This is intended to simplify the internal handling of deprecations during API boosting.
See https://docs.google.com/document/d/1mGO9LtVo7t4Lph7WlmyGCxXye3h6j29z3JZvIBbs_D0/edit
Ultimately the plan is to hide this all as a build artifact in Bazel cache, but due to the technical complexity of the pure Bazel solution (involving changes spanning PGV, protoxform, API build rules), we will use checked-in artifacts for 1.13.0.
Risk level: Low
Testing: Additional API test and protoxform golden test.
Part of #8082
This should be unwound in the future with #9479
Signed-off-by: Harvey Tuch <htuch@google.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ da5fb5ce6ec7cc6e4693656a5ba2161107f6ac4a
This is a rename PR only. It renames the capture transport socket
and associated tools to the tap transport socket. It also updates
some documentation. In a subsequent PR I'm going to refactor the
tap transport socket to use the new common tap framework so that
the tap transport socket can be configured via admin, the HTTP
tap filter can write to a file, the tap transport socket can have
matching, etc.
Signed-off-by: Matt Klein <mklein@lyft.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ 7a5849f2a8bcc55fa16da3eaee94d9c99a11147c
Legacy print statements are syntax errors in Python 3 but print() function works as expected in both Python 2 and Python 3.
Resolves syntax errors and name errors that have the potential to halt the runtime.
Risk Level: Minimal
Testing: http://flake8.pycqa.org
Signed-off-by: cclauss <cclauss@me.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ abd82f7c078b5c38faaecb885b46e0ac053e0353
* 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