- Ability to add custom response headers from ratelimit
service/filter
- For both (LimitStatus::OK and LimitStatus::OverLimit) custom
headers are added if RLS service sends headers
- For LimitStatus:OK, we temporarily store the headers and add
them to the response (via Filter::encodeHeaders())
*Risk Level*: Low
*Testing*: unit and integration tests added. Verified with modified
github.com/lyft/ratelimit service. Passes "bazel test //test/..." in
Linux
Signed-off-by: Suresh Kumar <suresh@freshdesk.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ 71152b710e3543732464fca57c8f07b7395de68d
There are several main changes in this PR:
Create envoy.api.v2.core packages to break circular dependencies from xDS on to subpackages on to base protos.
Create individual packages for each filter and add independent versioning to each filter.
Add visibility constraints to prevent formation of dependency cycles.
Add gogoproto annotations to improve go code generation.
After moving xDS service definitions and top-level resource protos back to envoy.core.api.v2, cycles were created, since the second-level definitions depend on base protobuf definitions, and are in turn included from xDS; however xDS and base definitions are in the same package.
The solution is to split the base protos into another package, envoy.api.v2.core. That eliminates dependency cycles (validated using go-control-plane).
Added a few gogoproto annotations to improve golang code generation.
Signed-off-by: Kuat Yessenov <kuat@google.com>
This is a design-level update to bootstrap.proto, that plumbs in the
remaining top-level config from v1. It will probably have some small
changes made beyond this as we implement.
Notable differences to v1 are:
* Static/dynamic resources are clearly delineated at top-level, clusters no longer belong to the ClusterManager object.
* Stats sinks are a repeated list of opaque configs, similar to filter.
* Some simplifications to object types, e.g. RLS no longer specifies type (do we want to preserve the v1 generality here?).
Also renamed RLDS back to RLS, I'll admit that it didn't make sense to
cram it into the xDS namespace, it's really a very distinct service on
the data plane and shouldn't be bundled with the control plane services.
We can dynamically discover service/method descriptors in Envoy, so we
don't need to generate any C++ stubs for this. This simplifies the
Google import and removes an unnecessary build output.
This is useful in Travis CI (and also internally at Google in our CI) to
validate basic build/link of the protos.
This exposed a small issue with API compatibility. Since we don't have
additional package namespaces for each individual API, there was a
conflict between the RateLimit mesage in RLDS and RDS. The quick fix was
to move the RLDS message inside the response object (this is fine as
nobody is using the v2 RLDS yet, open to alternatives including per-xDS
API namespaces).