* master: (912 commits)
Update redirects.txt
Added redirect for Spark guide link
client: log when server list changes
docs: mention regression in task config validation
fix update to changelog
update CHANGELOG with datacenter config validation https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad/pull/5665
typo: "atleast" -> "at least"
implement nomad exec for rkt
docs: fixed typo
use pty/tty terminology similar to github.com/kr/pty
vendor github.com/kr/pty
drivers: implement streaming exec for executor based drivers
executors: implement streaming exec
executor: scaffolding for executor grpc handling
client: expose allocated memory per task
client improve a comment in updateNetworks
stalebot: Add 'thinking' as an exempt label (#5684)
Added Sparrow link
update links to use new canonical location
Add redirects for restructing done in GH-5667
...
Implements streamign exec handling in both executors (i.e. universal and
libcontainer).
For creation of TTY, some incidental complexity leaked in. The universal
executor uses github.com/kr/pty for creation of TTYs.
On the other hand, libcontainer expects a console socket and for libcontainer to
create the underlying console object on process start. The caller can then use
`libcontainer.utils.RecvFd()` to get tty master end.
I chose github.com/kr/pty for managing TTYs here. I tried
`github.com/containerd/console` package (which is already imported), but the
package did not work as expected on macOS.
Related to #4280
This PR adds
`client.allocs.<job>.<group>.<alloc>.<task>.memory.allocated` as a gauge
in bytes to metrics to ease calculating how close a task is to OOMing.
```
'nomad.client.allocs.memory.allocated.example.cache.6d98cbaf-d6bc-2a84-c63f-bfff8905a9d8.redis.rusty': 268435456.000
'nomad.client.allocs.memory.cache.example.cache.6d98cbaf-d6bc-2a84-c63f-bfff8905a9d8.redis.rusty': 5677056.000
'nomad.client.allocs.memory.kernel_max_usage.example.cache.6d98cbaf-d6bc-2a84-c63f-bfff8905a9d8.redis.rusty': 0.000
'nomad.client.allocs.memory.kernel_usage.example.cache.6d98cbaf-d6bc-2a84-c63f-bfff8905a9d8.redis.rusty': 0.000
'nomad.client.allocs.memory.max_usage.example.cache.6d98cbaf-d6bc-2a84-c63f-bfff8905a9d8.redis.rusty': 8908800.000
'nomad.client.allocs.memory.rss.example.cache.6d98cbaf-d6bc-2a84-c63f-bfff8905a9d8.redis.rusty': 876544.000
'nomad.client.allocs.memory.swap.example.cache.6d98cbaf-d6bc-2a84-c63f-bfff8905a9d8.redis.rusty': 0.000
'nomad.client.allocs.memory.usage.example.cache.6d98cbaf-d6bc-2a84-c63f-bfff8905a9d8.redis.rusty': 8208384.000
```
Adds nomad exec support in our API, by hitting the websocket endpoint.
We introduce API structs that correspond to the drivers streaming exec structs.
For creating the websocket connection, we reuse the transport setting from api
http client.
This adds a websocket endpoint for handling `nomad exec`.
The endpoint is a websocket interface, as we require a bi-directional
streaming (to handle both input and output), which is not very appropriate for
plain HTTP 1.0. Using websocket makes implementing the web ui a bit simpler. I
considered using golang http hijack capability to treat http request as a plain
connection, but the web interface would be too complicated potentially.
Furthermore, the API endpoint operates against the raw core nomad exec streaming
datastructures, defined in protobuf, with json serializer. Our APIs use json
interfaces in general, and protobuf generates json friendly golang structs.
Reusing the structs here simplify interface and reduce conversion overhead.