adds the required visibility rules and delegates the rest to the generic
api_proto_library. I tested the change by doing the following without
getting errors.
./ci/run_envoy_docker.sh './ci/do_ci.sh docs'
I changed the BUILD files using the following commands.
/envoy/api$ find . -type f -name BUILD | xargs sed -i -e 's/api_proto_library(/api_proto_library_internal(/g'
envoy/api$ find . -type f -name BUILD | xargs sed -i -e 's/"api_proto_library"/"api_proto_library_internal"/g'
Signed-off-by: mickey <mickeyju@google.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ 4b871c0ab9350882271a490adcee44e613ed9807
Fixes https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy/issues/743
This is a general cleanup of all of the access logging documentation.
I have reorganized a bunch of things and hidden the various gRPC logging
fields that are not implemented yet.
I've also moved the existing tap protos into a new "output" directory. This
is the best name I could come up for cleanly separating output data that might
be stored outside of any service or configuration.
Signed-off-by: Matt Klein <mklein@lyft.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ c15019e79c832d9f0a09468affaadabc4be3e115
* tap/fuzz: transport socket extension for traffic capture.
This PR introduces a transport socket extension that wraps a given transport socket, interposes on its
plain text traffic and records it into a proto trace file on the filesystem. This can be used for a
number of purposes:
1. As a corpus for fuzzing the data plane.
2. Converted to PCAP using a soon-to-be-written utility, allowing existing tools such as Wireshark
to be used to decode L4/L7 protocol history in the trace. Essentially this lets us take advantage
of the PCAP ecosystem.
Relates to #1413 and #508.
Risk Level: Low (opt-in).
Testing: New SSL integration tests, demonstrating plain text intercept.
Signed-off-by: Harvey Tuch <htuch@google.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ 6c7a91733469f76381487f9ca78bdece6825c8c9