_SNAPSHOT_COUNT
##### -heartbeat-interval
+ Time (in milliseconds) of a heartbeat interval.
+ default: "100"
+ env variable: ETCD_HEARTBEAT_INTERVAL
##### -election-timeout
+ Time (in milliseconds) for an election to timeout. See [Documentation/tuning.md](tuning.md#time-parameters) for details.
+ default: "1000"
+ env variable: ETCD_ELECTION_TIMEOUT
##### -listen-peer-urls
+ List of URLs to listen on for peer traffic. This flag tells the etcd to accept incoming requests from its peers on the specified scheme://IP:port combinations. Scheme can be either http or https.If 0.0.0.0 is specified as the IP, etcd listens to the given port on all interfaces. If an IP address is given as well as a port, etcd will listen on the given port and interface. Multiple URLs may be used to specify a number of addresses and ports to listen on. The etcd will respond to requests from any of the listed addresses and ports.
+ default: "http://localhost:2380,http://localhost:7001"
+ env variable: ETCD_LISTEN_PEER_URLS
+ example: "http://10.0.0.1:2380"
+ invalid example: "http://example.com:2380" (domain name is invalid for binding)
##### -listen-client-urls
+ List of URLs to listen on for client traffic. This flag tells the etcd to accept incoming requests from the clients on the specified scheme://IP:port combinations. Scheme can be either http or https. If 0.0.0.0 is specified as the IP, etcd listens to the given port on all interfaces. If an IP address is given as well as a port, etcd will listen on the given port and interface. Multiple URLs may be used to specify a number of addresses and ports to listen on. The etcd will respond to requests from any of the listed addresses and ports.
+ default: "http://localhost:2379,http://localhost:4001"
+ env variable: ETCD_LISTEN_CLIENT_URLS
+ example: "http://10.0.0.1:2379"
+ invalid example: "http://example.com:2379" (domain name is invalid for binding)
##### -max-snapshots
+ Maximum number of snapshot files to retain (0 is unlimited)
+ default: 5
+ env variable: ETCD_MAX_SNAPSHOTS
+ The default for users on Windows is unlimited, and manual purging down to 5 (or your preference for safety) is recommended.
##### -max-wals
+ Maximum number of wal files to retain (0 is unlimited)
+ default: 5
+ env variable: ETCD_MAX_WALS
+ The default for users on Windows is unlimited, and manual purging down to 5 (or your preference for safety) is recommended.
##### -cors
+ Comma-separated white list of origins for CORS (cross-origin resource sharing).
+ default: none
+ env variable: ETCD_CORS
### Clustering Flags
`-initial` prefix flags are used in bootstrapping ([static bootstrap][build-cluster], [discovery-service bootstrap][discovery] or [runtime reconfiguration][reconfig]) a new member, and ignored when restarting an existing member.
`-discovery` prefix flags need to be set when using [discovery service][discovery].
##### -initial-advertise-peer-urls
+ List of this member's peer URLs to advertise to the rest of the cluster. These addresses are used for communicating etcd data around the cluster. At least one must be routable to all cluster members. These URLs can contain domain names.
+ default: "http://localhost:2380,http://localhost:7001"
+ env variable: ETCD_INITIAL_ADVERTISE_PEER_URLS
+ example: "http://example.com:2380, http://10.0.0.1:2380"
##### -initial-cluster
+ Initial cluster configuration for bootstrapping.
+ default: "default=http://localhost:2380,default=http://localhost:7001"
+ env variable: ETCD_INITIAL_CLUSTER
+ The key is the value of the `-name` flag for each node provided. The default uses `default` for the key because this is the default for the `-name` flag.
##### -initial-cluster-state
+ Initial cluster state ("new" or "existing"). Set to `new` for all members present during initial static or DNS bootstrapping. If this option is set to `existing`, etcd will attempt to join the existing cluster. If the wrong value is set, etcd will attempt to start but fail safely.
+ default: "new"
+ env variable: ETCD_INITIAL_CLUSTER_STATE
[static bootstrap]: clustering.md#static
##### -initial-cluster-token
+ Initial cluster token for the etcd cluster during bootstrap.
+ default: "etcd-cluster"
+ env variable: ETCD_INITIAL_CLUSTER_TOKEN
##### -advertise-client-urls
+ List of this member's client URLs to advertise to the rest of the cluster. These URLs can contain domain names.
+ default: "http://localhost:2379,http://localhost:4001"
+ env variable: ETCD_ADVERTISE_CLIENT_URLS
+ example: "http://example.com:2379, http://10.0.0.1:2379"
+ Be careful if you are advertising URLs such as http://localhost:2379 from a cluster member and are using the proxy feature of etcd. This will cause loops, because the proxy will be forwarding requests to itself until its resources (memory, file descriptors) are eventually depleted.
##### -discovery
+ Discovery URL used to bootstrap the cluster.
+ default: none
+ env variable: ETCD_DISCOVERY
##### -discovery-srv
+ DNS srv domain used to bootstrap the cluster.
+ default: none
+ env variable: ETCD_DISCOVERY_SRV
##### -discovery-fallback
+ Expected behavior ("exit" or "proxy") when discovery services fails.
+ default: "proxy"
+ env variable: ETCD_DISCOVERY_FALLBACK
##### -discovery-proxy
+ HTTP proxy to use for traffic to discovery service.
+ default: none
+ env variable: ETCD_DISCOVERY_PROXY
### Proxy Flags
`-proxy` prefix flags configures etcd to run in [proxy mode][proxy].
##### -proxy
+ Proxy mode setting ("off", "readonly" or "on").
+ default: "off"
+ env variable: ETCD_PROXY
##### -proxy-failure-wait
+ Time (in milliseconds) an endpoint will be held in a failed state before being reconsidered for proxied requests.
+ default: 5000
+ env variable: ETCD_PROXY_FAILURE_WAIT
##### -proxy-refresh-interval
+ Time (in milliseconds) of the endpoints refresh interval.
+ default: 30000
+ env variable: ETCD_PROXY_REFRESH_INTERVAL
##### -proxy-dial-timeout
+ Time (in milliseconds) for a dial to timeout or 0 to disable the timeout
+ default: 1000
+ env variable: ETCD_PROXY_DIAL_TIMEOUT
##### -proxy-write-timeout
+ Time (in milliseconds) for a write to timeout or 0 to disable the timeout.
+ default: 5000
+ env variable: ETCD_PROXY_WRITE_TIMEOUT
##### -proxy-read-timeout
+ Time (in milliseconds) for a read to timeout or 0 to disable the timeout.
+ Don't change this value if you use watches because they are using long polling requests.
+ default: 0
+ env variable: ETCD_PROXY_READ_TIMEOUT
### Security Flags
The security flags help to [build a secure etcd cluster][security].
##### -ca-file [DEPRECATED]
+ Path to the client server TLS CA file. `-ca-file ca.crt` could be replaced by `-trusted-ca-file ca.crt -client-cert-auth` and etcd will perform the same.
+ default: none
+ env variable: ETCD_CA_FILE
##### -cert-file
+ Path to the client server TLS cert file.
+ default: none
+ env variable: ETCD_CERT_FILE
##### -key-file
+ Path to the client server TLS key file.
+ default: none
+ env variable: ETCD_KEY_FILE
##### -client-cert-auth
+ Enable client cert authentication.
+ default: false
+ env variable: ETCD_CLIENT_CERT_AUTH
##### -trusted-ca-file
+ Path to the client server TLS trusted CA key file.
+ default: none
+ env variable: ETCD_TRUSTED_CA_FILE
##### -peer-ca-file [DEPRECATED]
+ Path to the peer server TLS CA file. `-peer-ca-file ca.crt` could be replaced by `-peer-trusted-ca-file ca.crt -peer-client-cert-auth` and etcd will perform the same.
+ default: none
+ env variable: ETCD_PEER_CA_FILE
##### -peer-cert-file
+ Path to the peer server TLS cert file.
+ default: none
+ env variable: ETCD_PEER_CERT_FILE
##### -peer-key-file
+ Path to the peer server TLS key file.
+ default: none
+ env variable: ETCD_PEER_KEY_FILE
##### -peer-client-cert-auth
+ Enable peer client cert authentication.
+ default: false
+ env variable: ETCD_PEER_CLIENT_CERT_AUTH
##### -peer-trusted-ca-file
+ Path to the peer server TLS trusted CA file.
+ default: none
+ env variable: ETCD_PEER_TRUSTED_CA_FILE
### Logging Flags
##### -debug
+ Drop the default log level to DEBUG for all subpackages.
+ default: false (INFO for all packages)
+ env variable: ETCD_DEBUG
##### -log-package-levels
+ Set individual etcd subpackages to specific log levels. An example being `etcdserver=WARNING,security=DEBUG`
+ default: none (INFO for all packages)
+ env variable: ETCD_LOG_PACKAGE_LEVELS
### Unsafe Flags
Please be CAUTIOUS when using unsafe flags because it will break the guarantees given by the consensus protocol.
For example, it may panic if other members in the cluster are still alive.
Follow the instructions when using these flags.
##### -force-new-cluster
+ Force to create a new one-member cluster. It commits configuration changes in force to remove all existing members in the cluster and add itself. It needs to be set to [restore a backup][restore].
+ default: false
+ env variable: ETCD_FORCE_NEW_CLUSTER
### Experimental Flags
##### -experimental-v3demo
+ Enable experimental [v3 demo API](rfc/v3api.proto).
+ default: false
+ env variable: ETCD_EXPERIMENTAL_V3DEMO
### Miscellaneous Flags
##### -version
+ Print the version and exit.
+ default: false
[build-cluster]: clustering.md#static
[reconfig]: runtime-configuration.md
[discovery]: clustering.md#discovery
[proxy]: proxy.md
[security]: security.md
[restore]: admin_guide.md#restoring-a-backup

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@ -1,427 +0,0 @@
{
"swagger": "2.0",
"info": {
"title": "server/etcdserver/api/v3election/v3electionpb/v3election.proto",
"version": "version not set"
},
"consumes": [
"application/json"
],
"produces": [
"application/json"
],
"paths": {
"/v3/election/campaign": {
"post": {
"summary": "Campaign waits to acquire leadership in an election, returning a LeaderKey\nrepresenting the leadership if successful. The LeaderKey can then be used\nto issue new values on the election, transactionally guard API requests on\nleadership still being held, and resign from the election.",
"operationId": "Election_Campaign",
"responses": {
"200": {
"description": "A successful response.",
"schema": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/v3electionpbCampaignResponse"
}
},
"default": {
"description": "An unexpected error response",
"schema": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/runtimeError"
}
}
},
"parameters": [
{
"name": "body",
"in": "body",
"required": true,
"schema": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/v3electionpbCampaignRequest"
}
}
],
"tags": [
"Election"
]
}
},
"/v3/election/leader": {
"post": {
"summary": "Leader returns the current election proclamation, if any.",
"operationId": "Election_Leader",
"responses": {
"200": {
"description": "A successful response.",
"schema": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/v3electionpbLeaderResponse"
}
},
"default": {
"description": "An unexpected error response",
"schema": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/runtimeError"
}
}
},
"parameters": [
{
"name": "body",
"in": "body",
"required": true,
"schema": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/v3electionpbLeaderRequest"
}
}
],
"tags": [
"Election"
]
}
},
"/v3/election/observe": {
"post": {
"summary": "Observe streams election proclamations in-order as made by the election's\nelected leaders.",
"operationId": "Election_Observe",
"responses": {
"200": {
"description": "A successful response.(streaming responses)",
"schema": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"result": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/v3electionpbLeaderResponse"
},
"error": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/runtimeStreamError"
}
},
"title": "Stream result of v3electionpbLeaderResponse"
}
},
"default": {
"description": "An unexpected error response",
"schema": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/runtimeError"
}
}
},
"parameters": [
{
"name": "body",
"in": "body",
"required": true,
"schema": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/v3electionpbLeaderRequest"
}
}
],
"tags": [
"Election"
]
}
},
"/v3/election/proclaim": {
"post": {
"summary": "Proclaim updates the leader's posted value with a new value.",
"operationId": "Election_Proclaim",
"responses": {
"200": {
"description": "A successful response.",
"schema": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/v3electionpbProclaimResponse"
}
},
"default": {
"description": "An unexpected error response",
"schema": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/runtimeError"
}
}
},
"parameters": [
{
"name": "body",
"in": "body",
"required": true,
"schema": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/v3electionpbProclaimRequest"
}
}
],
"tags": [
"Election"
]
}
},
"/v3/election/resign": {
"post": {
"summary": "Resign releases election leadership so other campaigners may acquire\nleadership on the election.",
"operationId": "Election_Resign",
"responses": {
"200": {
"description": "A successful response.",
"schema": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/v3electionpbResignResponse"
}
},
"default": {
"description": "An unexpected error response",
"schema": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/runtimeError"
}
}
},
"parameters": [
{
"name": "body",
"in": "body",
"required": true,
"schema": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/v3electionpbResignRequest"
}
}
],
"tags": [
"Election"
]
}
}
},
"definitions": {
"etcdserverpbResponseHeader": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"cluster_id": {
"type": "string",
"format": "uint64",
"description": "cluster_id is the ID of the cluster which sent the response."
},
"member_id": {
"type": "string",
"format": "uint64",
"description": "member_id is the ID of the member which sent the response."
},
"revision": {
"type": "string",
"format": "int64",
"description": "revision is the key-value store revision when the request was applied.\nFor watch progress responses, the header.revision indicates progress. All future events\nrecieved in this stream are guaranteed to have a higher revision number than the\nheader.revision number."
},
"raft_term": {
"type": "string",
"format": "uint64",
"description": "raft_term is the raft term when the request was applied."
}
}
},
"mvccpbKeyValue": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"key": {
"type": "string",
"format": "byte",
"description": "key is the key in bytes. An empty key is not allowed."
},
"create_revision": {
"type": "string",
"format": "int64",
"description": "create_revision is the revision of last creation on this key."
},
"mod_revision": {
"type": "string",
"format": "int64",
"description": "mod_revision is the revision of last modification on this key."
},
"version": {
"type": "string",
"format": "int64",
"description": "version is the version of the key. A deletion resets\nthe version to zero and any modification of the key\nincreases its version."
},
"value": {
"type": "string",
"format": "byte",
"description": "value is the value held by the key, in bytes."
},
"lease": {
"type": "string",
"format": "int64",
"description": "lease is the ID of the lease that attached to key.\nWhen the attached lease expires, the key will be deleted.\nIf lease is 0, then no lease is attached to the key."
}
}
},
"protobufAny": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"type_url": {
"type": "string"
},
"value": {
"type": "string",
"format": "byte"
}
}
},
"runtimeError": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"error": {
"type": "string"
},
"code": {
"type": "integer",
"format": "int32"
},
"message": {
"type": "string"
},
"details": {
"type": "array",
"items": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/protobufAny"
}
}
}
},
"runtimeStreamError": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"grpc_code": {
"type": "integer",
"format": "int32"
},
"http_code": {
"type": "integer",
"format": "int32"
},
"message": {
"type": "string"
},
"http_status": {
"type": "string"
},
"details": {
"type": "array",
"items": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/protobufAny"
}
}
}
},
"v3electionpbCampaignRequest": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"name": {
"type": "string",
"format": "byte",
"description": "name is the election's identifier for the campaign."
},
"lease": {
"type": "string",
"format": "int64",
"description": "lease is the ID of the lease attached to leadership of the election. If the\nlease expires or is revoked before resigning leadership, then the\nleadership is transferred to the next campaigner, if any."
},
"value": {
"type": "string",
"format": "byte",
"description": "value is the initial proclaimed value set when the campaigner wins the\nelection."
}
}
},
"v3electionpbCampaignResponse": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"header": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/etcdserverpbResponseHeader"
},
"leader": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/v3electionpbLeaderKey",
"description": "leader describes the resources used for holding leadereship of the election."
}
}
},
"v3electionpbLeaderKey": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"name": {
"type": "string",
"format": "byte",
"description": "name is the election identifier that correponds to the leadership key."
},
"key": {
"type": "string",
"format": "byte",
"description": "key is an opaque key representing the ownership of the election. If the key\nis deleted, then leadership is lost."
},
"rev": {
"type": "string",
"format": "int64",
"description": "rev is the creation revision of the key. It can be used to test for ownership\nof an election during transactions by testing the key's creation revision\nmatches rev."
},
"lease": {
"type": "string",
"format": "int64",
"description": "lease is the lease ID of the election leader."
}
}
},
"v3electionpbLeaderRequest": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"name": {
"type": "string",
"format": "byte",
"description": "name is the election identifier for the leadership information."
}
}
},
"v3electionpbLeaderResponse": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"header": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/etcdserverpbResponseHeader"
},
"kv": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/mvccpbKeyValue",
"description": "kv is the key-value pair representing the latest leader update."
}
}
},
"v3electionpbProclaimRequest": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"leader": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/v3electionpbLeaderKey",
"description": "leader is the leadership hold on the election."
},
"value": {
"type": "string",
"format": "byte",
"description": "value is an update meant to overwrite the leader's current value."
}
}
},
"v3electionpbProclaimResponse": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"header": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/etcdserverpbResponseHeader"
}
}
},
"v3electionpbResignRequest": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"leader": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/v3electionpbLeaderKey",
"description": "leader is the leadership to relinquish by resignation."
}
}
},
"v3electionpbResignResponse": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"header": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/etcdserverpbResponseHeader"
}
}
}
}
}

View File

@ -1,187 +0,0 @@
{
"swagger": "2.0",
"info": {
"title": "server/etcdserver/api/v3lock/v3lockpb/v3lock.proto",
"version": "version not set"
},
"consumes": [
"application/json"
],
"produces": [
"application/json"
],
"paths": {
"/v3/lock/lock": {
"post": {
"summary": "Lock acquires a distributed shared lock on a given named lock.\nOn success, it will return a unique key that exists so long as the\nlock is held by the caller. This key can be used in conjunction with\ntransactions to safely ensure updates to etcd only occur while holding\nlock ownership. The lock is held until Unlock is called on the key or the\nlease associate with the owner expires.",
"operationId": "Lock_Lock",
"responses": {
"200": {
"description": "A successful response.",
"schema": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/v3lockpbLockResponse"
}
},
"default": {
"description": "An unexpected error response",
"schema": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/runtimeError"
}
}
},
"parameters": [
{
"name": "body",
"in": "body",
"required": true,
"schema": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/v3lockpbLockRequest"
}
}
],
"tags": [
"Lock"
]
}
},
"/v3/lock/unlock": {
"post": {
"summary": "Unlock takes a key returned by Lock and releases the hold on lock. The\nnext Lock caller waiting for the lock will then be woken up and given\nownership of the lock.",
"operationId": "Lock_Unlock",
"responses": {
"200": {
"description": "A successful response.",
"schema": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/v3lockpbUnlockResponse"
}
},
"default": {
"description": "An unexpected error response",
"schema": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/runtimeError"
}
}
},
"parameters": [
{
"name": "body",
"in": "body",
"required": true,
"schema": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/v3lockpbUnlockRequest"
}
}
],
"tags": [
"Lock"
]
}
}
},
"definitions": {
"etcdserverpbResponseHeader": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"cluster_id": {
"type": "string",
"format": "uint64",
"description": "cluster_id is the ID of the cluster which sent the response."
},
"member_id": {
"type": "string",
"format": "uint64",
"description": "member_id is the ID of the member which sent the response."
},
"revision": {
"type": "string",
"format": "int64",
"description": "revision is the key-value store revision when the request was applied.\nFor watch progress responses, the header.revision indicates progress. All future events\nrecieved in this stream are guaranteed to have a higher revision number than the\nheader.revision number."
},
"raft_term": {
"type": "string",
"format": "uint64",
"description": "raft_term is the raft term when the request was applied."
}
}
},
"protobufAny": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"type_url": {
"type": "string"
},
"value": {
"type": "string",
"format": "byte"
}
}
},
"runtimeError": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"error": {
"type": "string"
},
"code": {
"type": "integer",
"format": "int32"
},
"message": {
"type": "string"
},
"details": {
"type": "array",
"items": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/protobufAny"
}
}
}
},
"v3lockpbLockRequest": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"name": {
"type": "string",
"format": "byte",
"description": "name is the identifier for the distributed shared lock to be acquired."
},
"lease": {
"type": "string",
"format": "int64",
"description": "lease is the ID of the lease that will be attached to ownership of the\nlock. If the lease expires or is revoked and currently holds the lock,\nthe lock is automatically released. Calls to Lock with the same lease will\nbe treated as a single acquisition; locking twice with the same lease is a\nno-op."
}
}
},
"v3lockpbLockResponse": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"header": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/etcdserverpbResponseHeader"
},
"key": {
"type": "string",
"format": "byte",
"description": "key is a key that will exist on etcd for the duration that the Lock caller\nowns the lock. Users should not modify this key or the lock may exhibit\nundefined behavior."
}
}
},
"v3lockpbUnlockRequest": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"key": {
"type": "string",
"format": "byte",
"description": "key is the lock ownership key granted by Lock."
}
}
},
"v3lockpbUnlockResponse": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"header": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/etcdserverpbResponseHeader"
}
}
}
}
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,109 @@
# etcd release guide
The guide talks about how to release a new version of etcd.
The procedure includes some manual steps for sanity checking but it can probably be further scripted. Please keep this document up-to-date if you want to make changes to the release process.
## Prepare Release
Set desired version as environment variable for following steps. Here is an example to release 2.1.3:
```
export VERSION=v2.1.3
export PREV_VERSION=v2.1.2
```
All releases version numbers follow the format of [semantic versioning 2.0.0](http://semver.org/).
### Major, Minor Version Release, or its Pre-release
- Ensure the relevant milestone on GitHub is complete. All referenced issues should be closed, or moved elsewhere.
- Remove this release from [roadmap](https://github.com/coreos/etcd/blob/master/ROADMAP.md), if necessary.
- Ensure the latest upgrade documentation is available.
- Bump [hardcoded MinClusterVerion in the repository](https://github.com/coreos/etcd/blob/master/version/version.go#L29), if necessary.
- Add feature capability maps for the new version, if necessary.
### Patch Version Release
- Discuss about commits that are backported to the patch release. The commits should not include merge commits.
- Cherry-pick these commits starting from the oldest one into stable branch.
## Write Release Note
- Write introduction for the new release. For example, what major bug we fix, what new features we introduce or what performance improvement we make.
- Write changelog for the last release. ChangeLog should be straightforward and easy to understand for the end-user.
- Put `[GH XXXX]` at the head of change line to reference Pull Request that introduces the change. Moreover, add a link on it to jump to the Pull Request.
## Tag Version
- Bump [hardcoded Version in the repository](https://github.com/coreos/etcd/blob/master/version/version.go#L30) to the latest version `${VERSION}`.
- Ensure all tests on CI system are passed.
- Manually check etcd is buildable in Linux, Darwin and Windows.
- Manually check upgrade etcd cluster of previous minor version works well.
- Manually check new features work well.
- Add a signed tag through `git tag -s ${VERSION}`.
- Sanity check tag correctness through `git show tags/$VERSION`.
- Push the tag to GitHub through `git push origin tags/$VERSION`. This assumes `origin` corresponds to "https://github.com/coreos/etcd".
## Build Release Binaries and Images
- Ensure `actool` is available, or installing it through `go get github.com/appc/spec/actool`.
- Ensure `docker` is available.
Run release script in root directory:
```
./scripts/release.sh ${VERSION}
```
It generates all release binaries and images under directory ./release.
## Sign Binaries and Images
Choose appropriate private key to sign the generated binaries and images.
The following commands are used for public release sign:
```
cd release
# personal GPG is okay for now
for i in etcd-*{.zip,.tar.gz}; do gpg --sign ${i}; done
# use `CoreOS ACI Builder <release@coreos.com>` secret key
gpg -u 88182190 -a --output etcd-${VERSION}-linux-amd64.aci.asc --detach-sig etcd-${VERSION}-linux-amd64.aci
```
## Publish Release Page in GitHub
- Set release title as the version name.
- Follow the format of previous release pages.
- Attach the generated binaries, aci image and signatures.
- Select whether it is a pre-release.
- Publish the release!
## Publish Docker Image in Quay.io
- Push docker image:
```
docker login quay.io
docker push quay.io/coreos/etcd:${VERSION}
```
- Add `latest` tag to the new image on [quay.io](https://quay.io/repository/coreos/etcd?tag=latest&tab=tags) if this is a stable release.
## Announce to etcd-dev Googlegroup
- Follow the format of [previous release emails](https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/etcd-dev).
- Make sure to include a list of authors that contributed since the previous release - something like the following might be handy:
```
git log ...${PREV_VERSION} --pretty=format:"%an" | sort | uniq | tr '\n' ',' | sed -e 's#,#, #g' -e 's#, $##'
```
- Send email to etcd-dev@googlegroups.com
## Post Release
- Create new stable branch through `git push origin ${VERSION_MAJOR}.${VERSION_MINOR}` if this is a major stable release. This assumes `origin` corresponds to "https://github.com/coreos/etcd".
- Bump [hardcoded Version in the repository](https://github.com/coreos/etcd/blob/master/version/version.go#L30) to the version `${VERSION}+git`.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,109 @@
# Discovery Service Protocol
Discovery service protocol helps new etcd member to discover all other members in cluster bootstrap phase using a shared discovery URL.
Discovery service protocol is _only_ used in cluster bootstrap phase, and cannot be used for runtime reconfiguration or cluster monitoring.
The protocol uses a new discovery token to bootstrap one _unique_ etcd cluster. Remember that one discovery token can represent only one etcd cluster. As long as discovery protocol on this token starts, even if fails halfway, it must not be used to bootstrap another etcd cluster.
The rest of this article will walk through the discovery process with examples that correspond to a self-hosted discovery cluster. The public discovery service, discovery.etcd.io, functions the same way, but with a layer of polish to abstract away ugly URLs, generate UUIDs automatically, and provide some protections against excessive requests. At its core, the public discovery service still uses an etcd cluster as the data store as described in this document.
## The Protocol Workflow
The idea of discovery protocol is to use an internal etcd cluster to coordinate bootstrap of a new cluster. First, all new members interact with discovery service and help to generate the expected member list. Then each new member bootstraps its server using this list, which performs the same functionality as -initial-cluster flag.
In the following example workflow, we will list each step of protocol in curl format for ease of understanding.
By convention the etcd discovery protocol uses the key prefix `_etcd/registry`. If `http://example.com` hosts a etcd cluster for discovery service, a full URL to discovery keyspace will be `http://example.com/v2/keys/_etcd/registry`. We will use this as the URL prefix in the example.
### Creating a New Discovery Token
Generate a unique token that will identify the new cluster. This will be used as a unique prefix in discovery keyspace in the following steps. An easy way to do this is to use `uuidgen`:
```
UUID=$(uuidgen)
```
### Specifying the Expected Cluster Size
You need to specify the expected cluster size for this discovery token. The size is used by the discovery service to know when it has found all members that will initially form the cluster.
```
curl -X PUT http://example.com/v2/keys/_etcd/registry/${UUID}/_config/size -d value=${cluster_size}
```
Usually the cluster size is 3, 5 or 7. Check [optimal cluster size](admin_guide.md#optimal-cluster-size) for more details.
### Bringing up etcd Processes
Now that you have your discovery URL, you can use it as `-discovery` flag and bring up etcd processes. Every etcd process will follow this next few steps internally if given a `-discovery` flag.
### Registering itself
The first thing for etcd process is to register itself into the discovery URL as a member. This is done by creating member ID as a key in the discovery URL.
```
curl -X PUT http://example.com/v2/keys/_etcd/registry/${UUID}/${member_id}?prevExist=false -d value="${member_name}=${member_peer_url_1}&${member_name}=${member_peer_url_2}"
```
### Checking the Status
It checks the expected cluster size and registration status in discovery URL, and decides what the next action is.
```
curl -X GET http://example.com/v2/keys/_etcd/registry/${UUID}/_config/size
curl -X GET http://example.com/v2/keys/_etcd/registry/${UUID}
```
If registered members are still not enough, it will wait for left members to appear.
If the number of registered members is bigger than the expected size N, it treats the first N registered members as the member list for the cluster. If the member itself is in the member list, the discovery procedure succeeds and it fetches all peers through the member list. If it is not in the member list, the discovery procedure finishes with the failure that the cluster has been full.
In etcd implementation, the member may check the cluster status even before registering itself. So it could fail quickly if the cluster has been full.
### Waiting for All Members
The wait process is described in details [here](https://github.com/coreos/etcd/blob/master/Documentation/api.md#waiting-for-a-change).
```
curl -X GET http://example.com/v2/keys/_etcd/registry/${UUID}?wait=true&waitIndex=${current_etcd_index}
```
It keeps waiting until finding all members.
## Public Discovery Service
CoreOS Inc. hosts a public discovery service at https://discovery.etcd.io/ , which provides some nice features for ease of use.
### Mask Key Prefix
Public discovery service will redirect `https://discovery.etcd.io/${UUID}` to etcd cluster behind for the key at `/v2/keys/_etcd/registry`. It masks register key prefix for short and readable discovery url.
### Get new token
```
GET /new
Sent query:
size=${cluster_size}
Possible status codes:
200 OK
400 Bad Request
200 Body:
generated discovery url
```
The generation process in the service follows the step from [Creating a New Discovery Token](#creating-a-new-discovery-token) to [Specifying the Expected Cluster Size](#specifying-the-expected-cluster-size).
### Check Discovery Status
```
GET /${UUID}
```
You can check the status for this discovery token, including the machines that have been registered, by requesting the value of the UUID.
### Open-source repository
The repository is located at https://github.com/coreos/discovery.etcd.io. You could use it to build your own public discovery service.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,92 @@
# Running etcd under Docker
The following guide will show you how to run etcd under Docker using the [static bootstrap process](clustering.md#static).
## Running etcd in standalone mode
In order to expose the etcd API to clients outside of the Docker host you'll need use the host IP address when configuring etcd.
```
export HostIP="192.168.12.50"
```
The following `docker run` command will expose the etcd client API over ports 4001 and 2379, and expose the peer port over 2380.
```
docker run -d -v /usr/share/ca-certificates/:/etc/ssl/certs -p 4001:4001 -p 2380:2380 -p 2379:2379 \
--name etcd quay.io/coreos/etcd:v2.0.8 \
-name etcd0 \
-advertise-client-urls http://${HostIP}:2379,http://${HostIP}:4001 \
-listen-client-urls http://0.0.0.0:2379,http://0.0.0.0:4001 \
-initial-advertise-peer-urls http://${HostIP}:2380 \
-listen-peer-urls http://0.0.0.0:2380 \
-initial-cluster-token etcd-cluster-1 \
-initial-cluster etcd0=http://${HostIP}:2380 \
-initial-cluster-state new
```
Configure etcd clients to use the Docker host IP and one of the listening ports from above.
```
etcdctl -C http://192.168.12.50:2379 member list
```
```
etcdctl -C http://192.168.12.50:4001 member list
```
## Running a 3 node etcd cluster
Using Docker to setup a multi-node cluster is very similar to the standalone mode configuration.
The main difference being the value used for the `-initial-cluster` flag, which must contain the peer urls for each etcd member in the cluster.
### etcd0
```
docker run -d -v /usr/share/ca-certificates/:/etc/ssl/certs -p 4001:4001 -p 2380:2380 -p 2379:2379 \
--name etcd quay.io/coreos/etcd:v2.0.8 \
-name etcd0 \
-advertise-client-urls http://192.168.12.50:2379,http://192.168.12.50:4001 \
-listen-client-urls http://0.0.0.0:2379,http://0.0.0.0:4001 \
-initial-advertise-peer-urls http://192.168.12.50:2380 \
-listen-peer-urls http://0.0.0.0:2380 \
-initial-cluster-token etcd-cluster-1 \
-initial-cluster etcd0=http://192.168.12.50:2380,etcd1=http://192.168.12.51:2380,etcd2=http://192.168.12.52:2380 \
-initial-cluster-state new
```
### etcd1
```
docker run -d -v /usr/share/ca-certificates/:/etc/ssl/certs -p 4001:4001 -p 2380:2380 -p 2379:2379 \
--name etcd quay.io/coreos/etcd:v2.0.8 \
-name etcd1 \
-advertise-client-urls http://192.168.12.51:2379,http://192.168.12.51:4001 \
-listen-client-urls http://0.0.0.0:2379,http://0.0.0.0:4001 \
-initial-advertise-peer-urls http://192.168.12.51:2380 \
-listen-peer-urls http://0.0.0.0:2380 \
-initial-cluster-token etcd-cluster-1 \
-initial-cluster etcd0=http://192.168.12.50:2380,etcd1=http://192.168.12.51:2380,etcd2=http://192.168.12.52:2380 \
-initial-cluster-state new
```
### etcd2
```
docker run -d -v /usr/share/ca-certificates/:/etc/ssl/certs -p 4001:4001 -p 2380:2380 -p 2379:2379 \
--name etcd quay.io/coreos/etcd:v2.0.8 \
-name etcd2 \
-advertise-client-urls http://192.168.12.52:2379,http://192.168.12.52:4001 \
-listen-client-urls http://0.0.0.0:2379,http://0.0.0.0:4001 \
-initial-advertise-peer-urls http://192.168.12.52:2380 \
-listen-peer-urls http://0.0.0.0:2380 \
-initial-cluster-token etcd-cluster-1 \
-initial-cluster etcd0=http://192.168.12.50:2380,etcd1=http://192.168.12.51:2380,etcd2=http://192.168.12.52:2380 \
-initial-cluster-state new
```
Once the cluster has been bootstrapped etcd clients can be configured with a list of etcd members:
```
etcdctl -C http://192.168.12.50:2379,http://192.168.12.51:2379,http://192.168.12.52:2379 member list
```

View File

@ -0,0 +1,42 @@
Error Code
======
This document describes the error code used in key space '/v2/keys'. Feel free to import 'github.com/coreos/etcd/error' to use.
It's categorized into four groups:
- Command Related Error
| name | code | strerror |
|----------------------|------|-----------------------|
| EcodeKeyNotFound | 100 | "Key not found" |
| EcodeTestFailed | 101 | "Compare failed" |
| EcodeNotFile | 102 | "Not a file" |
| EcodeNotDir | 104 | "Not a directory" |
| EcodeNodeExist | 105 | "Key already exists" |
| EcodeRootROnly | 107 | "Root is read only" |
| EcodeDirNotEmpty | 108 | "Directory not empty" |
- Post Form Related Error
| name | code | strerror |
|--------------------------|------|------------------------------------------------|
| EcodePrevValueRequired | 201 | "PrevValue is Required in POST form" |
| EcodeTTLNaN | 202 | "The given TTL in POST form is not a number" |
| EcodeIndexNaN | 203 | "The given index in POST form is not a number" |
| EcodeInvalidField | 209 | "Invalid field" |
| EcodeInvalidForm | 210 | "Invalid POST form" |
- Raft Related Error
| name | code | strerror |
|-------------------|------|--------------------------|
| EcodeRaftInternal | 300 | "Raft Internal Error" |
| EcodeLeaderElect | 301 | "During Leader Election" |
- Etcd Related Error
| name | code | strerror |
|-------------------------|------|--------------------------------------------------------|
| EcodeWatcherCleared | 400 | "watcher is cleared due to etcd recovery" |
| EcodeEventIndexCleared | 401 | "The event in requested index is outdated and cleared" |

80
Documentation/faq.md Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,80 @@
# FAQ
## 1) How come I can read an old version of the data when a majority of the members are down?
In situations where a client connects to a minority, etcd
favors by default availability over consistency. This means that even though
data might be “out of date”, it is still better to return something versus
nothing.
In order to confirm that a read is up to date with a majority of the cluster,
the client can use the `quorum=true` parameter on reads of keys. This means
that a majority of the cluster is checked on reads before returning the data,
otherwise the read will timeout and fail.
## 2) With quorum=false, doesnt this mean that if my client switched the member it was connected to, that it could experience a logical ordering where the cluster goes backwards in time?
Yes, but this could be handled at the etcd client implementation via
remembering the last seen index. The “index” is the cluster's single
irrevocable sequence of the entire modification history. The client could
remember the last seen index, and determine via comparing the index returned on
the GET whether or not the state of the key-value pair is before or after its
last seen state.
## 3) What happens if a watch is registered on a minority member?
The watch will stay untriggered, even as modifications are occurring in the
majority quorum. This is an open issue, and is being addressed in v3. There are
multiple ways to work around the watch trigger not firing.
1) build a signaling mechanism independent of etcd. This could be as simple as
a “pulse” to the client to reissue a GET with quorum=true for the most recent
version of the data.
2) poll on the `/v2/keys` endpoint and check that the raft-index is increasing every
timeout.
## 4) What is a proxy used for?
A proxy is a redirection server to the etcd cluster. The proxy handles the
redirection of a client to the current configuration of the etcd cluster. A
typical usecase is to start a proxy on a machine, and on first boot up of the
proxy specify both the `--proxy` flag and the `--initial-cluster` flag.
From there, any etcdctl client that starts up automatically speaks to the local
proxy and the proxy redirects operations to the current configuration of the
cluster it was originally paired with.
In the v2 spec of etcd, proxies cannot be promoted to members of the cluster.
They also cannot be promoted to followers or at any point become part of the
replication of the etcd cluster itself.
## 5) How is cluster membership and health handled in etcd v2?
The design goal of etcd is that reconfiguration is simply an API, and health
monitoring and addition/removal of members is up to the individual application
and their integration with the reconfiguration API.
Thus, a member that is down, even infinitely, will never be automatically
removed from the etcd cluster member list.
This makes sense because its usually an application level / administrative
action to determine whether a reconfiguration should happen based on health.
For more information, refer to [Documentation/runtime-reconfiguration.md].
## 6) how does --peers work with etcdctl?
The `--peers` flag can specify any number of etcd cluster members in a comma
separated list. This list might be a subset, equal to, or more than the actual
etcd cluster member list itself.
If only one peer is specified via the `--peers` flag, the etcdctl discovers the
rest of the cluster via the member list of that one peer, and then it randomly
chooses a member to use. Again, the client can use the `quorum=true` flag on
reads, which will always fail when using a member in the minority.
If peers from multiple clusters are specified via the `--peers` flag, etcdctl
will randomly choose a peer, and the request will simply get routed to one of
the clusters. This is probably not what you want.

35
Documentation/glossary.md Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,35 @@
## Glossary
This document defines the various terms used in etcd documentation, command line and source code.
### Node
Node is an instance of raft state machine.
It has a unique identification, and records other nodes' progress internally when it is the leader.
### Member
Member is an instance of etcd. It hosts a node, and provides service to clients.
### Cluster
Cluster consists of several members.
The node in each member follows raft consensus protocol to replicate logs. Cluster receives proposals from members, commits them and apply to local store.
### Peer
Peer is another member of the same cluster.
### Proposal
A proposal is a request (for example a write request, a configuration change request) that needs to go through raft protocol.
### Client
Client is a caller of the cluster's HTTP API.
### Machine (deprecated)
The alternative of Member in etcd before 2.0

View File

@ -0,0 +1,65 @@
# FAQ
## Initial Bootstrapping UX
etcd initial bootstrapping is done via command line flags such as
`--initial-cluster` or `--discovery`. These flags can safely be left on the
command line after your cluster is running but they will be ignored if you have
a non-empty data dir. So, why did we decide to have this sort of odd UX?
One of the design goals of etcd is easy bringup of clusters using a one-shot
static configuration like AWS Cloud Formation, PXE booting, etc. Essentially we
want to describe several virtual machines and bring them all up at once into an
etcd cluster.
To achieve this sort of hands-free cluster bootstrap we had two other options:
**API to bootstrap**
This is problematic because it cannot be coordinated from a single service file
and we didn't want to have the etcd socket listening but unresponsive to
clients for an unbound period of time.
It would look something like this:
```
ExecStart=/usr/bin/etcd
ExecStartPost/usr/bin/etcd init localhost:2379 --cluster=
```
**etcd init subcommand**
```
etcd init --cluster='default=http://localhost:2380,default=http://localhost:7001'...
etcd init --discovery https://discovery-example.etcd.io/193e4
```
Then after running an init step you would execute `etcd`. This however
introduced problems: we now have to define a hand-off protocol between the etcd
init process and the etcd binary itself. This is hard to coordinate in a single
service file such as:
```
ExecStartPre=/usr/bin/etcd init --cluster=....
ExecStart=/usr/bin/etcd
```
There are several error cases:
0) Init has already ran and the data directory is already configured
1) Discovery fails because of network timeout, etc
2) Discovery fails because the cluster is already full and etcd needs to fall back to proxy
3) Static cluster configuration fails because of conflict, misconfiguration or timeout
In hindsight we could have made this work by doing:
```
rc status
0 Init already ran
1 Discovery fails on network timeout, etc
0 Discovery fails for cluster full, coordinate via proxy state file
1 Static cluster configuration failed
```
Perhaps we can add the init command in a future version and deprecate if the UX
continues to confuse people.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,61 @@
# Versioning
Goal: We want to be able to upgrade an individual peer in an etcd cluster to a newer version of etcd.
The process will take the form of individual followers upgrading to the latest version until the entire cluster is on the new version.
Immediate need: etcd is moving too fast to version the internal API right now.
But, we need to keep mixed version clusters from being started by a rolling upgrade process (e.g. the CoreOS developer alpha).
Longer term need: Having a mixed version cluster where all peers are not running the exact same version of etcd itself but are able to speak one version of the internal protocol.
Solution: The internal protocol needs to be versioned just as the client protocol is.
Initially during the 0.\*.\* series of etcd releases we won't allow mixed versions at all.
## Join Control
We will add a version field to the join command.
But, who decides whether a newly upgraded follower should be able to join a cluster?
### Leader Controlled
If the leader controls the version of followers joining the cluster then it compares its version to the version number presented by the follower in the JoinCommand and rejects the join if the number is less than the leader's version number.
Advantages
- Leader controls all cluster decisions still
Disadvantages
- Follower knows better what versions of the internal protocol it can talk than the leader
### Follower Controlled
A newly upgraded follower should be able to figure out the leaders internal version from a defined internal backwards compatible API endpoint and figure out if it can join the cluster.
If it cannot join the cluster then it simply exits.
Advantages
- The follower is running newer code and knows better if it can talk older protocols
Disadvantages
- This cluster decision isn't made by the leader
## Recommendation
To solve the immediate need and to plan for the future lets do the following:
- Add Version field to JoinCommand
- Have a joining follower read the Version field of the leader and if its own version doesn't match the leader then sleep for some random interval and retry later to see if the leader has upgraded.
# Research
## Zookeeper versioning
Zookeeper very recently added versioning into the protocol and it doesn't seem to have seen any use yet.
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/ZOOKEEPER-1633
## doozerd
doozerd stores the version number of the peers in the datastore for other clients to check, no decisions are made off of this number currently.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,121 @@
## Libraries and Tools
**Tools**
- [etcdctl](https://github.com/coreos/etcdctl) - A command line client for etcd
- [etcd-backup](https://github.com/fanhattan/etcd-backup) - A powerful command line utility for dumping/restoring etcd - Supports v2
- [etcd-dump](https://npmjs.org/package/etcd-dump) - Command line utility for dumping/restoring etcd.
- [etcd-fs](https://github.com/xetorthio/etcd-fs) - FUSE filesystem for etcd
- [etcd-browser](https://github.com/henszey/etcd-browser) - A web-based key/value editor for etcd using AngularJS
- [etcd-lock](https://github.com/datawisesystems/etcd-lock) - Master election & distributed r/w lock implementation using etcd - Supports v2
- [etcd-console](https://github.com/matishsiao/etcd-console) - A web-base key/value editor for etcd using PHP
- [etcd-viewer](https://github.com/nikfoundas/etcd-viewer) - An etcd key-value store editor/viewer written in Java
**Go libraries**
- [go-etcd](https://github.com/coreos/go-etcd) - Supports v2
**Java libraries**
- [boonproject/etcd](https://github.com/boonproject/boon/blob/master/etcd/README.md) - Supports v2, Async/Sync and waits
- [justinsb/jetcd](https://github.com/justinsb/jetcd)
- [diwakergupta/jetcd](https://github.com/diwakergupta/jetcd) - Supports v2
- [jurmous/etcd4j](https://github.com/jurmous/etcd4j) - Supports v2, Async/Sync, waits and SSL
- [AdoHe/etcd4j](http://github.com/AdoHe/etcd4j) - Supports v2 (enhance for real production cluster)
**Python libraries**
- [jplana/python-etcd](https://github.com/jplana/python-etcd) - Supports v2
- [russellhaering/txetcd](https://github.com/russellhaering/txetcd) - a Twisted Python library
- [cholcombe973/autodock](https://github.com/cholcombe973/autodock) - A docker deployment automation tool
- [lisael/aioetcd](https://github.com/lisael/aioetcd) - (Python 3.4+) Asyncio coroutines client (Supports v2)
**Node libraries**
- [stianeikeland/node-etcd](https://github.com/stianeikeland/node-etcd) - Supports v2 (w Coffeescript)
- [lavagetto/nodejs-etcd](https://github.com/lavagetto/nodejs-etcd) - Supports v2
- [deedubs/node-etcd-config](https://github.com/deedubs/node-etcd-config) - Supports v2
**Ruby libraries**
- [iconara/etcd-rb](https://github.com/iconara/etcd-rb)
- [jpfuentes2/etcd-ruby](https://github.com/jpfuentes2/etcd-ruby)
- [ranjib/etcd-ruby](https://github.com/ranjib/etcd-ruby) - Supports v2
**C libraries**
- [jdarcy/etcd-api](https://github.com/jdarcy/etcd-api) - Supports v2
- [shafreeck/cetcd](https://github.com/shafreeck/cetcd) - Supports v2
**C++ libraries**
- [edwardcapriolo/etcdcpp](https://github.com/edwardcapriolo/etcdcpp) - Supports v2
**Clojure libraries**
- [aterreno/etcd-clojure](https://github.com/aterreno/etcd-clojure)
- [dwwoelfel/cetcd](https://github.com/dwwoelfel/cetcd) - Supports v2
- [rthomas/clj-etcd](https://github.com/rthomas/clj-etcd) - Supports v2
**Erlang libraries**
- [marshall-lee/etcd.erl](https://github.com/marshall-lee/etcd.erl)
**.Net Libraries**
- [drusellers/etcetera](https://github.com/drusellers/etcetera)
**PHP Libraries**
- [linkorb/etcd-php](https://github.com/linkorb/etcd-php)
**Haskell libraries**
- [wereHamster/etcd-hs](https://github.com/wereHamster/etcd-hs)
**R libraries**
- [ropensci/etseed](https://github.com/ropensci/etseed)
**Tcl libraries**
- [efrecon/etcd-tcl](https://github.com/efrecon/etcd-tcl) - Supports v2, except wait.
A detailed recap of client functionalities can be found in the [clients compatibility matrix][clients-matrix.md].
[clients-matrix.md]: https://github.com/coreos/etcd/blob/master/Documentation/clients-matrix.md
**Chef Integration**
- [coderanger/etcd-chef](https://github.com/coderanger/etcd-chef)
**Chef Cookbook**
- [spheromak/etcd-cookbook](https://github.com/spheromak/etcd-cookbook)
**BOSH Releases**
- [cloudfoundry-community/etcd-boshrelease](https://github.com/cloudfoundry-community/etcd-boshrelease)
- [cloudfoundry/cf-release](https://github.com/cloudfoundry/cf-release/tree/master/jobs/etcd)
**Projects using etcd**
- [binocarlos/yoda](https://github.com/binocarlos/yoda) - etcd + ZeroMQ
- [calavera/active-proxy](https://github.com/calavera/active-proxy) - HTTP Proxy configured with etcd
- [derekchiang/etcdplus](https://github.com/derekchiang/etcdplus) - A set of distributed synchronization primitives built upon etcd
- [go-discover](https://github.com/flynn/go-discover) - service discovery in Go
- [gleicon/goreman](https://github.com/gleicon/goreman/tree/etcd) - Branch of the Go Foreman clone with etcd support
- [garethr/hiera-etcd](https://github.com/garethr/hiera-etcd) - Puppet hiera backend using etcd
- [mattn/etcd-vim](https://github.com/mattn/etcd-vim) - SET and GET keys from inside vim
- [mattn/etcdenv](https://github.com/mattn/etcdenv) - "env" shebang with etcd integration
- [kelseyhightower/confd](https://github.com/kelseyhightower/confd) - Manage local app config files using templates and data from etcd
- [configdb](https://git.autistici.org/ai/configdb/tree/master) - A REST relational abstraction on top of arbitrary database backends, aimed at storing configs and inventories.
- [scrz](https://github.com/scrz/scrz) - Container manager, stores configuration in etcd.
- [fleet](https://github.com/coreos/fleet) - Distributed init system
- [GoogleCloudPlatform/kubernetes](https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/kubernetes) - Container cluster manager.
- [mailgun/vulcand](https://github.com/mailgun/vulcand) - HTTP proxy that uses etcd as a configuration backend.
- [duedil-ltd/discodns](https://github.com/duedil-ltd/discodns) - Simple DNS nameserver using etcd as a database for names and records.
- [skynetservices/skydns](https://github.com/skynetservices/skydns) - RFC compliant DNS server
- [xordataexchange/crypt](https://github.com/xordataexchange/crypt) - Securely store values in etcd using GPG encryption
- [spf13/viper](https://github.com/spf13/viper) - Go configuration library, reads values from ENV, pflags, files, and etcd with optional encryption
- [lytics/metafora](https://github.com/lytics/metafora) - Go distributed task library
- [ryandoyle/nss-etcd](https://github.com/ryandoyle/nss-etcd) - A GNU libc NSS module for resolving names from etcd.

137
Documentation/metrics.md Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,137 @@
## Metrics
**NOTE: The metrics feature is considered as an experimental. We might add/change/remove metrics without warning in the future releases.**
etcd uses [Prometheus](http://prometheus.io/) for metrics reporting in the server. The metrics can be used for real-time monitoring and debugging.
The simplest way to see the available metrics is to cURL the metrics endpoint `/metrics` of etcd. The format is described [here](http://prometheus.io/docs/instrumenting/exposition_formats/).
You can also follow the doc [here](http://prometheus.io/docs/introduction/getting_started/) to start a Promethus server and monitor etcd metrics.
The naming of metrics follows the suggested [best practice of Promethus](http://prometheus.io/docs/practices/naming/). A metric name has an `etcd` prefix as its namespace and a subsystem prefix (for example `wal` and `etcdserver`).
etcd now exposes the following metrics:
### etcdserver
| Name | Description | Type |
|-----------------------------------------|--------------------------------------------------|---------|
| file_descriptors_used_total | The total number of file descriptors used | Gauge |
| proposal_durations_milliseconds | The latency distributions of committing proposal | Summary |
| pending_proposal_total | The total number of pending proposals | Gauge |
| proposal_failed_total | The total number of failed proposals | Counter |
High file descriptors (`file_descriptors_used_total`) usage (near the file descriptors limitation of the process) indicates a potential out of file descriptors issue. That might cause etcd fails to create new WAL files and panics.
[Proposal](glossary.md#proposal) durations (`proposal_durations_milliseconds`) give you an summary about the proposal commit latency. Latency can be introduced into this process by network and disk IO.
Pending proposal (`pending_proposal_total`) gives you an idea about how many proposal are in the queue and waiting for commit. An increasing pending number indicates a high client load or an unstable cluster.
Failed proposals (`proposal_failed_total`) are normally related to two issues: temporary failures related to a leader election or longer duration downtime caused by a loss of quorum in the cluster.
### store
These metrics describe the accesses into the data store of etcd members that exist in the cluster. They
are useful to count what kind of actions are taken by users. It is also useful to see and whether all etcd members
"see" the same set of data mutations, and whether reads and watches (which are local) are equally distributed.
All these metrics are prefixed with `etcd_store_`.
| Name | Description | Type |
|---------------------------|------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|--------------------|
| reads_total | Total number of reads from store, should differ among etcd members (local reads). | Counter(action) |
| writes_total | Total number of writes to store, should be same among all etcd members. | Counter(action) |
| reads_failed_total | Number of failed reads from store (e.g. key missing) on local reads. | Counter(action) |
| writes_failed_total | Number of failed writes to store (e.g. failed compare and swap). | Counter(action) |
| expires_total | Total number of expired keys (due to TTL).   | Counter |
| watch_requests_totals | Total number of incoming watch requests to this etcd member (local watches). | Counter |
| watchers | Current count of active watchers on this etcd member. | Gauge |
Both `reads_total` and `writes_total` count both successful and failed requests. `reads_failed_total` and
`writes_failed_total` count failed requests. A lot of failed writes indicate possible contentions on keys (e.g. when
doing `compareAndSet`), and read failures indicate that some clients try to access keys that don't exist.
Example Prometheus queries that may be useful from these metrics (across all etcd members):
* `sum(rate(etcd_store_reads_total{job="etcd"}[1m])) by (action)`
`max(rate(etcd_store_writes_total{job="etcd"}[1m])) by (action)`
Rate of reads and writes by action, across all servers across a time window of `1m`. The reason why `max` is used
for writes as opposed to `sum` for reads is because all of etcd nodes in the cluster apply all writes to their stores.
Shows the rate of successfull readonly/write queries across all servers, across a time window of `1m`.
* `sum(rate(etcd_store_watch_requests_total{job="etcd"}[1m]))`
Shows rate of new watch requests per second. Likely driven by how often watched keys change.
* `sum(etcd_store_watchers{job="etcd"})`
Number of active watchers across all etcd servers.
### wal
| Name | Description | Type |
|------------------------------------|--------------------------------------------------|---------|
| fsync_durations_microseconds | The latency distributions of fsync called by wal | Summary |
| last_index_saved | The index of the last entry saved by wal | Gauge |
Abnormally high fsync duration (`fsync_durations_microseconds`) indicates disk issues and might cause the cluster to be unstable.
### snapshot
| Name | Description | Type |
|--------------------------------------------|------------------------------------------------------------|---------|
| snapshot_save_total_durations_microseconds | The total latency distributions of save called by snapshot | Summary |
Abnormally high snapshot duration (`snapshot_save_total_durations_microseconds`) indicates disk issues and might cause the cluster to be unstable.
### rafthttp
| Name | Description | Type | Labels |
|-----------------------------------|--------------------------------------------|---------|--------------------------------|
| message_sent_latency_microseconds | The latency distributions of messages sent | Summary | sendingType, msgType, remoteID |
| message_sent_failed_total | The total number of failed messages sent | Summary | sendingType, msgType, remoteID |
Abnormally high message duration (`message_sent_latency_microseconds`) indicates network issues and might cause the cluster to be unstable.
An increase in message failures (`message_sent_failed_total`) indicates more severe network issues and might cause the cluster to be unstable.
Label `sendingType` is the connection type to send messages. `message`, `msgapp` and `msgappv2` use HTTP streaming, while `pipeline` does HTTP request for each message.
Label `msgType` is the type of raft message. `MsgApp` is log replication message; `MsgSnap` is snapshot install message; `MsgProp` is proposal forward message; the others are used to maintain raft internal status. If you have a large snapshot, you would expect a long msgSnap sending latency. For other types of messages, you would expect low latency, which is comparable to your ping latency if you have enough network bandwidth.
Label `remoteID` is the member ID of the message destination.
### proxy
etcd members operating in proxy mode do not do store operations. They forward all requests
to cluster instances.
Tracking the rate of requests coming from a proxy allows one to pin down which machine is performing most reads/writes.
All these metrics are prefixed with `etcd_proxy_`
| Name | Description | Type |
|---------------------------|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|--------------------|
| requests_total | Total number of requests by this proxy instance. . | Counter(method) |
| handled_total | Total number of fully handled requests, with responses from etcd members. | Counter(method) |
| dropped_total | Total number of dropped requests due to forwarding errors to etcd members.  | Counter(method,error) |
| handling_duration_seconds | Bucketed handling times by HTTP method, including round trip to member instances. | Histogram(method) |
Example Prometheus queries that may be useful from these metrics (across all etcd servers):
* `sum(rate(etcd_proxy_handled_total{job="etcd"}[1m])) by (method)`
Rate of requests (by HTTP method) handled by all proxies, across a window of `1m`.
* `histogram_quantile(0.9, sum(increase(etcd_proxy_events_handling_time_seconds_bucket{job="etcd",method="GET"}[5m])) by (le))`
`histogram_quantile(0.9, sum(increase(etcd_proxy_events_handling_time_seconds_bucket{job="etcd",method!="GET"}[5m])) by (le))`
Show the 0.90-tile latency (in seconds) of handling of user requestsacross all proxy machines, with a window of `5m`.
* `sum(rate(etcd_proxy_dropped_total{job="etcd"}[1m])) by (proxying_error)`
Number of failed request on the proxy. This should be 0, spikes here indicate connectivity issues to etcd cluster.

119
Documentation/other_apis.md Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,119 @@
## Members API
* [List members](#list-members)
* [Add a member](#add-a-member)
* [Delete a member](#delete-a-member)
* [Change the peer urls of a member](#change-the-peer-urls-of-a-member)
## List members
Return an HTTP 200 OK response code and a representation of all members in the etcd cluster.
### Request
```
GET /v2/members HTTP/1.1
```
### Example
```sh
curl http://10.0.0.10:2379/v2/members
```
```json
{
"members": [
{
"id": "272e204152",
"name": "infra1",
"peerURLs": [
"http://10.0.0.10:2380"
],
"clientURLs": [
"http://10.0.0.10:2379"
]
},
{
"id": "2225373f43",
"name": "infra2",
"peerURLs": [
"http://10.0.0.11:2380"
],
"clientURLs": [
"http://10.0.0.11:2379"
]
},
]
}
```
## Add a member
Returns an HTTP 201 response code and the representation of added member with a newly generated a memberID when successful. Returns a string describing the failure condition when unsuccessful.
If the POST body is malformed an HTTP 400 will be returned. If the member exists in the cluster or existed in the cluster at some point in the past an HTTP 409 will be returned. If any of the given peerURLs exists in the cluster an HTTP 409 will be returned. If the cluster fails to process the request within timeout an HTTP 500 will be returned, though the request may be processed later.
### Request
```
POST /v2/members HTTP/1.1
{"peerURLs": ["http://10.0.0.10:2380"]}
```
### Example
```sh
curl http://10.0.0.10:2379/v2/members -XPOST \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"peerURLs":["http://10.0.0.10:2380"]}'
```
```json
{
"id": "3777296169",
"peerURLs": [
"http://10.0.0.10:2380"
]
}
```
## Delete a member
Remove a member from the cluster. The member ID must be a hex-encoded uint64.
Returns 204 with empty content when successful. Returns a string describing the failure condition when unsuccessful.
If the member does not exist in the cluster an HTTP 500(TODO: fix this) will be returned. If the cluster fails to process the request within timeout an HTTP 500 will be returned, though the request may be processed later.
### Request
```
DELETE /v2/members/<id> HTTP/1.1
```
### Example
```sh
curl http://10.0.0.10:2379/v2/members/272e204152 -XDELETE
```
## Change the peer urls of a member
Change the peer urls of a given member. The member ID must be a hex-encoded uint64. Returns 204 with empty content when successful. Returns a string describing the failure condition when unsuccessful.
If the POST body is malformed an HTTP 400 will be returned. If the member does not exist in the cluster an HTTP 404 will be returned. If any of the given peerURLs exists in the cluster an HTTP 409 will be returned. If the cluster fails to process the request within timeout an HTTP 500 will be returned, though the request may be processed later.
#### Request
```
PUT /v2/members/<id> HTTP/1.1
{"peerURLs": ["http://10.0.0.10:2380"]}
```
#### Example
```sh
curl http://10.0.0.10:2379/v2/members/272e204152 -XPUT \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"peerURLs":["http://10.0.0.10:2380"]}'
```

View File

@ -0,0 +1,62 @@
# FreeBSD
Starting with version 0.1.2 both etcd and etcdctl have been ported to FreeBSD and can
be installed either via packages or ports system. Their versions have been recently
updated to 0.2.0 so now you can enjoy using etcd and etcdctl on FreeBSD 10.0 (RC4 as
of now) and 9.x where they have been tested. They might also work when installed from
ports on earlier versions of FreeBSD, but your mileage may vary.
## Installation
### Using pkgng package system
1. If you do not have pkg­ng installed, install it with command `pkg` and answering 'Y'
when asked
2. Update your repository data with `pkg update`
3. Install etcd with `pkg install coreos­etcd coreos­etcdctl`
4. Verify successful installation with `pkg info | grep etcd` and you should get:
```
r@fbsd­10:/ # pkg info | grep etcd
coreos­etcd­0.2.0              Highly­available key value store and service discovery
coreos­etcdctl­0.2.0           Simple commandline client for etcd
r@fbsd­10:/ #
```
5. Youre ready to use etcd and etcdctl! For more information about using pkgng, please
see: http://www.freebsd.org/doc/handbook/pkgng­intro.html
 
### Using ports system
1. If you do not have ports installed, install with with `portsnap fetch extract` (it
may take some time depending on your hardware and network connection)
2. Build etcd with `cd /usr/ports/devel/etcd && make install clean`, you
will get an option to build and install documentation and etcdctl with it.
3. If you haven't installed it with etcdctl, and you would like to install it later, you can build it
with `cd /usr/ports/devel/etcdctl && make install clean`
4. Verify successful installation with `pkg info | grep etcd` and you should get:
 
```
r@fbsd­10:/ # pkg info | grep etcd
coreos­etcd­0.2.0              Highly­available key value store and service discovery
coreos­etcdctl­0.2.0           Simple commandline client for etcd
r@fbsd­10:/ #
```
5. Youre ready to use etcd and etcdctl! For more information about using ports system,
please see: https://www.freebsd.org/doc/handbook/ports­using.html
## Issues
If you find any issues with the build/install procedure or you've found a problem that
you've verified is local to FreeBSD version only (for example, by not being able to
reproduce it on any other platform, like OSX or Linux), please sent a
problem report using this page for more
information: http://www.freebsd.org/send­pr.html

View File

@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
etcd is being used successfully by many companies in production. It is,
however, under active development and systems like etcd are difficult to get
correct. If you are comfortable with bleeding-edge software please use etcd and
provide us with the feedback and testing young software needs.

37
Documentation/proxy.md Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,37 @@
## Proxy
etcd can now run as a transparent proxy. Running etcd as a proxy allows for easily discovery of etcd within your infrastructure, since it can run on each machine as a local service. In this mode, etcd acts as a reverse proxy and forwards client requests to an active etcd cluster. The etcd proxy does not participate in the consensus replication of the etcd cluster, thus it neither increases the resilience nor decreases the write performance of the etcd cluster.
etcd currently supports two proxy modes: `readwrite` and `readonly`. The default mode is `readwrite`, which forwards both read and write requests to the etcd cluster. A `readonly` etcd proxy only forwards read requests to the etcd cluster, and returns `HTTP 501` to all write requests.
The proxy will shuffle the list of cluster members periodically to avoid sending all connections to a single member.
The member list used by proxy consists of all client URLs advertised within the cluster, as specified in each members' `-advertise-client-urls` flag. If this flag is set incorrectly, requests sent to the proxy are forwarded to wrong addresses and then fail. Including URLs in the `-advertise-client-urls` flag that point to the proxy itself, e.g. http://localhost:2379, is even more problematic as it will cause loops, because the proxy keeps trying to forward requests to itself until its resources (memory, file descriptors) are eventually depleted. The fix for this problem is to restart etcd member with correct `-advertise-client-urls` flag. After client URLs list in proxy is recalculated, which happens every 30 seconds, requests will be forwarded correctly.
### Using an etcd proxy
To start etcd in proxy mode, you need to provide three flags: `proxy`, `listen-client-urls`, and `initial-cluster` (or `discovery`).
To start a readwrite proxy, set `-proxy on`; To start a readonly proxy, set `-proxy readonly`.
The proxy will be listening on `listen-client-urls` and forward requests to the etcd cluster discovered from in `initial-cluster` or `discovery` url.
#### Start an etcd proxy with a static configuration
To start a proxy that will connect to a statically defined etcd cluster, specify the `initial-cluster` flag:
```
etcd -proxy on -listen-client-urls http://127.0.0.1:8080 -initial-cluster infra0=http://10.0.1.10:2380,infra1=http://10.0.1.11:2380,infra2=http://10.0.1.12:2380
```
#### Start an etcd proxy with the discovery service
If you bootstrap an etcd cluster using the [discovery service][discovery-service], you can also start the proxy with the same `discovery`.
To start a proxy using the discovery service, specify the `discovery` flag. The proxy will wait until the etcd cluster defined at the `discovery` url finishes bootstrapping, and then start to forward the requests.
```
etcd -proxy on -listen-client-urls http://127.0.0.1:8080 -discovery https://discovery.etcd.io/3e86b59982e49066c5d813af1c2e2579cbf573de
```
#### Fallback to proxy mode with discovery service
If you bootstrap a etcd cluster using [discovery service][discovery-service] with more than the expected number of etcd members, the extra etcd processes will fall back to being `readwrite` proxies by default. They will forward the requests to the cluster as described above. For example, if you create a discovery url with `size=5`, and start ten etcd processes using that same discovery url, the result will be a cluster with five etcd members and five proxies. Note that this behaviour can be disabled with the `proxy-fallback` flag.
[discovery-service]: clustering.md#discovery

View File

@ -0,0 +1,43 @@
## Reporting Bugs
If you find bugs or documentation mistakes in etcd project, please let us know by [opening an issue](https://github.com/coreos/etcd/issues/new). We treat bugs and mistakes very seriously and believe no issue is too small. Before creating a bug report, please check there that one does not already exist.
To make your bug report accurate and easy to understand, please try to create bug reports that are:
- Specific. Include as much details as possible: which version, what environment, what configuration, etc. You can also attach etcd log (the starting log with etcd configuration is especially important).
- Reproducible. Include the steps to reproduce the problem. We understand some issues might be hard to reproduce, please includes the steps that might lead to the problem. You can also attach the affected etcd data dir and stack strace to the bug report.
- Isolated. Please try to isolate and reproduce the bug with minimum dependencies. It would significantly slow down the speed to fix a bug if too many dependencies are involved in a bug report. Debugging external systems that rely on etcd is out of scope, but we are happy to point you in the right direction or help you interact with etcd in the correct manner.
- Unique. Do not duplicate existing bug report.
- Scoped. One bug per report. Do not follow up with another bug inside one report.
You might also want to read [Elika Etemads article on filing good bug reports](http://fantasai.inkedblade.net/style/talks/filing-good-bugs/) before creating a bug report.
We might ask you for further information to locate a bug. A duplicated bug report will be closed.
## Frequently Asked Questions
### How to get stack trace
``` bash
$ kill -QUIT $PID
```
### How to get etcd version
``` bash
$ etcd --version
```
### How to get etcd configuration and log when it runs as systemd service etcd2.service
``` bash
$ sudo systemctl cat etcd2
$ sudo journalctl -u etcd2
```
Due to an upstream systemd bug, journald may miss the last few log lines when its process exit. If journalctl tells you that etcd stops without fatal or panic message, you could try `sudo journalctl -f -t etcd2` to get full log.

191
Documentation/rfc/v3api.md Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,191 @@
## Design
1. Flatten binary key-value space
2. Keep the event history until compaction
- access to old version of keys
- user controlled history compaction
3. Support range query
- Pagination support with limit argument
- Support consistency guarantee across multiple range queries
4. Replace TTL key with Lease
- more efficient/ low cost keep alive
- a logical group of TTL keys
5. Replace CAS/CAD with multi-object Txn
- MUCH MORE powerful and flexible
6. Support efficient watching with multiple ranges
7. RPC API supports the completed set of APIs.
- more efficient than JSON/HTTP
- additional txn/lease support
8. HTTP API supports a subset of APIs.
- easy for people to try out etcd
- easy for people to write simple etcd application
## Protobuf Defined API
[protobuf](./v3api.proto)
### Examples
#### Put a key (foo=bar)
```
// A put is always successful
Put( PutRequest { key = foo, value = bar } )
PutResponse {
cluster_id = 0x1000,
member_id = 0x1,
revision = 1,
raft_term = 0x1,
}
```
#### Get a key (assume we have foo=bar)
```
Get ( RangeRequest { key = foo } )
RangeResponse {
cluster_id = 0x1000,
member_id = 0x1,
revision = 1,
raft_term = 0x1,
kvs = {
{
key = foo,
value = bar,
create_revision = 1,
mod_revision = 1,
version = 1;
},
},
}
```
#### Range over a key space (assume we have foo0=bar0… foo100=bar100)
```
Range ( RangeRequest { key = foo, end_key = foo80, limit = 30 } )
RangeResponse {
cluster_id = 0x1000,
member_id = 0x1,
revision = 100,
raft_term = 0x1,
kvs = {
{
key = foo0,
value = bar0,
create_revision = 1,
mod_revision = 1,
version = 1;
},
...,
{
key = foo30,
value = bar30,
create_revision = 30,
mod_revision = 30,
version = 1;
},
},
}
```
#### Finish a txn (assume we have foo0=bar0, foo1=bar1)
```
Txn(TxnRequest {
// mod_revision of foo0 is equal to 1, mod_revision of foo1 is greater than 1
compare = {
{compareType = equal, key = foo0, mod_revision = 1},
{compareType = greater, key = foo1, mod_revision = 1}}
},
// if the comparison succeeds, put foo2 = bar2
success = {PutRequest { key = foo2, value = success }},
// if the comparison fails, put foo2=fail
failure = {PutRequest { key = foo2, value = failure }},
)
TxnResponse {
cluster_id = 0x1000,
member_id = 0x1,
revision = 3,
raft_term = 0x1,
succeeded = true,
responses = {
// response of PUT foo2=success
{
cluster_id = 0x1000,
member_id = 0x1,
revision = 3,
raft_term = 0x1,
}
}
}
```
#### Watch on a key/range
```
Watch( WatchRequest{
key = foo,
end_key = fop, // prefix foo
start_revision = 20,
end_revision = 10000,
// server decided notification frequency
progress_notification = true,
}
… // this can be a watch request stream
)
// put (foo0=bar0) event at 3
WatchResponse {
cluster_id = 0x1000,
member_id = 0x1,
revision = 3,
raft_term = 0x1,
event_type = put,
kv = {
key = foo0,
value = bar0,
create_revision = 1,
mod_revision = 1,
version = 1;
},
}
// a notification at 2000
WatchResponse {
cluster_id = 0x1000,
member_id = 0x1,
revision = 2000,
raft_term = 0x1,
// nil event as notification
}
// put (foo0=bar3000) event at 3000
WatchResponse {
cluster_id = 0x1000,
member_id = 0x1,
revision = 3000,
raft_term = 0x1,
event_type = put,
kv = {
key = foo0,
value = bar3000,
create_revision = 1,
mod_revision = 3000,
version = 2;
},
}
```

View File

@ -0,0 +1,285 @@
syntax = "proto3";
// Interface exported by the server.
service etcd {
// Range gets the keys in the range from the store.
rpc Range(RangeRequest) returns (RangeResponse) {}
// Put puts the given key into the store.
// A put request increases the revision of the store,
// and generates one event in the event history.
rpc Put(PutRequest) returns (PutResponse) {}
// Delete deletes the given range from the store.
// A delete request increase the revision of the store,
// and generates one event in the event history.
rpc DeleteRange(DeleteRangeRequest) returns (DeleteRangeResponse) {}
// Txn processes all the requests in one transaction.
// A txn request increases the revision of the store,
// and generates events with the same revision in the event history.
rpc Txn(TxnRequest) returns (TxnResponse) {}
// Watch watches the events happening or happened in etcd. Both input and output
// are stream. One watch rpc can watch for multiple ranges and get a stream of
// events. The whole events history can be watched unless compacted.
rpc WatchRange(stream WatchRangeRequest) returns (stream WatchRangeResponse) {}
// Compact compacts the event history in etcd. User should compact the
// event history periodically, or it will grow infinitely.
rpc Compact(CompactionRequest) returns (CompactionResponse) {}
// LeaseCreate creates a lease. A lease has a TTL. The lease will expire if the
// server does not receive a keepAlive within TTL from the lease holder.
// All keys attached to the lease will be expired and deleted if the lease expires.
// The key expiration generates an event in event history.
rpc LeaseCreate(LeaseCreateRequest) returns (LeaseCreateResponse) {}
// LeaseRevoke revokes a lease. All the key attached to the lease will be expired and deleted.
rpc LeaseRevoke(LeaseRevokeRequest) returns (LeaseRevokeResponse) {}
// LeaseAttach attaches keys with a lease.
rpc LeaseAttach(LeaseAttachRequest) returns (LeaseAttachResponse) {}
// LeaseTxn likes Txn. It has two addition success and failure LeaseAttachRequest list.
// If the Txn is successful, then the success list will be executed. Or the failure list
// will be executed.
rpc LeaseTxn(LeaseTxnRequest) returns (LeaseTxnResponse) {}
// KeepAlive keeps the lease alive.
rpc LeaseKeepAlive(stream LeaseKeepAliveRequest) returns (stream LeaseKeepAliveResponse) {}
}
message ResponseHeader {
// an error type message?
string error = 1;
uint64 cluster_id = 2;
uint64 member_id = 3;
// revision of the store when the request was applied.
int64 revision = 4;
// term of raft when the request was applied.
uint64 raft_term = 5;
}
message RangeRequest {
// if the range_end is not given, the request returns the key.
bytes key = 1;
// if the range_end is given, it gets the keys in range [key, range_end).
bytes range_end = 2;
// limit the number of keys returned.
int64 limit = 3;
// range over the store at the given revision.
// if revision is less or equal to zero, range over the newest store.
// if the revision has been compacted, ErrCompaction will be returned in
// response.
int64 revision = 4;
}
message RangeResponse {
ResponseHeader header = 1;
repeated storagepb.KeyValue kvs = 2;
// more indicates if there are more keys to return in the requested range.
bool more = 3;
}
message PutRequest {
bytes key = 1;
bytes value = 2;
}
message PutResponse {
ResponseHeader header = 1;
}
message DeleteRangeRequest {
// if the range_end is not given, the request deletes the key.
bytes key = 1;
// if the range_end is given, it deletes the keys in range [key, range_end).
bytes range_end = 2;
}
message DeleteRangeResponse {
ResponseHeader header = 1;
}
message RequestUnion {
oneof request {
RangeRequest request_range = 1;
PutRequest request_put = 2;
DeleteRangeRequest request_delete_range = 3;
}
}
message ResponseUnion {
oneof response {
RangeResponse response_range = 1;
PutResponse response_put = 2;
DeleteRangeResponse response_delete_range = 3;
}
}
message Compare {
enum CompareResult {
EQUAL = 0;
GREATER = 1;
LESS = 2;
}
enum CompareTarget {
VERSION = 0;
CREATE = 1;
MOD = 2;
VALUE= 3;
}
CompareResult result = 1;
CompareTarget target = 2;
// key path
bytes key = 3;
oneof target_union {
// version of the given key
int64 version = 4;
// create revision of the given key
int64 create_revision = 5;
// last modified revision of the given key
int64 mod_revision = 6;
// value of the given key
bytes value = 7;
}
}
// If the comparisons succeed, then the success requests will be processed in order,
// and the response will contain their respective responses in order.
// If the comparisons fail, then the failure requests will be processed in order,
// and the response will contain their respective responses in order.
// From google paxosdb paper:
// Our implementation hinges around a powerful primitive which we call MultiOp. All other database
// operations except for iteration are implemented as a single call to MultiOp. A MultiOp is applied atomically
// and consists of three components:
// 1. A list of tests called guard. Each test in guard checks a single entry in the database. It may check
// for the absence or presence of a value, or compare with a given value. Two different tests in the guard
// may apply to the same or different entries in the database. All tests in the guard are applied and
// MultiOp returns the results. If all tests are true, MultiOp executes t op (see item 2 below), otherwise
// it executes f op (see item 3 below).
// 2. A list of database operations called t op. Each operation in the list is either an insert, delete, or
// lookup operation, and applies to a single database entry. Two different operations in the list may apply
// to the same or different entries in the database. These operations are executed
// if guard evaluates to
// true.
// 3. A list of database operations called f op. Like t op, but executed if guard evaluates to false.
message TxnRequest {
repeated Compare compare = 1;
repeated RequestUnion success = 2;
repeated RequestUnion failure = 3;
}
message TxnResponse {
ResponseHeader header = 1;
bool succeeded = 2;
repeated ResponseUnion responses = 3;
}
message KeyValue {
bytes key = 1;
int64 create_revision = 2;
// mod_revision is the last modified revision of the key.
int64 mod_revision = 3;
// version is the version of the key. A deletion resets
// the version to zero and any modification of the key
// increases its version.
int64 version = 4;
bytes value = 5;
}
message WatchRangeRequest {
// if the range_end is not given, the request returns the key.
bytes key = 1;
// if the range_end is given, it gets the keys in range [key, range_end).
bytes range_end = 2;
// start_revision is an optional revision (including) to watch from. No start_revision is "now".
int64 start_revision = 3;
// end_revision is an optional revision (excluding) to end watch. No end_revision is "forever".
int64 end_revision = 4;
bool progress_notification = 5;
}
message WatchRangeResponse {
ResponseHeader header = 1;
repeated Event events = 2;
}
message Event {
enum EventType {
PUT = 0;
DELETE = 1;
EXPIRE = 2;
}
EventType event_type = 1;
// a put event contains the current key-value
// a delete/expire event contains the previous
// key-value
KeyValue kv = 2;
}
// Compaction compacts the kv store upto the given revision (including).
// It removes the old versions of a key. It keeps the newest version of
// the key even if its latest modification revision is smaller than the given
// revision.
message CompactionRequest {
int64 revision = 1;
}
message CompactionResponse {
ResponseHeader header = 1;
}
message LeaseCreateRequest {
// advisory ttl in seconds
int64 ttl = 1;
}
message LeaseCreateResponse {
ResponseHeader header = 1;
int64 lease_id = 2;
// server decided ttl in second
int64 ttl = 3;
string error = 4;
}
message LeaseRevokeRequest {
int64 lease_id = 1;
}
message LeaseRevokeResponse {
ResponseHeader header = 1;
}
message LeaseTxnRequest {
TxnRequest request = 1;
repeated LeaseAttachRequest success = 2;
repeated LeaseAttachRequest failure = 3;
}
message LeaseTxnResponse {
ResponseHeader header = 1;
TxnResponse response = 2;
repeated LeaseAttachResponse attach_responses = 3;
}
message LeaseAttachRequest {
int64 lease_id = 1;
bytes key = 2;
}
message LeaseAttachResponse {
ResponseHeader header = 1;
}
message LeaseKeepAliveRequest {
int64 lease_id = 1;
}
message LeaseKeepAliveResponse {
ResponseHeader header = 1;
int64 lease_id = 2;
int64 ttl = 3;
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,163 @@
## Runtime Reconfiguration
etcd comes with support for incremental runtime reconfiguration, which allows users to update the membership of the cluster at run time.
Reconfiguration requests can only be processed when the the majority of the cluster members are functioning. It is **highly recommended** to always have a cluster size greater than two in production. It is unsafe to remove a member from a two member cluster. The majority of a two member cluster is also two. If there is a failure during the removal process, the cluster might not able to make progress and need to [restart from majority failure][majority failure].
To better understand the design behind runtime reconfiguration, we suggest you read [this](runtime-reconf-design.md).
[majority failure]: #restart-cluster-from-majority-failure
## Reconfiguration Use Cases
Let us walk through some common reasons for reconfiguring a cluster. Most of these just involve combinations of adding or removing a member, which are explained below under [Cluster Reconfiguration Operations](#cluster-reconfiguration-operations).
### Cycle or Upgrade Multiple Machines
If you need to move multiple members of your cluster due to planned maintenance (hardware upgrades, network downtime, etc.), it is recommended to modify members one at a time.
It is safe to remove the leader, however there is a brief period of downtime while the election process takes place. If your cluster holds more than 50MB, it is recommended to [migrate the member's data directory][member migration].
[member migration]: admin_guide.md#member-migration
### Change the Cluster Size
Increasing the cluster size can enhance [failure tolerance][fault tolerance table] and provide better read performance. Since clients can read from any member, increasing the number of members increases the overall read throughput.
Decreasing the cluster size can improve the write performance of a cluster, with a trade-off of decreased resilience. Writes into the cluster are replicated to a majority of members of the cluster before considered committed. Decreasing the cluster size lowers the majority, and each write is committed more quickly.
[fault tolerance table]: admin_guide.md#fault-tolerance-table
### Replace A Failed Machine
If a machine fails due to hardware failure, data directory corruption, or some other fatal situation, it should be replaced as soon as possible. Machines that have failed but haven't been removed adversely affect your quorum and reduce the tolerance for an additional failure.
To replace the machine, follow the instructions for [removing the member][remove member] from the cluster, and then [add a new member][add member] in its place. If your cluster holds more than 50MB, it is recommended to [migrate the failed member's data directory][member migration] if you can still access it.
[remove member]: #remove-a-member
[add member]: #add-a-new-member
### Restart Cluster from Majority Failure
If the majority of your cluster is lost or all of your nodes have changed IP addresses, then you need to take manual action in order to recover safely.
The basic steps in the recovery process include [creating a new cluster using the old data][disaster recovery], forcing a single member to act as the leader, and finally using runtime configuration to [add new members][add member] to this new cluster one at a time.
[add member]: #add-a-new-member
[disaster recovery]: admin_guide.md#disaster-recovery
## Cluster Reconfiguration Operations
Now that we have the use cases in mind, let us lay out the operations involved in each.
Before making any change, the simple majority (quorum) of etcd members must be available.
This is essentially the same requirement as for any other write to etcd.
All changes to the cluster are done one at a time:
* To update a single member peerURLs you will make an update operation
* To replace a single member you will make an add then a remove operation
* To increase from 3 to 5 members you will make two add operations
* To decrease from 5 to 3 you will make two remove operations
All of these examples will use the `etcdctl` command line tool that ships with etcd.
If you want to use the member API directly you can find the documentation [here](other_apis.md).
### Update a Member
If you would like to update a member IP address (peerURLs), first, we need to find the target member's ID. You can list all members with `etcdctl`:
```sh
$ etcdctl member list
6e3bd23ae5f1eae0: name=node2 peerURLs=http://localhost:23802 clientURLs=http://127.0.0.1:23792
924e2e83e93f2560: name=node3 peerURLs=http://localhost:23803 clientURLs=http://127.0.0.1:23793
a8266ecf031671f3: name=node1 peerURLs=http://localhost:23801 clientURLs=http://127.0.0.1:23791
```
In this example let's `update` a8266ecf031671f3 member ID and change its peerURLs value to http://10.0.1.10:2380
```sh
$ etcdctl member update a8266ecf031671f3 http://10.0.1.10:2380
Updated member with ID a8266ecf031671f3 in cluster
```
### Remove a Member
Let us say the member ID we want to remove is a8266ecf031671f3.
We then use the `remove` command to perform the removal:
```sh
$ etcdctl member remove a8266ecf031671f3
Removed member a8266ecf031671f3 from cluster
```
The target member will stop itself at this point and print out the removal in the log:
```
etcd: this member has been permanently removed from the cluster. Exiting.
```
It is safe to remove the leader, however the cluster will be inactive while a new leader is elected. This duration is normally the period of election timeout plus the voting process.
### Add a New Member
Adding a member is a two step process:
* Add the new member to the cluster via the [members API](other_apis.md#post-v2members) or the `etcdctl member add` command.
* Start the new member with the new cluster configuration, including a list of the updated members (existing members + the new member).
Using `etcdctl` let's add the new member to the cluster by specifying its [name](configuration.md#-name) and [advertised peer URLs](configuration.md#-initial-advertise-peer-urls):
```sh
$ etcdctl member add infra3 http://10.0.1.13:2380
added member 9bf1b35fc7761a23 to cluster
ETCD_NAME="infra3"
ETCD_INITIAL_CLUSTER="infra0=http://10.0.1.10:2380,infra1=http://10.0.1.11:2380,infra2=http://10.0.1.12:2380,infra3=http://10.0.1.13:2380"
ETCD_INITIAL_CLUSTER_STATE=existing
```
`etcdctl` has informed the cluster about the new member and printed out the environment variables needed to successfully start it.
Now start the new etcd process with the relevant flags for the new member:
```sh
$ export ETCD_NAME="infra3"
$ export ETCD_INITIAL_CLUSTER="infra0=http://10.0.1.10:2380,infra1=http://10.0.1.11:2380,infra2=http://10.0.1.12:2380,infra3=http://10.0.1.13:2380"
$ export ETCD_INITIAL_CLUSTER_STATE=existing
$ etcd -listen-client-urls http://10.0.1.13:2379 -advertise-client-urls http://10.0.1.13:2379 -listen-peer-urls http://10.0.1.13:2380 -initial-advertise-peer-urls http://10.0.1.13:2380 -data-dir %data_dir%
```
The new member will run as a part of the cluster and immediately begin catching up with the rest of the cluster.
If you are adding multiple members the best practice is to configure a single member at a time and verify it starts correctly before adding more new members.
If you add a new member to a 1-node cluster, the cluster cannot make progress before the new member starts because it needs two members as majority to agree on the consensus. You will only see this behavior between the time `etcdctl member add` informs the cluster about the new member and the new member successfully establishing a connection to the existing one.
#### Error Cases
In the following case we have not included our new host in the list of enumerated nodes.
If this is a new cluster, the node must be added to the list of initial cluster members.
```sh
$ etcd -name infra3 \
-initial-cluster infra0=http://10.0.1.10:2380,infra1=http://10.0.1.11:2380,infra2=http://10.0.1.12:2380 \
-initial-cluster-state existing
etcdserver: assign ids error: the member count is unequal
exit 1
```
In this case we give a different address (10.0.1.14:2380) to the one that we used to join the cluster (10.0.1.13:2380).
```sh
$ etcd -name infra4 \
-initial-cluster infra0=http://10.0.1.10:2380,infra1=http://10.0.1.11:2380,infra2=http://10.0.1.12:2380,infra4=http://10.0.1.14:2380 \
-initial-cluster-state existing
etcdserver: assign ids error: unmatched member while checking PeerURLs
exit 1
```
When we start etcd using the data directory of a removed member, etcd will exit automatically if it connects to any alive member in the cluster:
```sh
$ etcd
etcd: this member has been permanently removed from the cluster. Exiting.
exit 1
```

View File

@ -0,0 +1,47 @@
### Design of Runtime Reconfiguration
Runtime reconfiguration is one of the hardest and most error prone features in a distributed system, especially in a consensus based system like etcd.
Read on to learn about the design of etcd's runtime reconfiguration commands and how we tackled these problems.
### Two Phase Config Changes Keep you Safe
In etcd, every runtime reconfiguration has to go through [two phases](Documentation/runtime-configuration.md#add-a-new-member) for safety reasons. For example, to add a member you need to first inform cluster of new configuration and then start the new member.
Phase 1 - Inform cluster of new configuration
To add a member into etcd cluster, you need to make an API call to request a new member to be added to the cluster. And this is only way that you can add a new member into an existing cluster. The API call returns when the cluster agrees on the configuration change.
Phase 2 - Start new member
To join the etcd member into the existing cluster, you need to specify the correct `initial-cluster` and set `initial-cluster-state` to `existing`. When the member starts, it will contact the existing cluster first and verify the current cluster configuration matches the expected one specified in `initial-cluster`. When the new member successfully starts, you know your cluster reached the expected configuration.
By splitting the process into two discrete phases users are forced to be explicit regarding cluster membership changes. This actually gives users more flexibility and makes things easier to reason about. For example, if there is an attempt to add a new member with the same ID as an existing member in an etcd cluster, the action will fail immediately during phase one without impacting the running cluster. Similar protection is provided to prevent adding new members by mistake. If a new etcd member attempts to join the cluster before the cluster has accepted the configuration change,, it will not be accepted by the cluster.
Without the explicit workflow around cluster membership etcd would be vulnerable to unexpected cluster membership changes. For example, if etcd is running under an init system such as systemd, etcd would be restarted after being removed via the membership API, and attempt to rejoin the cluster on startup. This cycle would continue every time a member is removed via the API and systemd is set to restart etcd after failing, which is unexpected.
We think runtime reconfiguration should be a low frequent operation. We made the decision to keep it explicit and user-driven to ensure configuration safety and keep your cluster always running smoothly under your control.
### Permanent Loss of Quorum Requires New Cluster
If a cluster permanently loses a majority of its members, a new cluster will need to be started from an old data directory to recover the previous state.
It is entirely possible to force removing the failed members from the existing cluster to recover. However, we decided not to support this method since it bypasses the normal consensus committing phase, which is unsafe. If the member to remove is not actually dead or you force to remove different members through different members in the same cluster, you will end up with diverged cluster with same clusterID. This is very dangerous and hard to debug/fix afterwards.
If you have a correct deployment, the possibility of permanent majority lose is very low. But it is a severe enough problem that worth special care. We strongly suggest you to read the [disaster recovery documentation](admin_guide.md#disaster-recovery) and prepare for permanent majority lose before you put etcd into production.
### Do Not Use Public Discovery Service For Runtime Reconfiguration
The public discovery service should only be used for bootstrapping a cluster. To join member into an existing cluster, you should use runtime reconfiguration API.
Discovery service is designed for bootstrapping an etcd cluster in the cloud environment, when you do not know the IP addresses of all the members beforehand. After you successfully bootstrap a cluster, the IP addresses of all the members are known. Technically, you should not need the discovery service any more.
It seems that using public discovery service is a convenient way to do runtime reconfiguration, after all discovery service already has all the cluster configuration information. However relying on public discovery service brings troubles:
1. it introduces a external dependencies for the entire life-cycle of your cluster, not just bootstrap time. If there is a network issue between your cluster and public discover service, your cluster will suffer from it.
2. public discovery service must reflect correct runtime configuration of your cluster during it life-cycle. It has to provide security mechanism to avoid bad actions, and it is hard.
3. public discovery service has to keep tens of thousands of cluster configurations. Our public discovery service backend is not ready for that workload.
If you want to have a discovery service that supports runtime reconfiguration, the best choice is to build your private one.

182
Documentation/security.md Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,182 @@
# security model
etcd supports SSL/TLS as well as authentication through client certificates, both for clients to server as well as peer (server to server / cluster) communication.
To get up and running you first need to have a CA certificate and a signed key pair for one member. It is recommended to create and sign a new key pair for every member in a cluster.
For convenience the [cfssl](https://github.com/cloudflare/cfssl) tool provides an easy interface to certificate generation, and we provide a full example using the tool at [here](../hack/tls-setup). Alternatively this site provides a good reference on how to generate self-signed key pairs:
http://www.g-loaded.eu/2005/11/10/be-your-own-ca/
## Basic setup
etcd takes several certificate related configuration options, either through command-line flags or environment variables:
**Client-to-server communication:**
`--cert-file=<path>`: Certificate used for SSL/TLS connections **to** etcd. When this option is set, you can set advertise-client-urls using HTTPS schema.
`--key-file=<path>`: Key for the certificate. Must be unencrypted.
`--client-cert-auth`: When this is set etcd will check all incoming HTTPS requests for a client certificate signed by the trusted CA, requests that don't supply a valid client certificate will fail.
`--trusted-ca-file=<path>`: Trusted certificate authority.
**Peer (server-to-server / cluster) communication:**
The peer options work the same way as the client-to-server options:
`--peer-cert-file=<path>`: Certificate used for SSL/TLS connections between peers. This will be used both for listening on the peer address as well as sending requests to other peers.
`--peer-key-file=<path>`: Key for the certificate. Must be unencrypted.
`--peer-client-cert-auth`: When set, etcd will check all incoming peer requests from the cluster for valid client certificates signed by the supplied CA.
`--peer-trusted-ca-file=<path>`: Trusted certificate authority.
If either a client-to-server or peer certificate is supplied the key must also be set. All of these configuration options are also available through the environment variables, `ETCD_CA_FILE`, `ETCD_PEER_CA_FILE` and so on.
## Example 1: Client-to-server transport security with HTTPS
For this you need your CA certificate (`ca.crt`) and signed key pair (`server.crt`, `server.key`) ready.
Let us configure etcd to provide simple HTTPS transport security step by step:
```sh
$ etcd -name infra0 -data-dir infra0 \
-cert-file=/path/to/server.crt -key-file=/path/to/server.key \
-advertise-client-urls=https://127.0.0.1:2379 -listen-client-urls=https://127.0.0.1:2379
```
This should start up fine and you can now test the configuration by speaking HTTPS to etcd:
```sh
$ curl --cacert /path/to/ca.crt https://127.0.0.1:2379/v2/keys/foo -XPUT -d value=bar -v
```
You should be able to see the handshake succeed. Because we use self-signed certificates with our own certificate authorities you need to provide the CA to curl using the `--cacert` option. Another possibility would be to add your CA certificate to the trusted certificates on your system (usually in `/etc/ssl/certs`).
**OSX 10.9+ Users**: curl 7.30.0 on OSX 10.9+ doesn't understand certificates passed in on the command line.
Instead you must import the dummy ca.crt directly into the keychain or add the `-k` flag to curl to ignore errors.
If you want to test without the `-k` flag run `open ./fixtures/ca/ca.crt` and follow the prompts.
Please remove this certificate after you are done testing!
If you know of a workaround let us know.
## Example 2: Client-to-server authentication with HTTPS client certificates
For now we've given the etcd client the ability to verify the server identity and provide transport security. We can however also use client certificates to prevent unauthorized access to etcd.
The clients will provide their certificates to the server and the server will check whether the cert is signed by the supplied CA and decide whether to serve the request.
You need the same files mentioned in the first example for this, as well as a key pair for the client (`client.crt`, `client.key`) signed by the same certificate authority.
```sh
$ etcd -name infra0 -data-dir infra0 \
-client-cert-auth -trusted-ca-file=/path/to/ca.crt -cert-file=/path/to/server.crt -key-file=/path/to/server.key \
-advertise-client-urls https://127.0.0.1:2379 -listen-client-urls https://127.0.0.1:2379
```
Now try the same request as above to this server:
```sh
$ curl --cacert /path/to/ca.crt https://127.0.0.1:2379/v2/keys/foo -XPUT -d value=bar -v
```
The request should be rejected by the server:
```
...
routines:SSL3_READ_BYTES:sslv3 alert bad certificate
...
```
To make it succeed, we need to give the CA signed client certificate to the server:
```sh
$ curl --cacert /path/to/ca.crt --cert /path/to/client.crt --key /path/to/client.key \
-L https://127.0.0.1:2379/v2/keys/foo -XPUT -d value=bar -v
```
You should able to see:
```
...
SSLv3, TLS handshake, CERT verify (15):
...
TLS handshake, Finished (20)
```
And also the response from the server:
```json
{
"action": "set",
"node": {
"createdIndex": 12,
"key": "/foo",
"modifiedIndex": 12,
"value": "bar"
}
}
```
## Example 3: Transport security & client certificates in a cluster
etcd supports the same model as above for **peer communication**, that means the communication between etcd members in a cluster.
Assuming we have our `ca.crt` and two members with their own keypairs (`member1.crt` & `member1.key`, `member2.crt` & `member2.key`) signed by this CA, we launch etcd as follows:
```sh
DISCOVERY_URL=... # from https://discovery.etcd.io/new
# member1
$ etcd -name infra1 -data-dir infra1 \
-peer-client-cert-auth -peer-trusted-ca-file=/path/to/ca.crt -peer-cert-file=/path/to/member1.crt -peer-key-file=/path/to/member1.key \
-initial-advertise-peer-urls=https://10.0.1.10:2380 -listen-peer-urls=https://10.0.1.10:2380 \
-discovery ${DISCOVERY_URL}
# member2
$ etcd -name infra2 -data-dir infra2 \
-peer-client-cert-atuh -peer-trusted-ca-file=/path/to/ca.crt -peer-cert-file=/path/to/member2.crt -peer-key-file=/path/to/member2.key \
-initial-advertise-peer-urls=https://10.0.1.11:2380 -listen-peer-urls=https://10.0.1.11:2380 \
-discovery ${DISCOVERY_URL}
```
The etcd members will form a cluster and all communication between members in the cluster will be encrypted and authenticated using the client certificates. You will see in the output of etcd that the addresses it connects to use HTTPS.
## Frequently Asked Questions
### My cluster is not working with peer tls configuration?
The internal protocol of etcd v2.0.x uses a lot of short-lived HTTP connections.
So, when enabling TLS you may need to increase the heartbeat interval and election timeouts to reduce internal cluster connection churn.
A reasonable place to start are these values: ` --heartbeat-interval 500 --election-timeout 2500`.
This issues is resolved in the etcd v2.1.x series of releases which uses fewer connections.
### I'm seeing a SSLv3 alert handshake failure when using SSL client authentication?
The `crypto/tls` package of `golang` checks the key usage of the certificate public key before using it.
To use the certificate public key to do client auth, we need to add `clientAuth` to `Extended Key Usage` when creating the certificate public key.
Here is how to do it:
Add the following section to your openssl.cnf:
```
[ ssl_client ]
...
extendedKeyUsage = clientAuth
...
```
When creating the cert be sure to reference it in the `-extensions` flag:
```
$ openssl ca -config openssl.cnf -policy policy_anything -extensions ssl_client -out certs/machine.crt -infiles machine.csr
```
### With peer certificate authentication I receive "certificate is valid for 127.0.0.1, not $MY_IP"
Make sure that you sign your certificates with a Subject Name your member's public IP address. The `etcd-ca` tool for example provides an `--ip=` option for its `new-cert` command.
If you need your certificate to be signed for your member's FQDN in its Subject Name then you could use Subject Alternative Names (short IP SANs) to add your IP address. The `etcd-ca` tool provides `--domain=` option for its `new-cert` command, and openssl can make [it](http://wiki.cacert.org/FAQ/subjectAltName) too.

70
Documentation/tuning.md Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,70 @@
## Tuning
The default settings in etcd should work well for installations on a local network where the average network latency is low.
However, when using etcd across multiple data centers or over networks with high latency you may need to tweak the heartbeat interval and election timeout settings.
The network isn't the only source of latency. Each request and response may be impacted by slow disks on both the leader and follower. Each of these timeouts represents the total time from request to successful response from the other machine.
### Time Parameters
The underlying distributed consensus protocol relies on two separate time parameters to ensure that nodes can handoff leadership if one stalls or goes offline.
The first parameter is called the *Heartbeat Interval*.
This is the frequency with which the leader will notify followers that it is still the leader.
For best pratices, the parameter should be set around round-trip time between members.
By default, etcd uses a `100ms` heartbeat interval.
The second parameter is the *Election Timeout*.
This timeout is how long a follower node will go without hearing a heartbeat before attempting to become leader itself.
By default, etcd uses a `1000ms` election timeout.
Adjusting these values is a trade off.
The value of heartbeat interval is recommended to be around the maximum of average round-trip time (RTT) between members, normally around 0.5-1.5x the round-trip time.
If heartbeat interval is too low, etcd will send unnecessary messages that increase the usage of CPU and network resources.
On the other side, a too high heartbeat interval leads to high election timeout. Higher election timeout takes longer time to detect a leader failure.
The easiest way to measure round-trip time (RTT) is to use [PING utility](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ping_(networking_utility)).
The election timeout should be set based on the heartbeat interval and average round-trip time between members.
Election timeouts must be at least 10 times the round-trip time so it can account for variance in your network.
For example, if the round-trip time between your members is 10ms then you should have at least a 100ms election timeout.
The upper limit of election timeout is 50000ms, which should only be used when deploying global etcd cluster. First, 5s is the upper limit of average global round-trip time. A reasonable round-trip time for the continental united states is 130ms, and the time between US and japan is around 350-400ms. Because package gets delayed a lot, and network situation may be terrible, 5s is a safe value for it. Then, because election timeout should be an order of magnitude bigger than broadcast time, 50s becomes its maximum.
You should also set your election timeout to at least 5 to 10 times your heartbeat interval to account for variance in leader replication.
For a heartbeat interval of 50ms you should set your election timeout to at least 250ms - 500ms.
The heartbeat interval and election timeout value should be the same for all members in one cluster. Setting different values for etcd members may disrupt cluster stability.
You can override the default values on the command line:
```sh
# Command line arguments:
$ etcd -heartbeat-interval=100 -election-timeout=500
# Environment variables:
$ ETCD_HEARTBEAT_INTERVAL=100 ETCD_ELECTION_TIMEOUT=500 etcd
```
The values are specified in milliseconds.
### Snapshots
etcd appends all key changes to a log file.
This log grows forever and is a complete linear history of every change made to the keys.
A complete history works well for lightly used clusters but clusters that are heavily used would carry around a large log.
To avoid having a huge log etcd makes periodic snapshots.
These snapshots provide a way for etcd to compact the log by saving the current state of the system and removing old logs.
### Snapshot Tuning
Creating snapshots can be expensive so they're only created after a given number of changes to etcd.
By default, snapshots will be made after every 10,000 changes.
If etcd's memory usage and disk usage are too high, you can lower the snapshot threshold by setting the following on the command line:
```sh
# Command line arguments:
$ etcd -snapshot-count=5000
# Environment variables:
$ ETCD_SNAPSHOT_COUNT=5000 etcd
```

View File

@ -0,0 +1,112 @@
## Upgrade etcd to 2.1
In the general case, upgrading from etcd 2.0 to 2.1 can be a zero-downtime, rolling upgrade:
- one by one, stop the etcd v2.0 processes and replace them with etcd v2.1 processes
- after you are running all v2.1 processes, new features in v2.1 are available to the cluster
Before [starting an upgrade](#upgrade-procedure), read through the rest of this guide to prepare.
### Upgrade Checklists
#### Upgrade Requirement
To upgrade an existing etcd deployment to 2.1, you must be running 2.0. If youre running a version of etcd before 2.0, you must upgrade to [2.0](https://github.com/coreos/etcd/releases/tag/v2.0.13) before upgrading to 2.1.
Also, to ensure a smooth rolling upgrade, your running cluster must be healthy. You can check the health of the cluster by using `etcdctl cluster-health` command.
#### Preparedness
Before upgrading etcd, always test the services relying on etcd in a staging environment before deploying the upgrade to the production environment.
You might also want to [backup your data directory](admin_guide.md#backing-up-the-datastore) for a potential [downgrade](#downgrade).
etcd 2.1 introduces a new [authentication](auth_api.md) feature, which is disabled by default. If your deployment depends on these, you may want to test the auth features before enabling them in production.
#### Mixed Versions
While upgrading, an etcd cluster supports mixed versions of etcd members. The cluster is only considered upgraded once all its members are upgraded to 2.1.
Internally, etcd members negotiate with each other to determine the overall etcd cluster version, which controls the reported cluster version and the supported features. For example, if you are mid-upgrade, any 2.1 features (such as the the authentication feature mentioned above) wont be available.
#### Limitations
If you encounter any issues during the upgrade, you can attempt to restart the etcd process in trouble using a newer v2.1 binary to solve the problem. One known issue is that etcd v2.0.0 and v2.0.2 may panic during rolling upgrades due to an existing bug, which has been fixed since etcd v2.0.3.
It might take up to 2 minutes for the newly upgraded member to catch up with the existing cluster when the total data size is larger than 50MB (You can check the size of the existing snapshot to know about the rough data size). In other words, it is safest to wait for 2 minutes before upgrading the next member.
If you have even more data, this might take more time. If you have a data size larger than 100MB you should contact us before upgrading, so we can make sure the upgrades work smoothly.
#### Downgrade
If all members have been upgraded to v2.1, the cluster will be upgraded to v2.1, and downgrade is **not possible**. If any member is still v2.0, the cluster will remain in v2.0, and you can go back to use v2.0 binary.
Please [backup your data directory](admin_guide.md#backing-up-the-datastore) of all etcd members if you want to downgrade the cluster, even if it is upgraded.
### Upgrade Procedure
#### 1. Check upgrade requirements.
```
$ etcdctl cluster-health
cluster is healthy
member 6e3bd23ae5f1eae0 is healthy
member 924e2e83e93f2560 is healthy
member a8266ecf031671f3 is healthy
$ curl http://127.0.0.1:4001/version
etcd 2.0.x
```
#### 2. Stop the existing etcd process
You will see similar error logging from other etcd processes in your cluster. This is normal, since you just shut down a member.
```
2015/06/23 15:45:09 sender: error posting to 6e3bd23ae5f1eae0: dial tcp 127.0.0.1:7002: connection refused
2015/06/23 15:45:09 sender: the connection with 6e3bd23ae5f1eae0 became inactive
2015/06/23 15:45:11 rafthttp: encountered error writing to server log stream: write tcp 127.0.0.1:53783: broken pipe
2015/06/23 15:45:11 rafthttp: server streaming to 6e3bd23ae5f1eae0 at term 2 has been stopped
2015/06/23 15:45:11 stream: error sending message: stopped
2015/06/23 15:45:11 stream: stopping the stream server...
```
You could [backup your data directory](https://github.com/coreos/etcd/blob/7f7e2cc79d9c5c342a6eb1e48c386b0223cf934e/Documentation/admin_guide.md#backing-up-the-datastore) for data safety.
```
$ etcdctl backup \
--data-dir /var/lib/etcd \
--backup-dir /tmp/etcd_backup
```
#### 3. Drop-in etcd v2.1 binary and start the new etcd process
You will see the etcd publish its information to the cluster.
```
2015/06/23 15:45:39 etcdserver: published {Name:infra2 ClientURLs:[http://localhost:4002]} to cluster e9c7614f68f35fb2
```
You could verify the cluster becomes healthy.
```
$ etcdctl cluster-health
cluster is healthy
member 6e3bd23ae5f1eae0 is healthy
member 924e2e83e93f2560 is healthy
member a8266ecf031671f3 is healthy
```
#### 4. Repeat step 2 to step 3 for all other members
#### 5. Finish
When all members are upgraded, you will see the cluster is upgraded to 2.1 successfully:
```
2015/06/23 15:46:35 etcdserver: updated the cluster version from 2.0.0 to 2.1.0
```
```
$ curl http://127.0.0.1:4001/version
{"etcdserver":"2.1.x","etcdcluster":"2.1.0"}
```

View File

@ -0,0 +1,128 @@
## Upgrade etcd from 2.1 to 2.2
In the general case, upgrading from etcd 2.1 to 2.2 can be a zero-downtime, rolling upgrade:
- one by one, stop the etcd v2.1 processes and replace them with etcd v2.2 processes
- after you are running all v2.2 processes, new features in v2.2 are available to the cluster
Before [starting an upgrade](#upgrade-procedure), read through the rest of this guide to prepare.
### Upgrade Checklists
#### Upgrade Requirement
To upgrade an existing etcd deployment to 2.2, you must be running 2.1. If youre running a version of etcd before 2.1, you must upgrade to [2.1](https://github.com/coreos/etcd/releases/tag/v2.1.2) before upgrading to 2.2.
Also, to ensure a smooth rolling upgrade, your running cluster must be healthy. You can check the health of the cluster by using `etcdctl cluster-health` command.
#### Preparedness
Before upgrading etcd, always test the services relying on etcd in a staging environment before deploying the upgrade to the production environment.
You might also want to [backup your data directory](admin_guide.md#backing-up-the-datastore) for a potential [downgrade](#downgrade).
#### Mixed Versions
While upgrading, an etcd cluster supports mixed versions of etcd members. The cluster is only considered upgraded once all its members are upgraded to 2.2.
Internally, etcd members negotiate with each other to determine the overall etcd cluster version, which controls the reported cluster version and the supported features.
#### Limitations
If you have a data size larger than 100MB you should contact us before upgrading, so we can make sure the upgrades work smoothly.
Every etcd 2.2 member will do health checking across the cluster periodically. etcd 2.1 member does not support health checking. During the upgrade, etcd 2.2 member will log warning about the unhealthy state of etcd 2.1 member. You can ignore the warning.
#### Downgrade
If all members have been upgraded to v2.2, the cluster will be upgraded to v2.2, and downgrade is **not possible**. If any member is still v2.1, the cluster will remain in v2.1, and you can go back to use v2.1 binary.
Please [backup your data directory](admin_guide.md#backing-up-the-datastore) of all etcd members if you want to downgrade the cluster, even if it is upgraded.
### Upgrade Procedure
In the example, we upgrade a three member v2.1 cluster running on local machine.
#### 1. Check upgrade requirements.
```
$ etcdctl cluster-health
member 6e3bd23ae5f1eae0 is healthy: got healthy result from http://localhost:22379
member 924e2e83e93f2560 is healthy: got healthy result from http://localhost:32379
member a8266ecf031671f3 is healthy: got healthy result from http://localhost:12379
cluster is healthy
$ curl http://localhost:4001/version
{"etcdserver":"2.1.x","etcdcluster":"2.1.0"}
```
#### 2. Stop the existing etcd process
You will see similar error logging from other etcd processes in your cluster. This is normal, since you just shut down a member and the connection is broken.
```
2015/09/2 09:48:35 etcdserver: failed to reach the peerURL(http://localhost:12380) of member a8266ecf031671f3 (Get http://localhost:12380/version: dial tcp [::1]:12380: getsockopt: connection refused)
2015/09/2 09:48:35 etcdserver: cannot get the version of member a8266ecf031671f3 (Get http://localhost:12380/version: dial tcp [::1]:12380: getsockopt: connection refused)
2015/09/2 09:48:35 rafthttp: failed to write a8266ecf031671f3 on stream Message (write tcp 127.0.0.1:32380->127.0.0.1:64394: write: broken pipe)
2015/09/2 09:48:35 rafthttp: failed to write a8266ecf031671f3 on pipeline (dial tcp [::1]:12380: getsockopt: connection refused)
2015/09/2 09:48:40 etcdserver: failed to reach the peerURL(http://localhost:7001) of member a8266ecf031671f3 (Get http://localhost:7001/version: dial tcp [::1]:12380: getsockopt: connection refused)
2015/09/2 09:48:40 etcdserver: cannot get the version of member a8266ecf031671f3 (Get http://localhost:12380/version: dial tcp [::1]:12380: getsockopt: connection refused)
2015/09/2 09:48:40 rafthttp: failed to heartbeat a8266ecf031671f3 on stream MsgApp v2 (write tcp 127.0.0.1:32380->127.0.0.1:64393: write: broken pipe)
```
You will see logging output like this from ungraded member due to a mixed version cluster. You can ignore this while upgrading.
```
2015/09/2 09:48:45 etcdserver: the etcd version 2.1.2+git is not up-to-date
2015/09/2 09:48:45 etcdserver: member a8266ecf031671f3 has a higher version &{2.2.0-rc.0+git 2.1.0}
```
You will also see logging output like this from the newly upgraded member, since etcd 2.1 member does not support health checking. You can ignore this while upgrading.
```
2015-09-02 09:55:42.691384 W | rafthttp: the connection to peer 6e3bd23ae5f1eae0 is unhealthy
2015-09-02 09:55:42.705626 W | rafthttp: the connection to peer 924e2e83e93f2560 is unhealthy
```
You could [backup your data directory](https://github.com/coreos/etcd/blob/7f7e2cc79d9c5c342a6eb1e48c386b0223cf934e/Documentation/admin_guide.md#backing-up-the-datastore) for data safety.
```
$ etcdctl backup \
--data-dir /var/lib/etcd \
--backup-dir /tmp/etcd_backup
```
#### 3. Drop-in etcd v2.2 binary and start the new etcd process
Now, you can start the etcd v2.2 binary with the previous configuration.
You will see the etcd start and publish its information to the cluster.
```
2015-09-02 09:56:46.117609 I | etcdserver: published {Name:infra2 ClientURLs:[http://localhost:22380]} to cluster e9c7614f68f35fb2
```
You could verify the cluster becomes healthy.
```
$ etcdctl cluster-health
member 6e3bd23ae5f1eae0 is healthy: got healthy result from http://localhost:22379
member 924e2e83e93f2560 is healthy: got healthy result from http://localhost:32379
member a8266ecf031671f3 is healthy: got healthy result from http://localhost:12379
cluster is healthy
```
#### 4. Repeat step 2 to step 3 for all other members
#### 5. Finish
When all members are upgraded, you will see the cluster is upgraded to 2.2 successfully:
```
2015-09-02 09:56:54.896848 N | etcdserver: updated the cluster version from 2.1 to 2.2
```
```
$ curl http://127.0.0.1:4001/version
{"etcdserver":"2.2.x","etcdcluster":"2.2.0"}
```

View File

@ -1,80 +0,0 @@
# etcd Governance
## Principles
The etcd community adheres to the following principles:
- Open: etcd is open source.
- Welcoming and respectful: See [Code of Conduct](code-of-conduct.md).
- Transparent and accessible: Changes to the etcd code repository and CNCF related
activities (e.g. level, involvement, etc) are done in public.
- Merit: Ideas and contributions are accepted according to their technical merit for
the betterment of the project. For specific guidance on practical contribution steps
please see [CONTRIBUTING](./CONTRIBUTING.md) guide.
## Maintainers
[Maintainers](./MAINTAINERS) are first and foremost contributors that have shown they
are committed to the long term success of a project. Maintainership is about building
trust with the current maintainers of the project and being a person that they can
depend on to make decisions in the best interest of the project in a consistent manner.
The maintainers role can be a top-level or restricted to certain package/feature
depending upon their commitment in fulfilling the expected responsibilities as explained
below.
### Top-level maintainer
- Running the etcd release processes
- Ownership of test and debug infrastructure
- Triage GitHub issues to keep the issue count low (goal: under 100)
- Regularly review GitHub pull requests across all pkgs
- Providing cross pkg design review
- Monitor email aliases
- Participate when called upon in the [security disclosure and release process](security/README.md)
- General project maintenance
### Package/feature maintainer
- Ownership of test and debug failures in a pkg/feature
- Resolution of bugs triaged to a package/feature
- Regularly review pull requests to the pkg subsystem
Contributors who are interested in becoming a maintainer, if performing these
responsibilities, should discuss their interest with the existing maintainers. New
maintainers must be nominated by an existing maintainer and must be elected by a
supermajority of maintainers. Likewise, maintainers can be removed by a supermajority
of the maintainers and moved to emeritus status.
Life priorities, interests, and passions can change. If a maintainer needs to step
down, inform other maintainers about this intention, and if possible, help find someone
to pick up the related work. At the very least, ensure the related work can be continued.
Afterward, create a pull request to remove yourself from the [MAINTAINERS](./MAINTAINERS)
file.
## Reviewers
[Reviewers](./MAINTAINERS) are contributors who have demonstrated greater skill in
reviewing the code contribution from other contributors. Their LGTM counts towards
merging a code change into the project. A reviewer is generally on the ladder towards
maintainership. New reviewers must be nominated by an existing maintainer and must be
elected by a supermajority of maintainers. Likewise, reviewers can be removed by a
supermajority of the maintainers or can resign by notifying the maintainers.
## Decision making process
Decisions are built on consensus between maintainers publicly. Proposals and ideas
can either be submitted for agreement via a GitHub issue or PR, or by sending an email
to `etcd-maintainers@googlegroups.com`.
## Conflict resolution
In general, we prefer that technical issues and maintainer membership are amicably
worked out between the persons involved. However, any technical dispute that has
reached an impasse with a subset of the community, any contributor may open a GitHub
issue or PR or send an email to `etcd-maintainers@googlegroups.com`. If the
maintainers themselves cannot decide an issue, the issue will be resolved by a
supermajority of the maintainers.
## Changes in Governance
Changes in project governance could be initiated by opening a GitHub PR.

201
Godeps/Godeps.json generated Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,201 @@
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/coreos/etcd",
"GoVersion": "go1.5.1",
"Packages": [
"./..."
],
"Deps": [
{
"ImportPath": "bitbucket.org/ww/goautoneg",
"Comment": "null-5",
"Rev": "75cd24fc2f2c2a2088577d12123ddee5f54e0675"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/akrennmair/gopcap",
"Rev": "00e11033259acb75598ba416495bb708d864a010"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/beorn7/perks/quantile",
"Rev": "b965b613227fddccbfffe13eae360ed3fa822f8d"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/bgentry/speakeasy",
"Rev": "36e9cfdd690967f4f690c6edcc9ffacd006014a0"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/boltdb/bolt",
"Comment": "v1.1.0-19-g0b00eff",
"Rev": "0b00effdd7a8270ebd91c24297e51643e370dd52"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/cheggaaa/pb",
"Rev": "da1f27ad1d9509b16f65f52fd9d8138b0f2dc7b2"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/codegangsta/cli",
"Comment": "1.2.0-183-gb5232bb",
"Rev": "b5232bb2934f606f9f27a1305f1eea224e8e8b88"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/coreos/gexpect",
"Rev": "5173270e159f5aa8fbc999dc7e3dcb50f4098a69"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/coreos/go-semver/semver",
"Rev": "568e959cd89871e61434c1143528d9162da89ef2"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/coreos/go-systemd/daemon",
"Comment": "v3-6-gcea488b",
"Rev": "cea488b4e6855fee89b6c22a811e3c5baca861b6"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/coreos/go-systemd/journal",
"Comment": "v3-6-gcea488b",
"Rev": "cea488b4e6855fee89b6c22a811e3c5baca861b6"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/coreos/go-systemd/util",
"Comment": "v3-6-gcea488b",
"Rev": "cea488b4e6855fee89b6c22a811e3c5baca861b6"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/coreos/pkg/capnslog",
"Rev": "2c77715c4df99b5420ffcae14ead08f52104065d"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/cpuguy83/go-md2man/md2man",
"Comment": "v1.0.4",
"Rev": "71acacd42f85e5e82f70a55327789582a5200a90"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/gogo/protobuf/proto",
"Comment": "v0.1-118-ge8904f5",
"Rev": "e8904f58e872a473a5b91bc9bf3377d223555263"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/golang/glog",
"Rev": "44145f04b68cf362d9c4df2182967c2275eaefed"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/golang/protobuf/proto",
"Rev": "6aaa8d47701fa6cf07e914ec01fde3d4a1fe79c3"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/google/btree",
"Rev": "cc6329d4279e3f025a53a83c397d2339b5705c45"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/inconshreveable/mousetrap",
"Rev": "76626ae9c91c4f2a10f34cad8ce83ea42c93bb75"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/jonboulle/clockwork",
"Rev": "72f9bd7c4e0c2a40055ab3d0f09654f730cce982"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/kballard/go-shellquote",
"Rev": "d8ec1a69a250a17bb0e419c386eac1f3711dc142"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/kr/pty",
"Comment": "release.r56-29-gf7ee69f",
"Rev": "f7ee69f31298ecbe5d2b349c711e2547a617d398"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/matttproud/golang_protobuf_extensions/pbutil",
"Rev": "fc2b8d3a73c4867e51861bbdd5ae3c1f0869dd6a"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/olekukonko/ts",
"Rev": "ecf753e7c962639ab5a1fb46f7da627d4c0a04b8"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus",
"Comment": "0.7.0-52-ge51041b",
"Rev": "e51041b3fa41cece0dca035740ba6411905be473"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go",
"Comment": "model-0.0.2-12-gfa8ad6f",
"Rev": "fa8ad6fec33561be4280a8f0514318c79d7f6cb6"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/prometheus/common/expfmt",
"Rev": "ffe929a3f4c4faeaa10f2b9535c2b1be3ad15650"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/prometheus/common/model",
"Rev": "ffe929a3f4c4faeaa10f2b9535c2b1be3ad15650"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/prometheus/procfs",
"Rev": "454a56f35412459b5e684fd5ec0f9211b94f002a"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/russross/blackfriday",
"Comment": "v1.4-2-g300106c",
"Rev": "300106c228d52c8941d4b3de6054a6062a86dda3"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/shurcooL/sanitized_anchor_name",
"Rev": "10ef21a441db47d8b13ebcc5fd2310f636973c77"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/spacejam/loghisto",
"Rev": "323309774dec8b7430187e46cd0793974ccca04a"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/spf13/cobra",
"Rev": "1c44ec8d3f1552cac48999f9306da23c4d8a288b"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/spf13/pflag",
"Rev": "08b1a584251b5b62f458943640fc8ebd4d50aaa5"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/stretchr/testify/assert",
"Rev": "9cc77fa25329013ce07362c7742952ff887361f2"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/ugorji/go/codec",
"Rev": "f1f1a805ed361a0e078bb537e4ea78cd37dcf065"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/xiang90/probing",
"Rev": "6a0cc1ae81b4cc11db5e491e030e4b98fba79c19"
},
{
"ImportPath": "golang.org/x/crypto/bcrypt",
"Rev": "1351f936d976c60a0a48d728281922cf63eafb8d"
},
{
"ImportPath": "golang.org/x/crypto/blowfish",
"Rev": "1351f936d976c60a0a48d728281922cf63eafb8d"
},
{
"ImportPath": "golang.org/x/net/context",
"Rev": "04b9de9b512f58addf28c9853d50ebef61c3953e"
},
{
"ImportPath": "golang.org/x/net/http2",
"Rev": "04b9de9b512f58addf28c9853d50ebef61c3953e"
},
{
"ImportPath": "golang.org/x/net/internal/timeseries",
"Rev": "04b9de9b512f58addf28c9853d50ebef61c3953e"
},
{
"ImportPath": "golang.org/x/net/trace",
"Rev": "04b9de9b512f58addf28c9853d50ebef61c3953e"
},
{
"ImportPath": "golang.org/x/sys/unix",
"Rev": "9c60d1c508f5134d1ca726b4641db998f2523357"
},
{
"ImportPath": "google.golang.org/grpc",
"Rev": "e29d659177655e589850ba7d3d83f7ce12ef23dd"
}
]
}

5
Godeps/Readme generated Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
This directory tree is generated automatically by godep.
Please do not edit.
See https://github.com/tools/godep for more information.

2
Godeps/_workspace/.gitignore generated vendored Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
/pkg
/bin

View File

@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
include $(GOROOT)/src/Make.inc
TARG=bitbucket.org/ww/goautoneg
GOFILES=autoneg.go
include $(GOROOT)/src/Make.pkg
format:
gofmt -w *.go
docs:
gomake clean
godoc ${TARG} > README.txt

View File

@ -0,0 +1,67 @@
PACKAGE
package goautoneg
import "bitbucket.org/ww/goautoneg"
HTTP Content-Type Autonegotiation.
The functions in this package implement the behaviour specified in
http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14.html
Copyright (c) 2011, Open Knowledge Foundation Ltd.
All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
met:
Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in
the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
distribution.
Neither the name of the Open Knowledge Foundation Ltd. nor the
names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote
products derived from this software without specific prior written
permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
"AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
FUNCTIONS
func Negotiate(header string, alternatives []string) (content_type string)
Negotiate the most appropriate content_type given the accept header
and a list of alternatives.
func ParseAccept(header string) (accept []Accept)
Parse an Accept Header string returning a sorted list
of clauses
TYPES
type Accept struct {
Type, SubType string
Q float32
Params map[string]string
}
Structure to represent a clause in an HTTP Accept Header
SUBDIRECTORIES
.hg

View File

@ -0,0 +1,162 @@
/*
HTTP Content-Type Autonegotiation.
The functions in this package implement the behaviour specified in
http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14.html
Copyright (c) 2011, Open Knowledge Foundation Ltd.
All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
met:
Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in
the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
distribution.
Neither the name of the Open Knowledge Foundation Ltd. nor the
names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote
products derived from this software without specific prior written
permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
"AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
package goautoneg
import (
"sort"
"strconv"
"strings"
)
// Structure to represent a clause in an HTTP Accept Header
type Accept struct {
Type, SubType string
Q float64
Params map[string]string
}
// For internal use, so that we can use the sort interface
type accept_slice []Accept
func (accept accept_slice) Len() int {
slice := []Accept(accept)
return len(slice)
}
func (accept accept_slice) Less(i, j int) bool {
slice := []Accept(accept)
ai, aj := slice[i], slice[j]
if ai.Q > aj.Q {
return true
}
if ai.Type != "*" && aj.Type == "*" {
return true
}
if ai.SubType != "*" && aj.SubType == "*" {
return true
}
return false
}
func (accept accept_slice) Swap(i, j int) {
slice := []Accept(accept)
slice[i], slice[j] = slice[j], slice[i]
}
// Parse an Accept Header string returning a sorted list
// of clauses
func ParseAccept(header string) (accept []Accept) {
parts := strings.Split(header, ",")
accept = make([]Accept, 0, len(parts))
for _, part := range parts {
part := strings.Trim(part, " ")
a := Accept{}
a.Params = make(map[string]string)
a.Q = 1.0
mrp := strings.Split(part, ";")
media_range := mrp[0]
sp := strings.Split(media_range, "/")
a.Type = strings.Trim(sp[0], " ")
switch {
case len(sp) == 1 && a.Type == "*":
a.SubType = "*"
case len(sp) == 2:
a.SubType = strings.Trim(sp[1], " ")
default:
continue
}
if len(mrp) == 1 {
accept = append(accept, a)
continue
}
for _, param := range mrp[1:] {
sp := strings.SplitN(param, "=", 2)
if len(sp) != 2 {
continue
}
token := strings.Trim(sp[0], " ")
if token == "q" {
a.Q, _ = strconv.ParseFloat(sp[1], 32)
} else {
a.Params[token] = strings.Trim(sp[1], " ")
}
}
accept = append(accept, a)
}
slice := accept_slice(accept)
sort.Sort(slice)
return
}
// Negotiate the most appropriate content_type given the accept header
// and a list of alternatives.
func Negotiate(header string, alternatives []string) (content_type string) {
asp := make([][]string, 0, len(alternatives))
for _, ctype := range alternatives {
asp = append(asp, strings.SplitN(ctype, "/", 2))
}
for _, clause := range ParseAccept(header) {
for i, ctsp := range asp {
if clause.Type == ctsp[0] && clause.SubType == ctsp[1] {
content_type = alternatives[i]
return
}
if clause.Type == ctsp[0] && clause.SubType == "*" {
content_type = alternatives[i]
return
}
if clause.Type == "*" && clause.SubType == "*" {
content_type = alternatives[i]
return
}
}
}
return
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,33 @@
package goautoneg
import (
"testing"
)
var chrome = "application/xml,application/xhtml+xml,text/html;q=0.9,text/plain;q=0.8,image/png,*/*;q=0.5"
func TestParseAccept(t *testing.T) {
alternatives := []string{"text/html", "image/png"}
content_type := Negotiate(chrome, alternatives)
if content_type != "image/png" {
t.Errorf("got %s expected image/png", content_type)
}
alternatives = []string{"text/html", "text/plain", "text/n3"}
content_type = Negotiate(chrome, alternatives)
if content_type != "text/html" {
t.Errorf("got %s expected text/html", content_type)
}
alternatives = []string{"text/n3", "text/plain"}
content_type = Negotiate(chrome, alternatives)
if content_type != "text/plain" {
t.Errorf("got %s expected text/plain", content_type)
}
alternatives = []string{"text/n3", "application/rdf+xml"}
content_type = Negotiate(chrome, alternatives)
if content_type != "text/n3" {
t.Errorf("got %s expected text/n3", content_type)
}
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
#*
*~
/tools/pass/pass
/tools/pcaptest/pcaptest
/tools/tcpdump/tcpdump

View File

@ -0,0 +1,27 @@
Copyright (c) 2009-2011 Andreas Krennmair. All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
met:
* Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer
in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
distribution.
* Neither the name of Andreas Krennmair nor the names of its
contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
this software without specific prior written permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
"AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
# PCAP
This is a simple wrapper around libpcap for Go. Originally written by Andreas
Krennmair <ak@synflood.at> and only minorly touched up by Mark Smith <mark@qq.is>.
Please see the included pcaptest.go and tcpdump.go programs for instructions on
how to use this library.
Miek Gieben <miek@miek.nl> has created a more Go-like package and replaced functionality
with standard functions from the standard library. The package has also been renamed to
pcap.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,527 @@
package pcap
import (
"encoding/binary"
"fmt"
"net"
"reflect"
"strings"
)
const (
TYPE_IP = 0x0800
TYPE_ARP = 0x0806
TYPE_IP6 = 0x86DD
TYPE_VLAN = 0x8100
IP_ICMP = 1
IP_INIP = 4
IP_TCP = 6
IP_UDP = 17
)
const (
ERRBUF_SIZE = 256
// According to pcap-linktype(7).
LINKTYPE_NULL = 0
LINKTYPE_ETHERNET = 1
LINKTYPE_TOKEN_RING = 6
LINKTYPE_ARCNET = 7
LINKTYPE_SLIP = 8
LINKTYPE_PPP = 9
LINKTYPE_FDDI = 10
LINKTYPE_ATM_RFC1483 = 100
LINKTYPE_RAW = 101
LINKTYPE_PPP_HDLC = 50
LINKTYPE_PPP_ETHER = 51
LINKTYPE_C_HDLC = 104
LINKTYPE_IEEE802_11 = 105
LINKTYPE_FRELAY = 107
LINKTYPE_LOOP = 108
LINKTYPE_LINUX_SLL = 113
LINKTYPE_LTALK = 104
LINKTYPE_PFLOG = 117
LINKTYPE_PRISM_HEADER = 119
LINKTYPE_IP_OVER_FC = 122
LINKTYPE_SUNATM = 123
LINKTYPE_IEEE802_11_RADIO = 127
LINKTYPE_ARCNET_LINUX = 129
LINKTYPE_LINUX_IRDA = 144
LINKTYPE_LINUX_LAPD = 177
)
type addrHdr interface {
SrcAddr() string
DestAddr() string
Len() int
}
type addrStringer interface {
String(addr addrHdr) string
}
func decodemac(pkt []byte) uint64 {
mac := uint64(0)
for i := uint(0); i < 6; i++ {
mac = (mac << 8) + uint64(pkt[i])
}
return mac
}
// Decode decodes the headers of a Packet.
func (p *Packet) Decode() {
if len(p.Data) <= 14 {
return
}
p.Type = int(binary.BigEndian.Uint16(p.Data[12:14]))
p.DestMac = decodemac(p.Data[0:6])
p.SrcMac = decodemac(p.Data[6:12])
if len(p.Data) >= 15 {
p.Payload = p.Data[14:]
}
switch p.Type {
case TYPE_IP:
p.decodeIp()
case TYPE_IP6:
p.decodeIp6()
case TYPE_ARP:
p.decodeArp()
case TYPE_VLAN:
p.decodeVlan()
}
}
func (p *Packet) headerString(headers []interface{}) string {
// If there's just one header, return that.
if len(headers) == 1 {
if hdr, ok := headers[0].(fmt.Stringer); ok {
return hdr.String()
}
}
// If there are two headers (IPv4/IPv6 -> TCP/UDP/IP..)
if len(headers) == 2 {
// Commonly the first header is an address.
if addr, ok := p.Headers[0].(addrHdr); ok {
if hdr, ok := p.Headers[1].(addrStringer); ok {
return fmt.Sprintf("%s %s", p.Time, hdr.String(addr))
}
}
}
// For IP in IP, we do a recursive call.
if len(headers) >= 2 {
if addr, ok := headers[0].(addrHdr); ok {
if _, ok := headers[1].(addrHdr); ok {
return fmt.Sprintf("%s > %s IP in IP: ",
addr.SrcAddr(), addr.DestAddr(), p.headerString(headers[1:]))
}
}
}
var typeNames []string
for _, hdr := range headers {
typeNames = append(typeNames, reflect.TypeOf(hdr).String())
}
return fmt.Sprintf("unknown [%s]", strings.Join(typeNames, ","))
}
// String prints a one-line representation of the packet header.
// The output is suitable for use in a tcpdump program.
func (p *Packet) String() string {
// If there are no headers, print "unsupported protocol".
if len(p.Headers) == 0 {
return fmt.Sprintf("%s unsupported protocol %d", p.Time, int(p.Type))
}
return fmt.Sprintf("%s %s", p.Time, p.headerString(p.Headers))
}
// Arphdr is a ARP packet header.
type Arphdr struct {
Addrtype uint16
Protocol uint16
HwAddressSize uint8
ProtAddressSize uint8
Operation uint16
SourceHwAddress []byte
SourceProtAddress []byte
DestHwAddress []byte
DestProtAddress []byte
}
func (arp *Arphdr) String() (s string) {
switch arp.Operation {
case 1:
s = "ARP request"
case 2:
s = "ARP Reply"
}
if arp.Addrtype == LINKTYPE_ETHERNET && arp.Protocol == TYPE_IP {
s = fmt.Sprintf("%012x (%s) > %012x (%s)",
decodemac(arp.SourceHwAddress), arp.SourceProtAddress,
decodemac(arp.DestHwAddress), arp.DestProtAddress)
} else {
s = fmt.Sprintf("addrtype = %d protocol = %d", arp.Addrtype, arp.Protocol)
}
return
}
func (p *Packet) decodeArp() {
if len(p.Payload) < 8 {
return
}
pkt := p.Payload
arp := new(Arphdr)
arp.Addrtype = binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[0:2])
arp.Protocol = binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[2:4])
arp.HwAddressSize = pkt[4]
arp.ProtAddressSize = pkt[5]
arp.Operation = binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[6:8])
if len(pkt) < int(8+2*arp.HwAddressSize+2*arp.ProtAddressSize) {
return
}
arp.SourceHwAddress = pkt[8 : 8+arp.HwAddressSize]
arp.SourceProtAddress = pkt[8+arp.HwAddressSize : 8+arp.HwAddressSize+arp.ProtAddressSize]
arp.DestHwAddress = pkt[8+arp.HwAddressSize+arp.ProtAddressSize : 8+2*arp.HwAddressSize+arp.ProtAddressSize]
arp.DestProtAddress = pkt[8+2*arp.HwAddressSize+arp.ProtAddressSize : 8+2*arp.HwAddressSize+2*arp.ProtAddressSize]
p.Headers = append(p.Headers, arp)
if len(pkt) >= int(8+2*arp.HwAddressSize+2*arp.ProtAddressSize) {
p.Payload = p.Payload[8+2*arp.HwAddressSize+2*arp.ProtAddressSize:]
}
}
// IPadr is the header of an IP packet.
type Iphdr struct {
Version uint8
Ihl uint8
Tos uint8
Length uint16
Id uint16
Flags uint8
FragOffset uint16
Ttl uint8
Protocol uint8
Checksum uint16
SrcIp []byte
DestIp []byte
}
func (p *Packet) decodeIp() {
if len(p.Payload) < 20 {
return
}
pkt := p.Payload
ip := new(Iphdr)
ip.Version = uint8(pkt[0]) >> 4
ip.Ihl = uint8(pkt[0]) & 0x0F
ip.Tos = pkt[1]
ip.Length = binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[2:4])
ip.Id = binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[4:6])
flagsfrags := binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[6:8])
ip.Flags = uint8(flagsfrags >> 13)
ip.FragOffset = flagsfrags & 0x1FFF
ip.Ttl = pkt[8]
ip.Protocol = pkt[9]
ip.Checksum = binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[10:12])
ip.SrcIp = pkt[12:16]
ip.DestIp = pkt[16:20]
pEnd := int(ip.Length)
if pEnd > len(pkt) {
pEnd = len(pkt)
}
if len(pkt) >= pEnd && int(ip.Ihl*4) < pEnd {
p.Payload = pkt[ip.Ihl*4 : pEnd]
} else {
p.Payload = []byte{}
}
p.Headers = append(p.Headers, ip)
p.IP = ip
switch ip.Protocol {
case IP_TCP:
p.decodeTcp()
case IP_UDP:
p.decodeUdp()
case IP_ICMP:
p.decodeIcmp()
case IP_INIP:
p.decodeIp()
}
}
func (ip *Iphdr) SrcAddr() string { return net.IP(ip.SrcIp).String() }
func (ip *Iphdr) DestAddr() string { return net.IP(ip.DestIp).String() }
func (ip *Iphdr) Len() int { return int(ip.Length) }
type Vlanhdr struct {
Priority byte
DropEligible bool
VlanIdentifier int
Type int // Not actually part of the vlan header, but the type of the actual packet
}
func (v *Vlanhdr) String() {
fmt.Sprintf("VLAN Priority:%d Drop:%v Tag:%d", v.Priority, v.DropEligible, v.VlanIdentifier)
}
func (p *Packet) decodeVlan() {
pkt := p.Payload
vlan := new(Vlanhdr)
if len(pkt) < 4 {
return
}
vlan.Priority = (pkt[2] & 0xE0) >> 13
vlan.DropEligible = pkt[2]&0x10 != 0
vlan.VlanIdentifier = int(binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[:2])) & 0x0FFF
vlan.Type = int(binary.BigEndian.Uint16(p.Payload[2:4]))
p.Headers = append(p.Headers, vlan)
if len(pkt) >= 5 {
p.Payload = p.Payload[4:]
}
switch vlan.Type {
case TYPE_IP:
p.decodeIp()
case TYPE_IP6:
p.decodeIp6()
case TYPE_ARP:
p.decodeArp()
}
}
type Tcphdr struct {
SrcPort uint16
DestPort uint16
Seq uint32
Ack uint32
DataOffset uint8
Flags uint16
Window uint16
Checksum uint16
Urgent uint16
Data []byte
}
const (
TCP_FIN = 1 << iota
TCP_SYN
TCP_RST
TCP_PSH
TCP_ACK
TCP_URG
TCP_ECE
TCP_CWR
TCP_NS
)
func (p *Packet) decodeTcp() {
if len(p.Payload) < 20 {
return
}
pkt := p.Payload
tcp := new(Tcphdr)
tcp.SrcPort = binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[0:2])
tcp.DestPort = binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[2:4])
tcp.Seq = binary.BigEndian.Uint32(pkt[4:8])
tcp.Ack = binary.BigEndian.Uint32(pkt[8:12])
tcp.DataOffset = (pkt[12] & 0xF0) >> 4
tcp.Flags = binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[12:14]) & 0x1FF
tcp.Window = binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[14:16])
tcp.Checksum = binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[16:18])
tcp.Urgent = binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[18:20])
if len(pkt) >= int(tcp.DataOffset*4) {
p.Payload = pkt[tcp.DataOffset*4:]
}
p.Headers = append(p.Headers, tcp)
p.TCP = tcp
}
func (tcp *Tcphdr) String(hdr addrHdr) string {
return fmt.Sprintf("TCP %s:%d > %s:%d %s SEQ=%d ACK=%d LEN=%d",
hdr.SrcAddr(), int(tcp.SrcPort), hdr.DestAddr(), int(tcp.DestPort),
tcp.FlagsString(), int64(tcp.Seq), int64(tcp.Ack), hdr.Len())
}
func (tcp *Tcphdr) FlagsString() string {
var sflags []string
if 0 != (tcp.Flags & TCP_SYN) {
sflags = append(sflags, "syn")
}
if 0 != (tcp.Flags & TCP_FIN) {
sflags = append(sflags, "fin")
}
if 0 != (tcp.Flags & TCP_ACK) {
sflags = append(sflags, "ack")
}
if 0 != (tcp.Flags & TCP_PSH) {
sflags = append(sflags, "psh")
}
if 0 != (tcp.Flags & TCP_RST) {
sflags = append(sflags, "rst")
}
if 0 != (tcp.Flags & TCP_URG) {
sflags = append(sflags, "urg")
}
if 0 != (tcp.Flags & TCP_NS) {
sflags = append(sflags, "ns")
}
if 0 != (tcp.Flags & TCP_CWR) {
sflags = append(sflags, "cwr")
}
if 0 != (tcp.Flags & TCP_ECE) {
sflags = append(sflags, "ece")
}
return fmt.Sprintf("[%s]", strings.Join(sflags, " "))
}
type Udphdr struct {
SrcPort uint16
DestPort uint16
Length uint16
Checksum uint16
}
func (p *Packet) decodeUdp() {
if len(p.Payload) < 8 {
return
}
pkt := p.Payload
udp := new(Udphdr)
udp.SrcPort = binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[0:2])
udp.DestPort = binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[2:4])
udp.Length = binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[4:6])
udp.Checksum = binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[6:8])
p.Headers = append(p.Headers, udp)
p.UDP = udp
if len(p.Payload) >= 8 {
p.Payload = pkt[8:]
}
}
func (udp *Udphdr) String(hdr addrHdr) string {
return fmt.Sprintf("UDP %s:%d > %s:%d LEN=%d CHKSUM=%d",
hdr.SrcAddr(), int(udp.SrcPort), hdr.DestAddr(), int(udp.DestPort),
int(udp.Length), int(udp.Checksum))
}
type Icmphdr struct {
Type uint8
Code uint8
Checksum uint16
Id uint16
Seq uint16
Data []byte
}
func (p *Packet) decodeIcmp() *Icmphdr {
if len(p.Payload) < 8 {
return nil
}
pkt := p.Payload
icmp := new(Icmphdr)
icmp.Type = pkt[0]
icmp.Code = pkt[1]
icmp.Checksum = binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[2:4])
icmp.Id = binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[4:6])
icmp.Seq = binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[6:8])
p.Payload = pkt[8:]
p.Headers = append(p.Headers, icmp)
return icmp
}
func (icmp *Icmphdr) String(hdr addrHdr) string {
return fmt.Sprintf("ICMP %s > %s Type = %d Code = %d ",
hdr.SrcAddr(), hdr.DestAddr(), icmp.Type, icmp.Code)
}
func (icmp *Icmphdr) TypeString() (result string) {
switch icmp.Type {
case 0:
result = fmt.Sprintf("Echo reply seq=%d", icmp.Seq)
case 3:
switch icmp.Code {
case 0:
result = "Network unreachable"
case 1:
result = "Host unreachable"
case 2:
result = "Protocol unreachable"
case 3:
result = "Port unreachable"
default:
result = "Destination unreachable"
}
case 8:
result = fmt.Sprintf("Echo request seq=%d", icmp.Seq)
case 30:
result = "Traceroute"
}
return
}
type Ip6hdr struct {
// http://www.networksorcery.com/enp/protocol/ipv6.htm
Version uint8 // 4 bits
TrafficClass uint8 // 8 bits
FlowLabel uint32 // 20 bits
Length uint16 // 16 bits
NextHeader uint8 // 8 bits, same as Protocol in Iphdr
HopLimit uint8 // 8 bits
SrcIp []byte // 16 bytes
DestIp []byte // 16 bytes
}
func (p *Packet) decodeIp6() {
if len(p.Payload) < 40 {
return
}
pkt := p.Payload
ip6 := new(Ip6hdr)
ip6.Version = uint8(pkt[0]) >> 4
ip6.TrafficClass = uint8((binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[0:2]) >> 4) & 0x00FF)
ip6.FlowLabel = binary.BigEndian.Uint32(pkt[0:4]) & 0x000FFFFF
ip6.Length = binary.BigEndian.Uint16(pkt[4:6])
ip6.NextHeader = pkt[6]
ip6.HopLimit = pkt[7]
ip6.SrcIp = pkt[8:24]
ip6.DestIp = pkt[24:40]
if len(p.Payload) >= 40 {
p.Payload = pkt[40:]
}
p.Headers = append(p.Headers, ip6)
switch ip6.NextHeader {
case IP_TCP:
p.decodeTcp()
case IP_UDP:
p.decodeUdp()
case IP_ICMP:
p.decodeIcmp()
case IP_INIP:
p.decodeIp()
}
}
func (ip6 *Ip6hdr) SrcAddr() string { return net.IP(ip6.SrcIp).String() }
func (ip6 *Ip6hdr) DestAddr() string { return net.IP(ip6.DestIp).String() }
func (ip6 *Ip6hdr) Len() int { return int(ip6.Length) }

View File

@ -0,0 +1,247 @@
package pcap
import (
"bytes"
"testing"
"time"
)
var testSimpleTcpPacket *Packet = &Packet{
Data: []byte{
0x00, 0x00, 0x0c, 0x9f, 0xf0, 0x20, 0xbc, 0x30, 0x5b, 0xe8, 0xd3, 0x49,
0x08, 0x00, 0x45, 0x00, 0x01, 0xa4, 0x39, 0xdf, 0x40, 0x00, 0x40, 0x06,
0x55, 0x5a, 0xac, 0x11, 0x51, 0x49, 0xad, 0xde, 0xfe, 0xe1, 0xc5, 0xf7,
0x00, 0x50, 0xc5, 0x7e, 0x0e, 0x48, 0x49, 0x07, 0x42, 0x32, 0x80, 0x18,
0x00, 0x73, 0xab, 0xb1, 0x00, 0x00, 0x01, 0x01, 0x08, 0x0a, 0x03, 0x77,
0x37, 0x9c, 0x42, 0x77, 0x5e, 0x3a, 0x47, 0x45, 0x54, 0x20, 0x2f, 0x20,
0x48, 0x54, 0x54, 0x50, 0x2f, 0x31, 0x2e, 0x31, 0x0d, 0x0a, 0x48, 0x6f,
0x73, 0x74, 0x3a, 0x20, 0x77, 0x77, 0x77, 0x2e, 0x66, 0x69, 0x73, 0x68,
0x2e, 0x63, 0x6f, 0x6d, 0x0d, 0x0a, 0x43, 0x6f, 0x6e, 0x6e, 0x65, 0x63,
0x74, 0x69, 0x6f, 0x6e, 0x3a, 0x20, 0x6b, 0x65, 0x65, 0x70, 0x2d, 0x61,
0x6c, 0x69, 0x76, 0x65, 0x0d, 0x0a, 0x55, 0x73, 0x65, 0x72, 0x2d, 0x41,
0x67, 0x65, 0x6e, 0x74, 0x3a, 0x20, 0x4d, 0x6f, 0x7a, 0x69, 0x6c, 0x6c,
0x61, 0x2f, 0x35, 0x2e, 0x30, 0x20, 0x28, 0x58, 0x31, 0x31, 0x3b, 0x20,
0x4c, 0x69, 0x6e, 0x75, 0x78, 0x20, 0x78, 0x38, 0x36, 0x5f, 0x36, 0x34,
0x29, 0x20, 0x41, 0x70, 0x70, 0x6c, 0x65, 0x57, 0x65, 0x62, 0x4b, 0x69,
0x74, 0x2f, 0x35, 0x33, 0x35, 0x2e, 0x32, 0x20, 0x28, 0x4b, 0x48, 0x54,
0x4d, 0x4c, 0x2c, 0x20, 0x6c, 0x69, 0x6b, 0x65, 0x20, 0x47, 0x65, 0x63,
0x6b, 0x6f, 0x29, 0x20, 0x43, 0x68, 0x72, 0x6f, 0x6d, 0x65, 0x2f, 0x31,
0x35, 0x2e, 0x30, 0x2e, 0x38, 0x37, 0x34, 0x2e, 0x31, 0x32, 0x31, 0x20,
0x53, 0x61, 0x66, 0x61, 0x72, 0x69, 0x2f, 0x35, 0x33, 0x35, 0x2e, 0x32,
0x0d, 0x0a, 0x41, 0x63, 0x63, 0x65, 0x70, 0x74, 0x3a, 0x20, 0x74, 0x65,
0x78, 0x74, 0x2f, 0x68, 0x74, 0x6d, 0x6c, 0x2c, 0x61, 0x70, 0x70, 0x6c,
0x69, 0x63, 0x61, 0x74, 0x69, 0x6f, 0x6e, 0x2f, 0x78, 0x68, 0x74, 0x6d,
0x6c, 0x2b, 0x78, 0x6d, 0x6c, 0x2c, 0x61, 0x70, 0x70, 0x6c, 0x69, 0x63,
0x61, 0x74, 0x69, 0x6f, 0x6e, 0x2f, 0x78, 0x6d, 0x6c, 0x3b, 0x71, 0x3d,
0x30, 0x2e, 0x39, 0x2c, 0x2a, 0x2f, 0x2a, 0x3b, 0x71, 0x3d, 0x30, 0x2e,
0x38, 0x0d, 0x0a, 0x41, 0x63, 0x63, 0x65, 0x70, 0x74, 0x2d, 0x45, 0x6e,
0x63, 0x6f, 0x64, 0x69, 0x6e, 0x67, 0x3a, 0x20, 0x67, 0x7a, 0x69, 0x70,
0x2c, 0x64, 0x65, 0x66, 0x6c, 0x61, 0x74, 0x65, 0x2c, 0x73, 0x64, 0x63,
0x68, 0x0d, 0x0a, 0x41, 0x63, 0x63, 0x65, 0x70, 0x74, 0x2d, 0x4c, 0x61,
0x6e, 0x67, 0x75, 0x61, 0x67, 0x65, 0x3a, 0x20, 0x65, 0x6e, 0x2d, 0x55,
0x53, 0x2c, 0x65, 0x6e, 0x3b, 0x71, 0x3d, 0x30, 0x2e, 0x38, 0x0d, 0x0a,
0x41, 0x63, 0x63, 0x65, 0x70, 0x74, 0x2d, 0x43, 0x68, 0x61, 0x72, 0x73,
0x65, 0x74, 0x3a, 0x20, 0x49, 0x53, 0x4f, 0x2d, 0x38, 0x38, 0x35, 0x39,
0x2d, 0x31, 0x2c, 0x75, 0x74, 0x66, 0x2d, 0x38, 0x3b, 0x71, 0x3d, 0x30,
0x2e, 0x37, 0x2c, 0x2a, 0x3b, 0x71, 0x3d, 0x30, 0x2e, 0x33, 0x0d, 0x0a,
0x0d, 0x0a,
}}
func BenchmarkDecodeSimpleTcpPacket(b *testing.B) {
for i := 0; i < b.N; i++ {
testSimpleTcpPacket.Decode()
}
}
func TestDecodeSimpleTcpPacket(t *testing.T) {
p := testSimpleTcpPacket
p.Decode()
if p.DestMac != 0x00000c9ff020 {
t.Error("Dest mac", p.DestMac)
}
if p.SrcMac != 0xbc305be8d349 {
t.Error("Src mac", p.SrcMac)
}
if len(p.Headers) != 2 {
t.Error("Incorrect number of headers", len(p.Headers))
return
}
if ip, ipOk := p.Headers[0].(*Iphdr); ipOk {
if ip.Version != 4 {
t.Error("ip Version", ip.Version)
}
if ip.Ihl != 5 {
t.Error("ip header length", ip.Ihl)
}
if ip.Tos != 0 {
t.Error("ip TOS", ip.Tos)
}
if ip.Length != 420 {
t.Error("ip Length", ip.Length)
}
if ip.Id != 14815 {
t.Error("ip ID", ip.Id)
}
if ip.Flags != 0x02 {
t.Error("ip Flags", ip.Flags)
}
if ip.FragOffset != 0 {
t.Error("ip Fragoffset", ip.FragOffset)
}
if ip.Ttl != 64 {
t.Error("ip TTL", ip.Ttl)
}
if ip.Protocol != 6 {
t.Error("ip Protocol", ip.Protocol)
}
if ip.Checksum != 0x555A {
t.Error("ip Checksum", ip.Checksum)
}
if !bytes.Equal(ip.SrcIp, []byte{172, 17, 81, 73}) {
t.Error("ip Src", ip.SrcIp)
}
if !bytes.Equal(ip.DestIp, []byte{173, 222, 254, 225}) {
t.Error("ip Dest", ip.DestIp)
}
if tcp, tcpOk := p.Headers[1].(*Tcphdr); tcpOk {
if tcp.SrcPort != 50679 {
t.Error("tcp srcport", tcp.SrcPort)
}
if tcp.DestPort != 80 {
t.Error("tcp destport", tcp.DestPort)
}
if tcp.Seq != 0xc57e0e48 {
t.Error("tcp seq", tcp.Seq)
}
if tcp.Ack != 0x49074232 {
t.Error("tcp ack", tcp.Ack)
}
if tcp.DataOffset != 8 {
t.Error("tcp dataoffset", tcp.DataOffset)
}
if tcp.Flags != 0x18 {
t.Error("tcp flags", tcp.Flags)
}
if tcp.Window != 0x73 {
t.Error("tcp window", tcp.Window)
}
if tcp.Checksum != 0xabb1 {
t.Error("tcp checksum", tcp.Checksum)
}
if tcp.Urgent != 0 {
t.Error("tcp urgent", tcp.Urgent)
}
} else {
t.Error("Second header is not TCP header")
}
} else {
t.Error("First header is not IP header")
}
if string(p.Payload) != "GET / HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: www.fish.com\r\nConnection: keep-alive\r\nUser-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64) AppleWebKit/535.2 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/15.0.874.121 Safari/535.2\r\nAccept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,*/*;q=0.8\r\nAccept-Encoding: gzip,deflate,sdch\r\nAccept-Language: en-US,en;q=0.8\r\nAccept-Charset: ISO-8859-1,utf-8;q=0.7,*;q=0.3\r\n\r\n" {
t.Error("--- PAYLOAD STRING ---\n", string(p.Payload), "\n--- PAYLOAD BYTES ---\n", p.Payload)
}
}
// Makes sure packet payload doesn't display the 6 trailing null of this packet
// as part of the payload. They're actually the ethernet trailer.
func TestDecodeSmallTcpPacketHasEmptyPayload(t *testing.T) {
p := &Packet{
// This packet is only 54 bits (an empty TCP RST), thus 6 trailing null
// bytes are added by the ethernet layer to make it the minimum packet size.
Data: []byte{
0xbc, 0x30, 0x5b, 0xe8, 0xd3, 0x49, 0xb8, 0xac, 0x6f, 0x92, 0xd5, 0xbf,
0x08, 0x00, 0x45, 0x00, 0x00, 0x28, 0x00, 0x00, 0x40, 0x00, 0x40, 0x06,
0x3f, 0x9f, 0xac, 0x11, 0x51, 0xc5, 0xac, 0x11, 0x51, 0x49, 0x00, 0x63,
0x9a, 0xef, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x2e, 0xc1, 0x27, 0x83, 0x50, 0x14,
0x00, 0x00, 0xc3, 0x08, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00,
}}
p.Decode()
if p.Payload == nil {
t.Error("Nil payload")
}
if len(p.Payload) != 0 {
t.Error("Non-empty payload:", p.Payload)
}
}
func TestDecodeVlanPacket(t *testing.T) {
p := &Packet{
Data: []byte{
0x00, 0x10, 0xdb, 0xff, 0x10, 0x00, 0x00, 0x15, 0x2c, 0x9d, 0xcc, 0x00, 0x81, 0x00, 0x01, 0xf7,
0x08, 0x00, 0x45, 0x00, 0x00, 0x28, 0x29, 0x8d, 0x40, 0x00, 0x7d, 0x06, 0x83, 0xa0, 0xac, 0x1b,
0xca, 0x8e, 0x45, 0x16, 0x94, 0xe2, 0xd4, 0x0a, 0x00, 0x50, 0xdf, 0xab, 0x9c, 0xc6, 0xcd, 0x1e,
0xe5, 0xd1, 0x50, 0x10, 0x01, 0x00, 0x5a, 0x74, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00,
}}
p.Decode()
if p.Type != TYPE_VLAN {
t.Error("Didn't detect vlan")
}
if len(p.Headers) != 3 {
t.Error("Incorrect number of headers:", len(p.Headers))
for i, h := range p.Headers {
t.Errorf("Header %d: %#v", i, h)
}
t.FailNow()
}
if _, ok := p.Headers[0].(*Vlanhdr); !ok {
t.Errorf("First header isn't vlan: %q", p.Headers[0])
}
if _, ok := p.Headers[1].(*Iphdr); !ok {
t.Errorf("Second header isn't IP: %q", p.Headers[1])
}
if _, ok := p.Headers[2].(*Tcphdr); !ok {
t.Errorf("Third header isn't TCP: %q", p.Headers[2])
}
}
func TestDecodeFuzzFallout(t *testing.T) {
testData := []struct {
Data []byte
}{
{[]byte("000000000000\x81\x000")},
{[]byte("000000000000\x81\x00000")},
{[]byte("000000000000\x86\xdd0")},
{[]byte("000000000000\b\x000")},
{[]byte("000000000000\b\x060")},
{[]byte{}},
{[]byte("000000000000\b\x0600000000")},
{[]byte("000000000000\x86\xdd000000\x01000000000000000000000000000000000")},
{[]byte("000000000000\x81\x0000\b\x0600000000")},
{[]byte("000000000000\b\x00n0000000000000000000")},
{[]byte("000000000000\x86\xdd000000\x0100000000000000000000000000000000000")},
{[]byte("000000000000\x81\x0000\b\x00g0000000000000000000")},
//{[]byte()},
{[]byte("000000000000\b\x00400000000\x110000000000")},
{[]byte("0nMء\xfe\x13\x13\x81\x00gr\b\x00&x\xc9\xe5b'\x1e0\x00\x04\x00\x0020596224")},
{[]byte("000000000000\x81\x0000\b\x00400000000\x110000000000")},
{[]byte("000000000000\b\x00000000000\x0600\xff0000000")},
{[]byte("000000000000\x86\xdd000000\x06000000000000000000000000000000000")},
{[]byte("000000000000\x81\x0000\b\x00000000000\x0600b0000000")},
{[]byte("000000000000\x81\x0000\b\x00400000000\x060000000000")},
{[]byte("000000000000\x86\xdd000000\x11000000000000000000000000000000000")},
{[]byte("000000000000\x86\xdd000000\x0600000000000000000000000000000000000000000000M")},
{[]byte("000000000000\b\x00500000000\x0600000000000")},
{[]byte("0nM\xd80\xfe\x13\x13\x81\x00gr\b\x00&x\xc9\xe5b'\x1e0\x00\x04\x00\x0020596224")},
}
for _, entry := range testData {
pkt := &Packet{
Time: time.Now(),
Caplen: uint32(len(entry.Data)),
Len: uint32(len(entry.Data)),
Data: entry.Data,
}
pkt.Decode()
/*
func() {
defer func() {
if err := recover(); err != nil {
t.Fatalf("%d. %q failed: %v", idx, string(entry.Data), err)
}
}()
pkt.Decode()
}()
*/
}
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,206 @@
package pcap
import (
"encoding/binary"
"fmt"
"io"
"time"
)
// FileHeader is the parsed header of a pcap file.
// http://wiki.wireshark.org/Development/LibpcapFileFormat
type FileHeader struct {
MagicNumber uint32
VersionMajor uint16
VersionMinor uint16
TimeZone int32
SigFigs uint32
SnapLen uint32
Network uint32
}
type PacketTime struct {
Sec int32
Usec int32
}
// Convert the PacketTime to a go Time struct.
func (p *PacketTime) Time() time.Time {
return time.Unix(int64(p.Sec), int64(p.Usec)*1000)
}
// Packet is a single packet parsed from a pcap file.
//
// Convenient access to IP, TCP, and UDP headers is provided after Decode()
// is called if the packet is of the appropriate type.
type Packet struct {
Time time.Time // packet send/receive time
Caplen uint32 // bytes stored in the file (caplen <= len)
Len uint32 // bytes sent/received
Data []byte // packet data
Type int // protocol type, see LINKTYPE_*
DestMac uint64
SrcMac uint64
Headers []interface{} // decoded headers, in order
Payload []byte // remaining non-header bytes
IP *Iphdr // IP header (for IP packets, after decoding)
TCP *Tcphdr // TCP header (for TCP packets, after decoding)
UDP *Udphdr // UDP header (for UDP packets after decoding)
}
// Reader parses pcap files.
type Reader struct {
flip bool
buf io.Reader
err error
fourBytes []byte
twoBytes []byte
sixteenBytes []byte
Header FileHeader
}
// NewReader reads pcap data from an io.Reader.
func NewReader(reader io.Reader) (*Reader, error) {
r := &Reader{
buf: reader,
fourBytes: make([]byte, 4),
twoBytes: make([]byte, 2),
sixteenBytes: make([]byte, 16),
}
switch magic := r.readUint32(); magic {
case 0xa1b2c3d4:
r.flip = false
case 0xd4c3b2a1:
r.flip = true
default:
return nil, fmt.Errorf("pcap: bad magic number: %0x", magic)
}
r.Header = FileHeader{
MagicNumber: 0xa1b2c3d4,
VersionMajor: r.readUint16(),
VersionMinor: r.readUint16(),
TimeZone: r.readInt32(),
SigFigs: r.readUint32(),
SnapLen: r.readUint32(),
Network: r.readUint32(),
}
return r, nil
}
// Next returns the next packet or nil if no more packets can be read.
func (r *Reader) Next() *Packet {
d := r.sixteenBytes
r.err = r.read(d)
if r.err != nil {
return nil
}
timeSec := asUint32(d[0:4], r.flip)
timeUsec := asUint32(d[4:8], r.flip)
capLen := asUint32(d[8:12], r.flip)
origLen := asUint32(d[12:16], r.flip)
data := make([]byte, capLen)
if r.err = r.read(data); r.err != nil {
return nil
}
return &Packet{
Time: time.Unix(int64(timeSec), int64(timeUsec)),
Caplen: capLen,
Len: origLen,
Data: data,
}
}
func (r *Reader) read(data []byte) error {
var err error
n, err := r.buf.Read(data)
for err == nil && n != len(data) {
var chunk int
chunk, err = r.buf.Read(data[n:])
n += chunk
}
if len(data) == n {
return nil
}
return err
}
func (r *Reader) readUint32() uint32 {
data := r.fourBytes
if r.err = r.read(data); r.err != nil {
return 0
}
return asUint32(data, r.flip)
}
func (r *Reader) readInt32() int32 {
data := r.fourBytes
if r.err = r.read(data); r.err != nil {
return 0
}
return int32(asUint32(data, r.flip))
}
func (r *Reader) readUint16() uint16 {
data := r.twoBytes
if r.err = r.read(data); r.err != nil {
return 0
}
return asUint16(data, r.flip)
}
// Writer writes a pcap file.
type Writer struct {
writer io.Writer
buf []byte
}
// NewWriter creates a Writer that stores output in an io.Writer.
// The FileHeader is written immediately.
func NewWriter(writer io.Writer, header *FileHeader) (*Writer, error) {
w := &Writer{
writer: writer,
buf: make([]byte, 24),
}
binary.LittleEndian.PutUint32(w.buf, header.MagicNumber)
binary.LittleEndian.PutUint16(w.buf[4:], header.VersionMajor)
binary.LittleEndian.PutUint16(w.buf[6:], header.VersionMinor)
binary.LittleEndian.PutUint32(w.buf[8:], uint32(header.TimeZone))
binary.LittleEndian.PutUint32(w.buf[12:], header.SigFigs)
binary.LittleEndian.PutUint32(w.buf[16:], header.SnapLen)
binary.LittleEndian.PutUint32(w.buf[20:], header.Network)
if _, err := writer.Write(w.buf); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return w, nil
}
// Writer writes a packet to the underlying writer.
func (w *Writer) Write(pkt *Packet) error {
binary.LittleEndian.PutUint32(w.buf, uint32(pkt.Time.Unix()))
binary.LittleEndian.PutUint32(w.buf[4:], uint32(pkt.Time.Nanosecond()))
binary.LittleEndian.PutUint32(w.buf[8:], uint32(pkt.Time.Unix()))
binary.LittleEndian.PutUint32(w.buf[12:], pkt.Len)
if _, err := w.writer.Write(w.buf[:16]); err != nil {
return err
}
_, err := w.writer.Write(pkt.Data)
return err
}
func asUint32(data []byte, flip bool) uint32 {
if flip {
return binary.BigEndian.Uint32(data)
}
return binary.LittleEndian.Uint32(data)
}
func asUint16(data []byte, flip bool) uint16 {
if flip {
return binary.BigEndian.Uint16(data)
}
return binary.LittleEndian.Uint16(data)
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,266 @@
// Interface to both live and offline pcap parsing.
package pcap
/*
#cgo linux LDFLAGS: -lpcap
#cgo freebsd LDFLAGS: -lpcap
#cgo darwin LDFLAGS: -lpcap
#cgo windows CFLAGS: -I C:/WpdPack/Include
#cgo windows,386 LDFLAGS: -L C:/WpdPack/Lib -lwpcap
#cgo windows,amd64 LDFLAGS: -L C:/WpdPack/Lib/x64 -lwpcap
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <pcap.h>
// Workaround for not knowing how to cast to const u_char**
int hack_pcap_next_ex(pcap_t *p, struct pcap_pkthdr **pkt_header,
u_char **pkt_data) {
return pcap_next_ex(p, pkt_header, (const u_char **)pkt_data);
}
*/
import "C"
import (
"errors"
"net"
"syscall"
"time"
"unsafe"
)
type Pcap struct {
cptr *C.pcap_t
}
type Stat struct {
PacketsReceived uint32
PacketsDropped uint32
PacketsIfDropped uint32
}
type Interface struct {
Name string
Description string
Addresses []IFAddress
// TODO: add more elements
}
type IFAddress struct {
IP net.IP
Netmask net.IPMask
// TODO: add broadcast + PtP dst ?
}
func (p *Pcap) Next() (pkt *Packet) {
rv, _ := p.NextEx()
return rv
}
// Openlive opens a device and returns a *Pcap handler
func Openlive(device string, snaplen int32, promisc bool, timeout_ms int32) (handle *Pcap, err error) {
var buf *C.char
buf = (*C.char)(C.calloc(ERRBUF_SIZE, 1))
h := new(Pcap)
var pro int32
if promisc {
pro = 1
}
dev := C.CString(device)
defer C.free(unsafe.Pointer(dev))
h.cptr = C.pcap_open_live(dev, C.int(snaplen), C.int(pro), C.int(timeout_ms), buf)
if nil == h.cptr {
handle = nil
err = errors.New(C.GoString(buf))
} else {
handle = h
}
C.free(unsafe.Pointer(buf))
return
}
func Openoffline(file string) (handle *Pcap, err error) {
var buf *C.char
buf = (*C.char)(C.calloc(ERRBUF_SIZE, 1))
h := new(Pcap)
cf := C.CString(file)
defer C.free(unsafe.Pointer(cf))
h.cptr = C.pcap_open_offline(cf, buf)
if nil == h.cptr {
handle = nil
err = errors.New(C.GoString(buf))
} else {
handle = h
}
C.free(unsafe.Pointer(buf))
return
}
func (p *Pcap) NextEx() (pkt *Packet, result int32) {
var pkthdr *C.struct_pcap_pkthdr
var buf_ptr *C.u_char
var buf unsafe.Pointer
result = int32(C.hack_pcap_next_ex(p.cptr, &pkthdr, &buf_ptr))
buf = unsafe.Pointer(buf_ptr)
if nil == buf {
return
}
pkt = new(Packet)
pkt.Time = time.Unix(int64(pkthdr.ts.tv_sec), int64(pkthdr.ts.tv_usec)*1000)
pkt.Caplen = uint32(pkthdr.caplen)
pkt.Len = uint32(pkthdr.len)
pkt.Data = C.GoBytes(buf, C.int(pkthdr.caplen))
return
}
func (p *Pcap) Close() {
C.pcap_close(p.cptr)
}
func (p *Pcap) Geterror() error {
return errors.New(C.GoString(C.pcap_geterr(p.cptr)))
}
func (p *Pcap) Getstats() (stat *Stat, err error) {
var cstats _Ctype_struct_pcap_stat
if -1 == C.pcap_stats(p.cptr, &cstats) {
return nil, p.Geterror()
}
stats := new(Stat)
stats.PacketsReceived = uint32(cstats.ps_recv)
stats.PacketsDropped = uint32(cstats.ps_drop)
stats.PacketsIfDropped = uint32(cstats.ps_ifdrop)
return stats, nil
}
func (p *Pcap) Setfilter(expr string) (err error) {
var bpf _Ctype_struct_bpf_program
cexpr := C.CString(expr)
defer C.free(unsafe.Pointer(cexpr))
if -1 == C.pcap_compile(p.cptr, &bpf, cexpr, 1, 0) {
return p.Geterror()
}
if -1 == C.pcap_setfilter(p.cptr, &bpf) {
C.pcap_freecode(&bpf)
return p.Geterror()
}
C.pcap_freecode(&bpf)
return nil
}
func Version() string {
return C.GoString(C.pcap_lib_version())
}
func (p *Pcap) Datalink() int {
return int(C.pcap_datalink(p.cptr))
}
func (p *Pcap) Setdatalink(dlt int) error {
if -1 == C.pcap_set_datalink(p.cptr, C.int(dlt)) {
return p.Geterror()
}
return nil
}
func DatalinkValueToName(dlt int) string {
if name := C.pcap_datalink_val_to_name(C.int(dlt)); name != nil {
return C.GoString(name)
}
return ""
}
func DatalinkValueToDescription(dlt int) string {
if desc := C.pcap_datalink_val_to_description(C.int(dlt)); desc != nil {
return C.GoString(desc)
}
return ""
}
func Findalldevs() (ifs []Interface, err error) {
var buf *C.char
buf = (*C.char)(C.calloc(ERRBUF_SIZE, 1))
defer C.free(unsafe.Pointer(buf))
var alldevsp *C.pcap_if_t
if -1 == C.pcap_findalldevs((**C.pcap_if_t)(&alldevsp), buf) {
return nil, errors.New(C.GoString(buf))
}
defer C.pcap_freealldevs((*C.pcap_if_t)(alldevsp))
dev := alldevsp
var i uint32
for i = 0; dev != nil; dev = (*C.pcap_if_t)(dev.next) {
i++
}
ifs = make([]Interface, i)
dev = alldevsp
for j := uint32(0); dev != nil; dev = (*C.pcap_if_t)(dev.next) {
var iface Interface
iface.Name = C.GoString(dev.name)
iface.Description = C.GoString(dev.description)
iface.Addresses = findalladdresses(dev.addresses)
// TODO: add more elements
ifs[j] = iface
j++
}
return
}
func findalladdresses(addresses *_Ctype_struct_pcap_addr) (retval []IFAddress) {
// TODO - make it support more than IPv4 and IPv6?
retval = make([]IFAddress, 0, 1)
for curaddr := addresses; curaddr != nil; curaddr = (*_Ctype_struct_pcap_addr)(curaddr.next) {
var a IFAddress
var err error
if a.IP, err = sockaddr_to_IP((*syscall.RawSockaddr)(unsafe.Pointer(curaddr.addr))); err != nil {
continue
}
if a.Netmask, err = sockaddr_to_IP((*syscall.RawSockaddr)(unsafe.Pointer(curaddr.addr))); err != nil {
continue
}
retval = append(retval, a)
}
return
}
func sockaddr_to_IP(rsa *syscall.RawSockaddr) (IP []byte, err error) {
switch rsa.Family {
case syscall.AF_INET:
pp := (*syscall.RawSockaddrInet4)(unsafe.Pointer(rsa))
IP = make([]byte, 4)
for i := 0; i < len(IP); i++ {
IP[i] = pp.Addr[i]
}
return
case syscall.AF_INET6:
pp := (*syscall.RawSockaddrInet6)(unsafe.Pointer(rsa))
IP = make([]byte, 16)
for i := 0; i < len(IP); i++ {
IP[i] = pp.Addr[i]
}
return
}
err = errors.New("Unsupported address type")
return
}
func (p *Pcap) Inject(data []byte) (err error) {
buf := (*C.char)(C.malloc((C.size_t)(len(data))))
for i := 0; i < len(data); i++ {
*(*byte)(unsafe.Pointer(uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(buf)) + uintptr(i))) = data[i]
}
if -1 == C.pcap_sendpacket(p.cptr, (*C.u_char)(unsafe.Pointer(buf)), (C.int)(len(data))) {
err = p.Geterror()
}
C.free(unsafe.Pointer(buf))
return
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,49 @@
package main
import (
"flag"
"fmt"
"os"
"runtime/pprof"
"time"
"github.com/coreos/etcd/Godeps/_workspace/src/github.com/akrennmair/gopcap"
)
func main() {
var filename *string = flag.String("file", "", "filename")
var decode *bool = flag.Bool("d", false, "If true, decode each packet")
var cpuprofile *string = flag.String("cpuprofile", "", "filename")
flag.Parse()
h, err := pcap.Openoffline(*filename)
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("Couldn't create pcap reader: %v", err)
}
if *cpuprofile != "" {
if out, err := os.Create(*cpuprofile); err == nil {
pprof.StartCPUProfile(out)
defer func() {
pprof.StopCPUProfile()
out.Close()
}()
} else {
panic(err)
}
}
i, nilPackets := 0, 0
start := time.Now()
for pkt, code := h.NextEx(); code != -2; pkt, code = h.NextEx() {
if pkt == nil {
nilPackets++
} else if *decode {
pkt.Decode()
}
i++
}
duration := time.Since(start)
fmt.Printf("Took %v to process %v packets, %v per packet, %d nil packets\n", duration, i, duration/time.Duration(i), nilPackets)
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,96 @@
package main
// Parses a pcap file, writes it back to disk, then verifies the files
// are the same.
import (
"bufio"
"flag"
"fmt"
"io"
"os"
"github.com/coreos/etcd/Godeps/_workspace/src/github.com/akrennmair/gopcap"
)
var input *string = flag.String("input", "", "input file")
var output *string = flag.String("output", "", "output file")
var decode *bool = flag.Bool("decode", false, "print decoded packets")
func copyPcap(dest, src string) {
f, err := os.Open(src)
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("couldn't open %q: %v\n", src, err)
return
}
defer f.Close()
reader, err := pcap.NewReader(bufio.NewReader(f))
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("couldn't create reader: %v\n", err)
return
}
w, err := os.Create(dest)
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("couldn't open %q: %v\n", dest, err)
return
}
defer w.Close()
buf := bufio.NewWriter(w)
writer, err := pcap.NewWriter(buf, &reader.Header)
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("couldn't create writer: %v\n", err)
return
}
for {
pkt := reader.Next()
if pkt == nil {
break
}
if *decode {
pkt.Decode()
fmt.Println(pkt.String())
}
writer.Write(pkt)
}
buf.Flush()
}
func check(dest, src string) {
f, err := os.Open(src)
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("couldn't open %q: %v\n", src, err)
return
}
defer f.Close()
freader := bufio.NewReader(f)
g, err := os.Open(dest)
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("couldn't open %q: %v\n", src, err)
return
}
defer g.Close()
greader := bufio.NewReader(g)
for {
fb, ferr := freader.ReadByte()
gb, gerr := greader.ReadByte()
if ferr == io.EOF && gerr == io.EOF {
break
}
if fb == gb {
continue
}
fmt.Println("FAIL")
return
}
fmt.Println("PASS")
}
func main() {
flag.Parse()
copyPcap(*output, *input)
check(*output, *input)
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,82 @@
package main
import (
"flag"
"fmt"
"time"
"github.com/coreos/etcd/Godeps/_workspace/src/github.com/akrennmair/gopcap"
)
func min(x uint32, y uint32) uint32 {
if x < y {
return x
}
return y
}
func main() {
var device *string = flag.String("d", "", "device")
var file *string = flag.String("r", "", "file")
var expr *string = flag.String("e", "", "filter expression")
flag.Parse()
var h *pcap.Pcap
var err error
ifs, err := pcap.Findalldevs()
if len(ifs) == 0 {
fmt.Printf("Warning: no devices found : %s\n", err)
} else {
for i := 0; i < len(ifs); i++ {
fmt.Printf("dev %d: %s (%s)\n", i+1, ifs[i].Name, ifs[i].Description)
}
}
if *device != "" {
h, err = pcap.Openlive(*device, 65535, true, 0)
if h == nil {
fmt.Printf("Openlive(%s) failed: %s\n", *device, err)
return
}
} else if *file != "" {
h, err = pcap.Openoffline(*file)
if h == nil {
fmt.Printf("Openoffline(%s) failed: %s\n", *file, err)
return
}
} else {
fmt.Printf("usage: pcaptest [-d <device> | -r <file>]\n")
return
}
defer h.Close()
fmt.Printf("pcap version: %s\n", pcap.Version())
if *expr != "" {
fmt.Printf("Setting filter: %s\n", *expr)
err := h.Setfilter(*expr)
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("Warning: setting filter failed: %s\n", err)
}
}
for pkt := h.Next(); pkt != nil; pkt = h.Next() {
fmt.Printf("time: %d.%06d (%s) caplen: %d len: %d\nData:",
int64(pkt.Time.Second()), int64(pkt.Time.Nanosecond()),
time.Unix(int64(pkt.Time.Second()), 0).String(), int64(pkt.Caplen), int64(pkt.Len))
for i := uint32(0); i < pkt.Caplen; i++ {
if i%32 == 0 {
fmt.Printf("\n")
}
if 32 <= pkt.Data[i] && pkt.Data[i] <= 126 {
fmt.Printf("%c", pkt.Data[i])
} else {
fmt.Printf(".")
}
}
fmt.Printf("\n\n")
}
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,121 @@
package main
import (
"bufio"
"flag"
"fmt"
"os"
"github.com/coreos/etcd/Godeps/_workspace/src/github.com/akrennmair/gopcap"
)
const (
TYPE_IP = 0x0800
TYPE_ARP = 0x0806
TYPE_IP6 = 0x86DD
IP_ICMP = 1
IP_INIP = 4
IP_TCP = 6
IP_UDP = 17
)
var out *bufio.Writer
var errout *bufio.Writer
func main() {
var device *string = flag.String("i", "", "interface")
var snaplen *int = flag.Int("s", 65535, "snaplen")
var hexdump *bool = flag.Bool("X", false, "hexdump")
expr := ""
out = bufio.NewWriter(os.Stdout)
errout = bufio.NewWriter(os.Stderr)
flag.Usage = func() {
fmt.Fprintf(errout, "usage: %s [ -i interface ] [ -s snaplen ] [ -X ] [ expression ]\n", os.Args[0])
errout.Flush()
os.Exit(1)
}
flag.Parse()
if len(flag.Args()) > 0 {
expr = flag.Arg(0)
}
if *device == "" {
devs, err := pcap.Findalldevs()
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintf(errout, "tcpdump: couldn't find any devices: %s\n", err)
}
if 0 == len(devs) {
flag.Usage()
}
*device = devs[0].Name
}
h, err := pcap.Openlive(*device, int32(*snaplen), true, 0)
if h == nil {
fmt.Fprintf(errout, "tcpdump: %s\n", err)
errout.Flush()
return
}
defer h.Close()
if expr != "" {
ferr := h.Setfilter(expr)
if ferr != nil {
fmt.Fprintf(out, "tcpdump: %s\n", ferr)
out.Flush()
}
}
for pkt := h.Next(); pkt != nil; pkt = h.Next() {
pkt.Decode()
fmt.Fprintf(out, "%s\n", pkt.String())
if *hexdump {
Hexdump(pkt)
}
out.Flush()
}
}
func min(a, b int) int {
if a < b {
return a
}
return b
}
func Hexdump(pkt *pcap.Packet) {
for i := 0; i < len(pkt.Data); i += 16 {
Dumpline(uint32(i), pkt.Data[i:min(i+16, len(pkt.Data))])
}
}
func Dumpline(addr uint32, line []byte) {
fmt.Fprintf(out, "\t0x%04x: ", int32(addr))
var i uint16
for i = 0; i < 16 && i < uint16(len(line)); i++ {
if i%2 == 0 {
out.WriteString(" ")
}
fmt.Fprintf(out, "%02x", line[i])
}
for j := i; j <= 16; j++ {
if j%2 == 0 {
out.WriteString(" ")
}
out.WriteString(" ")
}
out.WriteString(" ")
for i = 0; i < 16 && i < uint16(len(line)); i++ {
if line[i] >= 32 && line[i] <= 126 {
fmt.Fprintf(out, "%c", line[i])
} else {
out.WriteString(".")
}
}
out.WriteString("\n")
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,63 @@
package quantile
import (
"testing"
)
func BenchmarkInsertTargeted(b *testing.B) {
b.ReportAllocs()
s := NewTargeted(Targets)
b.ResetTimer()
for i := float64(0); i < float64(b.N); i++ {
s.Insert(i)
}
}
func BenchmarkInsertTargetedSmallEpsilon(b *testing.B) {
s := NewTargeted(TargetsSmallEpsilon)
b.ResetTimer()
for i := float64(0); i < float64(b.N); i++ {
s.Insert(i)
}
}
func BenchmarkInsertBiased(b *testing.B) {
s := NewLowBiased(0.01)
b.ResetTimer()
for i := float64(0); i < float64(b.N); i++ {
s.Insert(i)
}
}
func BenchmarkInsertBiasedSmallEpsilon(b *testing.B) {
s := NewLowBiased(0.0001)
b.ResetTimer()
for i := float64(0); i < float64(b.N); i++ {
s.Insert(i)
}
}
func BenchmarkQuery(b *testing.B) {
s := NewTargeted(Targets)
for i := float64(0); i < 1e6; i++ {
s.Insert(i)
}
b.ResetTimer()
n := float64(b.N)
for i := float64(0); i < n; i++ {
s.Query(i / n)
}
}
func BenchmarkQuerySmallEpsilon(b *testing.B) {
s := NewTargeted(TargetsSmallEpsilon)
for i := float64(0); i < 1e6; i++ {
s.Insert(i)
}
b.ResetTimer()
n := float64(b.N)
for i := float64(0); i < n; i++ {
s.Query(i / n)
}
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,121 @@
// +build go1.1
package quantile_test
import (
"bufio"
"fmt"
"log"
"os"
"strconv"
"time"
"github.com/coreos/etcd/Godeps/_workspace/src/github.com/beorn7/perks/quantile"
)
func Example_simple() {
ch := make(chan float64)
go sendFloats(ch)
// Compute the 50th, 90th, and 99th percentile.
q := quantile.NewTargeted(map[float64]float64{
0.50: 0.005,
0.90: 0.001,
0.99: 0.0001,
})
for v := range ch {
q.Insert(v)
}
fmt.Println("perc50:", q.Query(0.50))
fmt.Println("perc90:", q.Query(0.90))
fmt.Println("perc99:", q.Query(0.99))
fmt.Println("count:", q.Count())
// Output:
// perc50: 5
// perc90: 16
// perc99: 223
// count: 2388
}
func Example_mergeMultipleStreams() {
// Scenario:
// We have multiple database shards. On each shard, there is a process
// collecting query response times from the database logs and inserting
// them into a Stream (created via NewTargeted(0.90)), much like the
// Simple example. These processes expose a network interface for us to
// ask them to serialize and send us the results of their
// Stream.Samples so we may Merge and Query them.
//
// NOTES:
// * These sample sets are small, allowing us to get them
// across the network much faster than sending the entire list of data
// points.
//
// * For this to work correctly, we must supply the same quantiles
// a priori the process collecting the samples supplied to NewTargeted,
// even if we do not plan to query them all here.
ch := make(chan quantile.Samples)
getDBQuerySamples(ch)
q := quantile.NewTargeted(map[float64]float64{0.90: 0.001})
for samples := range ch {
q.Merge(samples)
}
fmt.Println("perc90:", q.Query(0.90))
}
func Example_window() {
// Scenario: We want the 90th, 95th, and 99th percentiles for each
// minute.
ch := make(chan float64)
go sendStreamValues(ch)
tick := time.NewTicker(1 * time.Minute)
q := quantile.NewTargeted(map[float64]float64{
0.90: 0.001,
0.95: 0.0005,
0.99: 0.0001,
})
for {
select {
case t := <-tick.C:
flushToDB(t, q.Samples())
q.Reset()
case v := <-ch:
q.Insert(v)
}
}
}
func sendStreamValues(ch chan float64) {
// Use your imagination
}
func flushToDB(t time.Time, samples quantile.Samples) {
// Use your imagination
}
// This is a stub for the above example. In reality this would hit the remote
// servers via http or something like it.
func getDBQuerySamples(ch chan quantile.Samples) {}
func sendFloats(ch chan<- float64) {
f, err := os.Open("exampledata.txt")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
sc := bufio.NewScanner(f)
for sc.Scan() {
b := sc.Bytes()
v, err := strconv.ParseFloat(string(b), 64)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
ch <- v
}
if sc.Err() != nil {
log.Fatal(sc.Err())
}
close(ch)
}

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@ -0,0 +1,292 @@
// Package quantile computes approximate quantiles over an unbounded data
// stream within low memory and CPU bounds.
//
// A small amount of accuracy is traded to achieve the above properties.
//
// Multiple streams can be merged before calling Query to generate a single set
// of results. This is meaningful when the streams represent the same type of
// data. See Merge and Samples.
//
// For more detailed information about the algorithm used, see:
//
// Effective Computation of Biased Quantiles over Data Streams
//
// http://www.cs.rutgers.edu/~muthu/bquant.pdf
package quantile
import (
"math"
"sort"
)
// Sample holds an observed value and meta information for compression. JSON
// tags have been added for convenience.
type Sample struct {
Value float64 `json:",string"`
Width float64 `json:",string"`
Delta float64 `json:",string"`
}
// Samples represents a slice of samples. It implements sort.Interface.
type Samples []Sample
func (a Samples) Len() int { return len(a) }
func (a Samples) Less(i, j int) bool { return a[i].Value < a[j].Value }
func (a Samples) Swap(i, j int) { a[i], a[j] = a[j], a[i] }
type invariant func(s *stream, r float64) float64
// NewLowBiased returns an initialized Stream for low-biased quantiles
// (e.g. 0.01, 0.1, 0.5) where the needed quantiles are not known a priori, but
// error guarantees can still be given even for the lower ranks of the data
// distribution.
//
// The provided epsilon is a relative error, i.e. the true quantile of a value
// returned by a query is guaranteed to be within (1±Epsilon)*Quantile.
//
// See http://www.cs.rutgers.edu/~muthu/bquant.pdf for time, space, and error
// properties.
func NewLowBiased(epsilon float64) *Stream {
ƒ := func(s *stream, r float64) float64 {
return 2 * epsilon * r
}
return newStream(ƒ)
}
// NewHighBiased returns an initialized Stream for high-biased quantiles
// (e.g. 0.01, 0.1, 0.5) where the needed quantiles are not known a priori, but
// error guarantees can still be given even for the higher ranks of the data
// distribution.
//
// The provided epsilon is a relative error, i.e. the true quantile of a value
// returned by a query is guaranteed to be within 1-(1±Epsilon)*(1-Quantile).
//
// See http://www.cs.rutgers.edu/~muthu/bquant.pdf for time, space, and error
// properties.
func NewHighBiased(epsilon float64) *Stream {
ƒ := func(s *stream, r float64) float64 {
return 2 * epsilon * (s.n - r)
}
return newStream(ƒ)
}
// NewTargeted returns an initialized Stream concerned with a particular set of
// quantile values that are supplied a priori. Knowing these a priori reduces
// space and computation time. The targets map maps the desired quantiles to
// their absolute errors, i.e. the true quantile of a value returned by a query
// is guaranteed to be within (Quantile±Epsilon).
//
// See http://www.cs.rutgers.edu/~muthu/bquant.pdf for time, space, and error properties.
func NewTargeted(targets map[float64]float64) *Stream {
ƒ := func(s *stream, r float64) float64 {
var m = math.MaxFloat64
var f float64
for quantile, epsilon := range targets {
if quantile*s.n <= r {
f = (2 * epsilon * r) / quantile
} else {
f = (2 * epsilon * (s.n - r)) / (1 - quantile)
}
if f < m {
m = f
}
}
return m
}
return newStream(ƒ)
}
// Stream computes quantiles for a stream of float64s. It is not thread-safe by
// design. Take care when using across multiple goroutines.
type Stream struct {
*stream
b Samples
sorted bool
}
func newStream(ƒ invariant) *Stream {
x := &stream{ƒ: ƒ}
return &Stream{x, make(Samples, 0, 500), true}
}
// Insert inserts v into the stream.
func (s *Stream) Insert(v float64) {
s.insert(Sample{Value: v, Width: 1})
}
func (s *Stream) insert(sample Sample) {
s.b = append(s.b, sample)
s.sorted = false
if len(s.b) == cap(s.b) {
s.flush()
}
}
// Query returns the computed qth percentiles value. If s was created with
// NewTargeted, and q is not in the set of quantiles provided a priori, Query
// will return an unspecified result.
func (s *Stream) Query(q float64) float64 {
if !s.flushed() {
// Fast path when there hasn't been enough data for a flush;
// this also yields better accuracy for small sets of data.
l := len(s.b)
if l == 0 {
return 0
}
i := int(float64(l) * q)
if i > 0 {
i -= 1
}
s.maybeSort()
return s.b[i].Value
}
s.flush()
return s.stream.query(q)
}
// Merge merges samples into the underlying streams samples. This is handy when
// merging multiple streams from separate threads, database shards, etc.
//
// ATTENTION: This method is broken and does not yield correct results. The
// underlying algorithm is not capable of merging streams correctly.
func (s *Stream) Merge(samples Samples) {
sort.Sort(samples)
s.stream.merge(samples)
}
// Reset reinitializes and clears the list reusing the samples buffer memory.
func (s *Stream) Reset() {
s.stream.reset()
s.b = s.b[:0]
}
// Samples returns stream samples held by s.
func (s *Stream) Samples() Samples {
if !s.flushed() {
return s.b
}
s.flush()
return s.stream.samples()
}
// Count returns the total number of samples observed in the stream
// since initialization.
func (s *Stream) Count() int {
return len(s.b) + s.stream.count()
}
func (s *Stream) flush() {
s.maybeSort()
s.stream.merge(s.b)
s.b = s.b[:0]
}
func (s *Stream) maybeSort() {
if !s.sorted {
s.sorted = true
sort.Sort(s.b)
}
}
func (s *Stream) flushed() bool {
return len(s.stream.l) > 0
}
type stream struct {
n float64
l []Sample
ƒ invariant
}
func (s *stream) reset() {
s.l = s.l[:0]
s.n = 0
}
func (s *stream) insert(v float64) {
s.merge(Samples{{v, 1, 0}})
}
func (s *stream) merge(samples Samples) {
// TODO(beorn7): This tries to merge not only individual samples, but
// whole summaries. The paper doesn't mention merging summaries at
// all. Unittests show that the merging is inaccurate. Find out how to
// do merges properly.
var r float64
i := 0
for _, sample := range samples {
for ; i < len(s.l); i++ {
c := s.l[i]
if c.Value > sample.Value {
// Insert at position i.
s.l = append(s.l, Sample{})
copy(s.l[i+1:], s.l[i:])
s.l[i] = Sample{
sample.Value,
sample.Width,
math.Max(sample.Delta, math.Floor(s.ƒ(s, r))-1),
// TODO(beorn7): How to calculate delta correctly?
}
i++
goto inserted
}
r += c.Width
}
s.l = append(s.l, Sample{sample.Value, sample.Width, 0})
i++
inserted:
s.n += sample.Width
r += sample.Width
}
s.compress()
}
func (s *stream) count() int {
return int(s.n)
}
func (s *stream) query(q float64) float64 {
t := math.Ceil(q * s.n)
t += math.Ceil(s.ƒ(s, t) / 2)
p := s.l[0]
var r float64
for _, c := range s.l[1:] {
r += p.Width
if r+c.Width+c.Delta > t {
return p.Value
}
p = c
}
return p.Value
}
func (s *stream) compress() {
if len(s.l) < 2 {
return
}
x := s.l[len(s.l)-1]
xi := len(s.l) - 1
r := s.n - 1 - x.Width
for i := len(s.l) - 2; i >= 0; i-- {
c := s.l[i]
if c.Width+x.Width+x.Delta <= s.ƒ(s, r) {
x.Width += c.Width
s.l[xi] = x
// Remove element at i.
copy(s.l[i:], s.l[i+1:])
s.l = s.l[:len(s.l)-1]
xi -= 1
} else {
x = c
xi = i
}
r -= c.Width
}
}
func (s *stream) samples() Samples {
samples := make(Samples, len(s.l))
copy(samples, s.l)
return samples
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,188 @@
package quantile
import (
"math"
"math/rand"
"sort"
"testing"
)
var (
Targets = map[float64]float64{
0.01: 0.001,
0.10: 0.01,
0.50: 0.05,
0.90: 0.01,
0.99: 0.001,
}
TargetsSmallEpsilon = map[float64]float64{
0.01: 0.0001,
0.10: 0.001,
0.50: 0.005,
0.90: 0.001,
0.99: 0.0001,
}
LowQuantiles = []float64{0.01, 0.1, 0.5}
HighQuantiles = []float64{0.99, 0.9, 0.5}
)
const RelativeEpsilon = 0.01
func verifyPercsWithAbsoluteEpsilon(t *testing.T, a []float64, s *Stream) {
sort.Float64s(a)
for quantile, epsilon := range Targets {
n := float64(len(a))
k := int(quantile * n)
lower := int((quantile - epsilon) * n)
if lower < 1 {
lower = 1
}
upper := int(math.Ceil((quantile + epsilon) * n))
if upper > len(a) {
upper = len(a)
}
w, min, max := a[k-1], a[lower-1], a[upper-1]
if g := s.Query(quantile); g < min || g > max {
t.Errorf("q=%f: want %v [%f,%f], got %v", quantile, w, min, max, g)
}
}
}
func verifyLowPercsWithRelativeEpsilon(t *testing.T, a []float64, s *Stream) {
sort.Float64s(a)
for _, qu := range LowQuantiles {
n := float64(len(a))
k := int(qu * n)
lowerRank := int((1 - RelativeEpsilon) * qu * n)
upperRank := int(math.Ceil((1 + RelativeEpsilon) * qu * n))
w, min, max := a[k-1], a[lowerRank-1], a[upperRank-1]
if g := s.Query(qu); g < min || g > max {
t.Errorf("q=%f: want %v [%f,%f], got %v", qu, w, min, max, g)
}
}
}
func verifyHighPercsWithRelativeEpsilon(t *testing.T, a []float64, s *Stream) {
sort.Float64s(a)
for _, qu := range HighQuantiles {
n := float64(len(a))
k := int(qu * n)
lowerRank := int((1 - (1+RelativeEpsilon)*(1-qu)) * n)
upperRank := int(math.Ceil((1 - (1-RelativeEpsilon)*(1-qu)) * n))
w, min, max := a[k-1], a[lowerRank-1], a[upperRank-1]
if g := s.Query(qu); g < min || g > max {
t.Errorf("q=%f: want %v [%f,%f], got %v", qu, w, min, max, g)
}
}
}
func populateStream(s *Stream) []float64 {
a := make([]float64, 0, 1e5+100)
for i := 0; i < cap(a); i++ {
v := rand.NormFloat64()
// Add 5% asymmetric outliers.
if i%20 == 0 {
v = v*v + 1
}
s.Insert(v)
a = append(a, v)
}
return a
}
func TestTargetedQuery(t *testing.T) {
rand.Seed(42)
s := NewTargeted(Targets)
a := populateStream(s)
verifyPercsWithAbsoluteEpsilon(t, a, s)
}
func TestLowBiasedQuery(t *testing.T) {
rand.Seed(42)
s := NewLowBiased(RelativeEpsilon)
a := populateStream(s)
verifyLowPercsWithRelativeEpsilon(t, a, s)
}
func TestHighBiasedQuery(t *testing.T) {
rand.Seed(42)
s := NewHighBiased(RelativeEpsilon)
a := populateStream(s)
verifyHighPercsWithRelativeEpsilon(t, a, s)
}
// BrokenTestTargetedMerge is broken, see Merge doc comment.
func BrokenTestTargetedMerge(t *testing.T) {
rand.Seed(42)
s1 := NewTargeted(Targets)
s2 := NewTargeted(Targets)
a := populateStream(s1)
a = append(a, populateStream(s2)...)
s1.Merge(s2.Samples())
verifyPercsWithAbsoluteEpsilon(t, a, s1)
}
// BrokenTestLowBiasedMerge is broken, see Merge doc comment.
func BrokenTestLowBiasedMerge(t *testing.T) {
rand.Seed(42)
s1 := NewLowBiased(RelativeEpsilon)
s2 := NewLowBiased(RelativeEpsilon)
a := populateStream(s1)
a = append(a, populateStream(s2)...)
s1.Merge(s2.Samples())
verifyLowPercsWithRelativeEpsilon(t, a, s2)
}
// BrokenTestHighBiasedMerge is broken, see Merge doc comment.
func BrokenTestHighBiasedMerge(t *testing.T) {
rand.Seed(42)
s1 := NewHighBiased(RelativeEpsilon)
s2 := NewHighBiased(RelativeEpsilon)
a := populateStream(s1)
a = append(a, populateStream(s2)...)
s1.Merge(s2.Samples())
verifyHighPercsWithRelativeEpsilon(t, a, s2)
}
func TestUncompressed(t *testing.T) {
q := NewTargeted(Targets)
for i := 100; i > 0; i-- {
q.Insert(float64(i))
}
if g := q.Count(); g != 100 {
t.Errorf("want count 100, got %d", g)
}
// Before compression, Query should have 100% accuracy.
for quantile := range Targets {
w := quantile * 100
if g := q.Query(quantile); g != w {
t.Errorf("want %f, got %f", w, g)
}
}
}
func TestUncompressedSamples(t *testing.T) {
q := NewTargeted(map[float64]float64{0.99: 0.001})
for i := 1; i <= 100; i++ {
q.Insert(float64(i))
}
if g := q.Samples().Len(); g != 100 {
t.Errorf("want count 100, got %d", g)
}
}
func TestUncompressedOne(t *testing.T) {
q := NewTargeted(map[float64]float64{0.99: 0.01})
q.Insert(3.14)
if g := q.Query(0.90); g != 3.14 {
t.Error("want PI, got", g)
}
}
func TestDefaults(t *testing.T) {
if g := NewTargeted(map[float64]float64{0.99: 0.001}).Query(0.99); g != 0 {
t.Errorf("want 0, got %f", g)
}
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
example/example
example/example.exe

View File

@ -0,0 +1,201 @@
Apache License
Version 2.0, January 2004
http://www.apache.org/licenses/
TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR USE, REPRODUCTION, AND DISTRIBUTION
1. Definitions.
"License" shall mean the terms and conditions for use, reproduction,
and distribution as defined by Sections 1 through 9 of this document.
"Licensor" shall mean the copyright owner or entity authorized by
the copyright owner that is granting the License.
"Legal Entity" shall mean the union of the acting entity and all
other entities that control, are controlled by, or are under common
control with that entity. For the purposes of this definition,
"control" means (i) the power, direct or indirect, to cause the
direction or management of such entity, whether by contract or
otherwise, or (ii) ownership of fifty percent (50%) or more of the
outstanding shares, or (iii) beneficial ownership of such entity.
"You" (or "Your") shall mean an individual or Legal Entity
exercising permissions granted by this License.
"Source" form shall mean the preferred form for making modifications,
including but not limited to software source code, documentation
source, and configuration files.
"Object" form shall mean any form resulting from mechanical
transformation or translation of a Source form, including but
not limited to compiled object code, generated documentation,
and conversions to other media types.
"Work" shall mean the work of authorship, whether in Source or
Object form, made available under the License, as indicated by a
copyright notice that is included in or attached to the work
(an example is provided in the Appendix below).
"Derivative Works" shall mean any work, whether in Source or Object
form, that is based on (or derived from) the Work and for which the
editorial revisions, annotations, elaborations, or other modifications
represent, as a whole, an original work of authorship. For the purposes
of this License, Derivative Works shall not include works that remain
separable from, or merely link (or bind by name) to the interfaces of,
the Work and Derivative Works thereof.
"Contribution" shall mean any work of authorship, including
the original version of the Work and any modifications or additions
to that Work or Derivative Works thereof, that is intentionally
submitted to Licensor for inclusion in the Work by the copyright owner
or by an individual or Legal Entity authorized to submit on behalf of
the copyright owner. For the purposes of this definition, "submitted"
means any form of electronic, verbal, or written communication sent
to the Licensor or its representatives, including but not limited to
communication on electronic mailing lists, source code control systems,
and issue tracking systems that are managed by, or on behalf of, the
Licensor for the purpose of discussing and improving the Work, but
excluding communication that is conspicuously marked or otherwise
designated in writing by the copyright owner as "Not a Contribution."
"Contributor" shall mean Licensor and any individual or Legal Entity
on behalf of whom a Contribution has been received by Licensor and
subsequently incorporated within the Work.
2. Grant of Copyright License. Subject to the terms and conditions of
this License, each Contributor hereby grants to You a perpetual,
worldwide, non-exclusive, no-charge, royalty-free, irrevocable
copyright license to reproduce, prepare Derivative Works of,
publicly display, publicly perform, sublicense, and distribute the
Work and such Derivative Works in Source or Object form.
3. Grant of Patent License. Subject to the terms and conditions of
this License, each Contributor hereby grants to You a perpetual,
worldwide, non-exclusive, no-charge, royalty-free, irrevocable
(except as stated in this section) patent license to make, have made,
use, offer to sell, sell, import, and otherwise transfer the Work,
where such license applies only to those patent claims licensable
by such Contributor that are necessarily infringed by their
Contribution(s) alone or by combination of their Contribution(s)
with the Work to which such Contribution(s) was submitted. If You
institute patent litigation against any entity (including a
cross-claim or counterclaim in a lawsuit) alleging that the Work
or a Contribution incorporated within the Work constitutes direct
or contributory patent infringement, then any patent licenses
granted to You under this License for that Work shall terminate
as of the date such litigation is filed.
4. Redistribution. You may reproduce and distribute copies of the
Work or Derivative Works thereof in any medium, with or without
modifications, and in Source or Object form, provided that You
meet the following conditions:
(a) You must give any other recipients of the Work or
Derivative Works a copy of this License; and
(b) You must cause any modified files to carry prominent notices
stating that You changed the files; and
(c) You must retain, in the Source form of any Derivative Works
that You distribute, all copyright, patent, trademark, and
attribution notices from the Source form of the Work,
excluding those notices that do not pertain to any part of
the Derivative Works; and
(d) If the Work includes a "NOTICE" text file as part of its
distribution, then any Derivative Works that You distribute must
include a readable copy of the attribution notices contained
within such NOTICE file, excluding those notices that do not
pertain to any part of the Derivative Works, in at least one
of the following places: within a NOTICE text file distributed
as part of the Derivative Works; within the Source form or
documentation, if provided along with the Derivative Works; or,
within a display generated by the Derivative Works, if and
wherever such third-party notices normally appear. The contents
of the NOTICE file are for informational purposes only and
do not modify the License. You may add Your own attribution
notices within Derivative Works that You distribute, alongside
or as an addendum to the NOTICE text from the Work, provided
that such additional attribution notices cannot be construed
as modifying the License.
You may add Your own copyright statement to Your modifications and
may provide additional or different license terms and conditions
for use, reproduction, or distribution of Your modifications, or
for any such Derivative Works as a whole, provided Your use,
reproduction, and distribution of the Work otherwise complies with
the conditions stated in this License.
5. Submission of Contributions. Unless You explicitly state otherwise,
any Contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the Work
by You to the Licensor shall be under the terms and conditions of
this License, without any additional terms or conditions.
Notwithstanding the above, nothing herein shall supersede or modify
the terms of any separate license agreement you may have executed
with Licensor regarding such Contributions.
6. Trademarks. This License does not grant permission to use the trade
names, trademarks, service marks, or product names of the Licensor,
except as required for reasonable and customary use in describing the
origin of the Work and reproducing the content of the NOTICE file.
7. Disclaimer of Warranty. Unless required by applicable law or
agreed to in writing, Licensor provides the Work (and each
Contributor provides its Contributions) on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or
implied, including, without limitation, any warranties or conditions
of TITLE, NON-INFRINGEMENT, MERCHANTABILITY, or FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE. You are solely responsible for determining the
appropriateness of using or redistributing the Work and assume any
risks associated with Your exercise of permissions under this License.
8. Limitation of Liability. In no event and under no legal theory,
whether in tort (including negligence), contract, or otherwise,
unless required by applicable law (such as deliberate and grossly
negligent acts) or agreed to in writing, shall any Contributor be
liable to You for damages, including any direct, indirect, special,
incidental, or consequential damages of any character arising as a
result of this License or out of the use or inability to use the
Work (including but not limited to damages for loss of goodwill,
work stoppage, computer failure or malfunction, or any and all
other commercial damages or losses), even if such Contributor
has been advised of the possibility of such damages.
9. Accepting Warranty or Additional Liability. While redistributing
the Work or Derivative Works thereof, You may choose to offer,
and charge a fee for, acceptance of support, warranty, indemnity,
or other liability obligations and/or rights consistent with this
License. However, in accepting such obligations, You may act only
on Your own behalf and on Your sole responsibility, not on behalf
of any other Contributor, and only if You agree to indemnify,
defend, and hold each Contributor harmless for any liability
incurred by, or claims asserted against, such Contributor by reason
of your accepting any such warranty or additional liability.
END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
APPENDIX: How to apply the Apache License to your work.
To apply the Apache License to your work, attach the following
boilerplate notice, with the fields enclosed by brackets "[]"
replaced with your own identifying information. (Don't include
the brackets!) The text should be enclosed in the appropriate
comment syntax for the file format. We also recommend that a
file or class name and description of purpose be included on the
same "printed page" as the copyright notice for easier
identification within third-party archives.
Copyright [2013] [the CloudFoundry Authors]
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,30 @@
# Speakeasy
This package provides cross-platform Go (#golang) helpers for taking user input
from the terminal while not echoing the input back (similar to `getpasswd`). The
package uses syscalls to avoid any dependence on cgo, and is therefore
compatible with cross-compiling.
[![GoDoc](https://godoc.org/github.com/bgentry/speakeasy?status.png)][godoc]
## Unicode
Multi-byte unicode characters work successfully on Mac OS X. On Windows,
however, this may be problematic (as is UTF in general on Windows). Other
platforms have not been tested.
## License
The code herein was not written by me, but was compiled from two separate open
source packages. Unix portions were imported from [gopass][gopass], while
Windows portions were imported from the [CloudFoundry Go CLI][cf-cli]'s
[Windows terminal helpers][cf-ui-windows].
The [license for the windows portion](./LICENSE_WINDOWS) has been copied exactly
from the source (though I attempted to fill in the correct owner in the
boilerplate copyright notice).
[cf-cli]: https://github.com/cloudfoundry/cli "CloudFoundry Go CLI"
[cf-ui-windows]: https://github.com/cloudfoundry/cli/blob/master/src/cf/terminal/ui_windows.go "CloudFoundry Go CLI Windows input helpers"
[godoc]: https://godoc.org/github.com/bgentry/speakeasy "speakeasy on Godoc.org"
[gopass]: https://code.google.com/p/gopass "gopass"

View File

@ -0,0 +1,18 @@
package main
import (
"fmt"
"os"
"github.com/coreos/etcd/Godeps/_workspace/src/github.com/bgentry/speakeasy"
)
func main() {
password, err := speakeasy.Ask("Please enter a password: ")
if err != nil {
fmt.Println(err)
os.Exit(1)
}
fmt.Printf("Password result: %q\n", password)
fmt.Printf("Password len: %d\n", len(password))
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,47 @@
package speakeasy
import (
"fmt"
"io"
"os"
"strings"
)
// Ask the user to enter a password with input hidden. prompt is a string to
// display before the user's input. Returns the provided password, or an error
// if the command failed.
func Ask(prompt string) (password string, err error) {
return FAsk(os.Stdout, prompt)
}
// Same as the Ask function, except it is possible to specify the file to write
// the prompt to.
func FAsk(file *os.File, prompt string) (password string, err error) {
if prompt != "" {
fmt.Fprint(file, prompt) // Display the prompt.
}
password, err = getPassword()
// Carriage return after the user input.
fmt.Fprintln(file, "")
return
}
func readline() (value string, err error) {
var valb []byte
var n int
b := make([]byte, 1)
for {
// read one byte at a time so we don't accidentally read extra bytes
n, err = os.Stdin.Read(b)
if err != nil && err != io.EOF {
return "", err
}
if n == 0 || b[0] == '\n' {
break
}
valb = append(valb, b[0])
}
return strings.TrimSuffix(string(valb), "\r"), nil
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,93 @@
// based on https://code.google.com/p/gopass
// Author: johnsiilver@gmail.com (John Doak)
//
// Original code is based on code by RogerV in the golang-nuts thread:
// https://groups.google.com/group/golang-nuts/browse_thread/thread/40cc41e9d9fc9247
// +build darwin freebsd linux netbsd openbsd solaris
package speakeasy
import (
"fmt"
"os"
"os/signal"
"strings"
"syscall"
)
const sttyArg0 = "/bin/stty"
var (
sttyArgvEOff = []string{"stty", "-echo"}
sttyArgvEOn = []string{"stty", "echo"}
)
// getPassword gets input hidden from the terminal from a user. This is
// accomplished by turning off terminal echo, reading input from the user and
// finally turning on terminal echo.
func getPassword() (password string, err error) {
sig := make(chan os.Signal, 10)
brk := make(chan bool)
// File descriptors for stdin, stdout, and stderr.
fd := []uintptr{os.Stdin.Fd(), os.Stdout.Fd(), os.Stderr.Fd()}
// Setup notifications of termination signals to channel sig, create a process to
// watch for these signals so we can turn back on echo if need be.
signal.Notify(sig, syscall.SIGHUP, syscall.SIGINT, syscall.SIGKILL, syscall.SIGQUIT,
syscall.SIGTERM)
go catchSignal(fd, sig, brk)
// Turn off the terminal echo.
pid, err := echoOff(fd)
if err != nil {
return "", err
}
// Turn on the terminal echo and stop listening for signals.
defer signal.Stop(sig)
defer close(brk)
defer echoOn(fd)
syscall.Wait4(pid, nil, 0, nil)
line, err := readline()
if err == nil {
password = strings.TrimSpace(line)
} else {
err = fmt.Errorf("failed during password entry: %s", err)
}
return password, err
}
// echoOff turns off the terminal echo.
func echoOff(fd []uintptr) (int, error) {
pid, err := syscall.ForkExec(sttyArg0, sttyArgvEOff, &syscall.ProcAttr{Dir: "", Files: fd})
if err != nil {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("failed turning off console echo for password entry:\n\t%s", err)
}
return pid, nil
}
// echoOn turns back on the terminal echo.
func echoOn(fd []uintptr) {
// Turn on the terminal echo.
pid, e := syscall.ForkExec(sttyArg0, sttyArgvEOn, &syscall.ProcAttr{Dir: "", Files: fd})
if e == nil {
syscall.Wait4(pid, nil, 0, nil)
}
}
// catchSignal tries to catch SIGKILL, SIGQUIT and SIGINT so that we can turn
// terminal echo back on before the program ends. Otherwise the user is left
// with echo off on their terminal.
func catchSignal(fd []uintptr, sig chan os.Signal, brk chan bool) {
select {
case <-sig:
echoOn(fd)
os.Exit(-1)
case <-brk:
}
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,43 @@
// +build windows
package speakeasy
import (
"os"
"syscall"
)
// SetConsoleMode function can be used to change value of ENABLE_ECHO_INPUT:
// http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/ms686033(v=vs.85).aspx
const ENABLE_ECHO_INPUT = 0x0004
func getPassword() (password string, err error) {
hStdin := syscall.Handle(os.Stdin.Fd())
var oldMode uint32
err = syscall.GetConsoleMode(hStdin, &oldMode)
if err != nil {
return
}
var newMode uint32 = (oldMode &^ ENABLE_ECHO_INPUT)
err = setConsoleMode(hStdin, newMode)
defer setConsoleMode(hStdin, oldMode)
if err != nil {
return
}
return readline()
}
func setConsoleMode(console syscall.Handle, mode uint32) (err error) {
dll := syscall.MustLoadDLL("kernel32")
proc := dll.MustFindProc("SetConsoleMode")
r, _, err := proc.Call(uintptr(console), uintptr(mode))
if r == 0 {
return err
}
return nil
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
*.prof
*.test
*.swp
/bin/

Some files were not shown because too many files have changed in this diff Show More