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tailscale/health/warnings.go

243 lines
10 KiB
Go

health: begin work to use structured health warnings instead of strings, pipe changes into ipn.Notify (#12406) Updates tailscale/tailscale#4136 This PR is the first round of work to move from encoding health warnings as strings and use structured data instead. The current health package revolves around the idea of Subsystems. Each subsystem can have (or not have) a Go error associated with it. The overall health of the backend is given by the concatenation of all these errors. This PR polishes the concept of Warnable introduced by @bradfitz a few weeks ago. Each Warnable is a component of the backend (for instance, things like 'dns' or 'magicsock' are Warnables). Each Warnable has a unique identifying code. A Warnable is an entity we can warn the user about, by setting (or unsetting) a WarningState for it. Warnables have: - an identifying Code, so that the GUI can track them as their WarningStates come and go - a Title, which the GUIs can use to tell the user what component of the backend is broken - a Text, which is a function that is called with a set of Args to generate a more detailed error message to explain the unhappy state Additionally, this PR also begins to send Warnables and their WarningStates through LocalAPI to the clients, using ipn.Notify messages. An ipn.Notify is only issued when a warning is added or removed from the Tracker. In a next PR, we'll get rid of subsystems entirely, and we'll start using structured warnings for all errors affecting the backend functionality. Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
5 months ago
// Copyright (c) Tailscale Inc & AUTHORS
// SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
package health
import (
"fmt"
"runtime"
"time"
"tailscale.com/version"
health: begin work to use structured health warnings instead of strings, pipe changes into ipn.Notify (#12406) Updates tailscale/tailscale#4136 This PR is the first round of work to move from encoding health warnings as strings and use structured data instead. The current health package revolves around the idea of Subsystems. Each subsystem can have (or not have) a Go error associated with it. The overall health of the backend is given by the concatenation of all these errors. This PR polishes the concept of Warnable introduced by @bradfitz a few weeks ago. Each Warnable is a component of the backend (for instance, things like 'dns' or 'magicsock' are Warnables). Each Warnable has a unique identifying code. A Warnable is an entity we can warn the user about, by setting (or unsetting) a WarningState for it. Warnables have: - an identifying Code, so that the GUI can track them as their WarningStates come and go - a Title, which the GUIs can use to tell the user what component of the backend is broken - a Text, which is a function that is called with a set of Args to generate a more detailed error message to explain the unhappy state Additionally, this PR also begins to send Warnables and their WarningStates through LocalAPI to the clients, using ipn.Notify messages. An ipn.Notify is only issued when a warning is added or removed from the Tracker. In a next PR, we'll get rid of subsystems entirely, and we'll start using structured warnings for all errors affecting the backend functionality. Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
5 months ago
)
/**
This file contains definitions for the Warnables maintained within this `health` package.
*/
// updateAvailableWarnable is a Warnable that warns the user that an update is available.
var updateAvailableWarnable = Register(&Warnable{
Code: "update-available",
Title: "Update available",
Severity: SeverityLow,
Text: func(args Args) string {
if version.IsMacAppStore() || version.IsAppleTV() || version.IsMacSys() || version.IsWindowsGUI() || runtime.GOOS == "android" {
return fmt.Sprintf("An update from version %s to %s is available.", args[ArgCurrentVersion], args[ArgAvailableVersion])
} else {
return fmt.Sprintf("An update from version %s to %s is available. Run `tailscale update` or `tailscale set --auto-update` to update now.", args[ArgCurrentVersion], args[ArgAvailableVersion])
}
health: begin work to use structured health warnings instead of strings, pipe changes into ipn.Notify (#12406) Updates tailscale/tailscale#4136 This PR is the first round of work to move from encoding health warnings as strings and use structured data instead. The current health package revolves around the idea of Subsystems. Each subsystem can have (or not have) a Go error associated with it. The overall health of the backend is given by the concatenation of all these errors. This PR polishes the concept of Warnable introduced by @bradfitz a few weeks ago. Each Warnable is a component of the backend (for instance, things like 'dns' or 'magicsock' are Warnables). Each Warnable has a unique identifying code. A Warnable is an entity we can warn the user about, by setting (or unsetting) a WarningState for it. Warnables have: - an identifying Code, so that the GUI can track them as their WarningStates come and go - a Title, which the GUIs can use to tell the user what component of the backend is broken - a Text, which is a function that is called with a set of Args to generate a more detailed error message to explain the unhappy state Additionally, this PR also begins to send Warnables and their WarningStates through LocalAPI to the clients, using ipn.Notify messages. An ipn.Notify is only issued when a warning is added or removed from the Tracker. In a next PR, we'll get rid of subsystems entirely, and we'll start using structured warnings for all errors affecting the backend functionality. Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
5 months ago
},
})
// securityUpdateAvailableWarnable is a Warnable that warns the user that an important security update is available.
var securityUpdateAvailableWarnable = Register(&Warnable{
Code: "security-update-available",
Title: "Security update available",
Severity: SeverityMedium,
health: begin work to use structured health warnings instead of strings, pipe changes into ipn.Notify (#12406) Updates tailscale/tailscale#4136 This PR is the first round of work to move from encoding health warnings as strings and use structured data instead. The current health package revolves around the idea of Subsystems. Each subsystem can have (or not have) a Go error associated with it. The overall health of the backend is given by the concatenation of all these errors. This PR polishes the concept of Warnable introduced by @bradfitz a few weeks ago. Each Warnable is a component of the backend (for instance, things like 'dns' or 'magicsock' are Warnables). Each Warnable has a unique identifying code. A Warnable is an entity we can warn the user about, by setting (or unsetting) a WarningState for it. Warnables have: - an identifying Code, so that the GUI can track them as their WarningStates come and go - a Title, which the GUIs can use to tell the user what component of the backend is broken - a Text, which is a function that is called with a set of Args to generate a more detailed error message to explain the unhappy state Additionally, this PR also begins to send Warnables and their WarningStates through LocalAPI to the clients, using ipn.Notify messages. An ipn.Notify is only issued when a warning is added or removed from the Tracker. In a next PR, we'll get rid of subsystems entirely, and we'll start using structured warnings for all errors affecting the backend functionality. Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
5 months ago
Text: func(args Args) string {
if version.IsMacAppStore() || version.IsAppleTV() || version.IsMacSys() || version.IsWindowsGUI() || runtime.GOOS == "android" {
return fmt.Sprintf("A security update from version %s to %s is available.", args[ArgCurrentVersion], args[ArgAvailableVersion])
} else {
return fmt.Sprintf("A security update from version %s to %s is available. Run `tailscale update` or `tailscale set --auto-update` to update now.", args[ArgCurrentVersion], args[ArgAvailableVersion])
}
health: begin work to use structured health warnings instead of strings, pipe changes into ipn.Notify (#12406) Updates tailscale/tailscale#4136 This PR is the first round of work to move from encoding health warnings as strings and use structured data instead. The current health package revolves around the idea of Subsystems. Each subsystem can have (or not have) a Go error associated with it. The overall health of the backend is given by the concatenation of all these errors. This PR polishes the concept of Warnable introduced by @bradfitz a few weeks ago. Each Warnable is a component of the backend (for instance, things like 'dns' or 'magicsock' are Warnables). Each Warnable has a unique identifying code. A Warnable is an entity we can warn the user about, by setting (or unsetting) a WarningState for it. Warnables have: - an identifying Code, so that the GUI can track them as their WarningStates come and go - a Title, which the GUIs can use to tell the user what component of the backend is broken - a Text, which is a function that is called with a set of Args to generate a more detailed error message to explain the unhappy state Additionally, this PR also begins to send Warnables and their WarningStates through LocalAPI to the clients, using ipn.Notify messages. An ipn.Notify is only issued when a warning is added or removed from the Tracker. In a next PR, we'll get rid of subsystems entirely, and we'll start using structured warnings for all errors affecting the backend functionality. Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
5 months ago
},
})
// unstableWarnable is a Warnable that warns the user that they are using an unstable version of Tailscale
// so they won't be surprised by all the issues that may arise.
var unstableWarnable = Register(&Warnable{
Code: "is-using-unstable-version",
Title: "Using an unstable version",
Severity: SeverityLow,
Text: StaticMessage("This is an unstable version of Tailscale meant for testing and development purposes. Please report any issues to Tailscale."),
health: begin work to use structured health warnings instead of strings, pipe changes into ipn.Notify (#12406) Updates tailscale/tailscale#4136 This PR is the first round of work to move from encoding health warnings as strings and use structured data instead. The current health package revolves around the idea of Subsystems. Each subsystem can have (or not have) a Go error associated with it. The overall health of the backend is given by the concatenation of all these errors. This PR polishes the concept of Warnable introduced by @bradfitz a few weeks ago. Each Warnable is a component of the backend (for instance, things like 'dns' or 'magicsock' are Warnables). Each Warnable has a unique identifying code. A Warnable is an entity we can warn the user about, by setting (or unsetting) a WarningState for it. Warnables have: - an identifying Code, so that the GUI can track them as their WarningStates come and go - a Title, which the GUIs can use to tell the user what component of the backend is broken - a Text, which is a function that is called with a set of Args to generate a more detailed error message to explain the unhappy state Additionally, this PR also begins to send Warnables and their WarningStates through LocalAPI to the clients, using ipn.Notify messages. An ipn.Notify is only issued when a warning is added or removed from the Tracker. In a next PR, we'll get rid of subsystems entirely, and we'll start using structured warnings for all errors affecting the backend functionality. Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
5 months ago
})
// NetworkStatusWarnable is a Warnable that warns the user that the network is down.
var NetworkStatusWarnable = Register(&Warnable{
Code: "network-status",
Title: "Network down",
Severity: SeverityMedium,
Text: StaticMessage("Tailscale cannot connect because the network is down. Check your Internet connection."),
health: begin work to use structured health warnings instead of strings, pipe changes into ipn.Notify (#12406) Updates tailscale/tailscale#4136 This PR is the first round of work to move from encoding health warnings as strings and use structured data instead. The current health package revolves around the idea of Subsystems. Each subsystem can have (or not have) a Go error associated with it. The overall health of the backend is given by the concatenation of all these errors. This PR polishes the concept of Warnable introduced by @bradfitz a few weeks ago. Each Warnable is a component of the backend (for instance, things like 'dns' or 'magicsock' are Warnables). Each Warnable has a unique identifying code. A Warnable is an entity we can warn the user about, by setting (or unsetting) a WarningState for it. Warnables have: - an identifying Code, so that the GUI can track them as their WarningStates come and go - a Title, which the GUIs can use to tell the user what component of the backend is broken - a Text, which is a function that is called with a set of Args to generate a more detailed error message to explain the unhappy state Additionally, this PR also begins to send Warnables and their WarningStates through LocalAPI to the clients, using ipn.Notify messages. An ipn.Notify is only issued when a warning is added or removed from the Tracker. In a next PR, we'll get rid of subsystems entirely, and we'll start using structured warnings for all errors affecting the backend functionality. Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
5 months ago
ImpactsConnectivity: true,
})
// IPNStateWarnable is a Warnable that warns the user that Tailscale is stopped.
var IPNStateWarnable = Register(&Warnable{
Code: "wantrunning-false",
Title: "Not connected to Tailscale",
Severity: SeverityLow,
Text: StaticMessage("Tailscale is stopped."),
})
// localLogWarnable is a Warnable that warns the user that the local log is misconfigured.
var localLogWarnable = Register(&Warnable{
Code: "local-log-config-error",
Title: "Local log misconfiguration",
Severity: SeverityLow,
Text: func(args Args) string {
return fmt.Sprintf("The local log is misconfigured: %v", args[ArgError])
},
})
// LoginStateWarnable is a Warnable that warns the user that they are logged out,
// and provides the last login error if available.
var LoginStateWarnable = Register(&Warnable{
Code: "login-state",
Title: "Logged out",
Severity: SeverityMedium,
Text: func(args Args) string {
if args[ArgError] != "" {
return fmt.Sprintf("You are logged out. The last login error was: %v", args[ArgError])
} else {
return "You are logged out."
}
},
})
// notInMapPollWarnable is a Warnable that warns the user that we are using a stale network map.
health: begin work to use structured health warnings instead of strings, pipe changes into ipn.Notify (#12406) Updates tailscale/tailscale#4136 This PR is the first round of work to move from encoding health warnings as strings and use structured data instead. The current health package revolves around the idea of Subsystems. Each subsystem can have (or not have) a Go error associated with it. The overall health of the backend is given by the concatenation of all these errors. This PR polishes the concept of Warnable introduced by @bradfitz a few weeks ago. Each Warnable is a component of the backend (for instance, things like 'dns' or 'magicsock' are Warnables). Each Warnable has a unique identifying code. A Warnable is an entity we can warn the user about, by setting (or unsetting) a WarningState for it. Warnables have: - an identifying Code, so that the GUI can track them as their WarningStates come and go - a Title, which the GUIs can use to tell the user what component of the backend is broken - a Text, which is a function that is called with a set of Args to generate a more detailed error message to explain the unhappy state Additionally, this PR also begins to send Warnables and their WarningStates through LocalAPI to the clients, using ipn.Notify messages. An ipn.Notify is only issued when a warning is added or removed from the Tracker. In a next PR, we'll get rid of subsystems entirely, and we'll start using structured warnings for all errors affecting the backend functionality. Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
5 months ago
var notInMapPollWarnable = Register(&Warnable{
Code: "not-in-map-poll",
Title: "Out of sync",
health: begin work to use structured health warnings instead of strings, pipe changes into ipn.Notify (#12406) Updates tailscale/tailscale#4136 This PR is the first round of work to move from encoding health warnings as strings and use structured data instead. The current health package revolves around the idea of Subsystems. Each subsystem can have (or not have) a Go error associated with it. The overall health of the backend is given by the concatenation of all these errors. This PR polishes the concept of Warnable introduced by @bradfitz a few weeks ago. Each Warnable is a component of the backend (for instance, things like 'dns' or 'magicsock' are Warnables). Each Warnable has a unique identifying code. A Warnable is an entity we can warn the user about, by setting (or unsetting) a WarningState for it. Warnables have: - an identifying Code, so that the GUI can track them as their WarningStates come and go - a Title, which the GUIs can use to tell the user what component of the backend is broken - a Text, which is a function that is called with a set of Args to generate a more detailed error message to explain the unhappy state Additionally, this PR also begins to send Warnables and their WarningStates through LocalAPI to the clients, using ipn.Notify messages. An ipn.Notify is only issued when a warning is added or removed from the Tracker. In a next PR, we'll get rid of subsystems entirely, and we'll start using structured warnings for all errors affecting the backend functionality. Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
5 months ago
Severity: SeverityMedium,
DependsOn: []*Warnable{NetworkStatusWarnable},
Text: StaticMessage("Unable to connect to the Tailscale coordination server to synchronize the state of your tailnet. Peer reachability might degrade over time."),
health: begin work to use structured health warnings instead of strings, pipe changes into ipn.Notify (#12406) Updates tailscale/tailscale#4136 This PR is the first round of work to move from encoding health warnings as strings and use structured data instead. The current health package revolves around the idea of Subsystems. Each subsystem can have (or not have) a Go error associated with it. The overall health of the backend is given by the concatenation of all these errors. This PR polishes the concept of Warnable introduced by @bradfitz a few weeks ago. Each Warnable is a component of the backend (for instance, things like 'dns' or 'magicsock' are Warnables). Each Warnable has a unique identifying code. A Warnable is an entity we can warn the user about, by setting (or unsetting) a WarningState for it. Warnables have: - an identifying Code, so that the GUI can track them as their WarningStates come and go - a Title, which the GUIs can use to tell the user what component of the backend is broken - a Text, which is a function that is called with a set of Args to generate a more detailed error message to explain the unhappy state Additionally, this PR also begins to send Warnables and their WarningStates through LocalAPI to the clients, using ipn.Notify messages. An ipn.Notify is only issued when a warning is added or removed from the Tracker. In a next PR, we'll get rid of subsystems entirely, and we'll start using structured warnings for all errors affecting the backend functionality. Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
5 months ago
})
// noDERPHomeWarnable is a Warnable that warns the user that Tailscale doesn't have a home DERP.
var noDERPHomeWarnable = Register(&Warnable{
Code: "no-derp-home",
Title: "No home relay server",
Severity: SeverityMedium,
DependsOn: []*Warnable{NetworkStatusWarnable},
Text: StaticMessage("Tailscale could not connect to any relay server. Check your Internet connection."),
ImpactsConnectivity: true,
health: begin work to use structured health warnings instead of strings, pipe changes into ipn.Notify (#12406) Updates tailscale/tailscale#4136 This PR is the first round of work to move from encoding health warnings as strings and use structured data instead. The current health package revolves around the idea of Subsystems. Each subsystem can have (or not have) a Go error associated with it. The overall health of the backend is given by the concatenation of all these errors. This PR polishes the concept of Warnable introduced by @bradfitz a few weeks ago. Each Warnable is a component of the backend (for instance, things like 'dns' or 'magicsock' are Warnables). Each Warnable has a unique identifying code. A Warnable is an entity we can warn the user about, by setting (or unsetting) a WarningState for it. Warnables have: - an identifying Code, so that the GUI can track them as their WarningStates come and go - a Title, which the GUIs can use to tell the user what component of the backend is broken - a Text, which is a function that is called with a set of Args to generate a more detailed error message to explain the unhappy state Additionally, this PR also begins to send Warnables and their WarningStates through LocalAPI to the clients, using ipn.Notify messages. An ipn.Notify is only issued when a warning is added or removed from the Tracker. In a next PR, we'll get rid of subsystems entirely, and we'll start using structured warnings for all errors affecting the backend functionality. Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
5 months ago
})
// noDERPConnectionWarnable is a Warnable that warns the user that Tailscale couldn't connect to a specific DERP server.
var noDERPConnectionWarnable = Register(&Warnable{
Code: "no-derp-connection",
Title: "Relay server unavailable",
Severity: SeverityMedium,
health: begin work to use structured health warnings instead of strings, pipe changes into ipn.Notify (#12406) Updates tailscale/tailscale#4136 This PR is the first round of work to move from encoding health warnings as strings and use structured data instead. The current health package revolves around the idea of Subsystems. Each subsystem can have (or not have) a Go error associated with it. The overall health of the backend is given by the concatenation of all these errors. This PR polishes the concept of Warnable introduced by @bradfitz a few weeks ago. Each Warnable is a component of the backend (for instance, things like 'dns' or 'magicsock' are Warnables). Each Warnable has a unique identifying code. A Warnable is an entity we can warn the user about, by setting (or unsetting) a WarningState for it. Warnables have: - an identifying Code, so that the GUI can track them as their WarningStates come and go - a Title, which the GUIs can use to tell the user what component of the backend is broken - a Text, which is a function that is called with a set of Args to generate a more detailed error message to explain the unhappy state Additionally, this PR also begins to send Warnables and their WarningStates through LocalAPI to the clients, using ipn.Notify messages. An ipn.Notify is only issued when a warning is added or removed from the Tracker. In a next PR, we'll get rid of subsystems entirely, and we'll start using structured warnings for all errors affecting the backend functionality. Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
5 months ago
DependsOn: []*Warnable{NetworkStatusWarnable},
Text: func(args Args) string {
if n := args[ArgDERPRegionName]; n != "" {
return fmt.Sprintf("Tailscale could not connect to the '%s' relay server. Your Internet connection might be down, or the server might be temporarily unavailable.", n)
} else {
return fmt.Sprintf("Tailscale could not connect to the relay server with ID '%s'. Your Internet connection might be down, or the server might be temporarily unavailable.", args[ArgDERPRegionID])
}
health: begin work to use structured health warnings instead of strings, pipe changes into ipn.Notify (#12406) Updates tailscale/tailscale#4136 This PR is the first round of work to move from encoding health warnings as strings and use structured data instead. The current health package revolves around the idea of Subsystems. Each subsystem can have (or not have) a Go error associated with it. The overall health of the backend is given by the concatenation of all these errors. This PR polishes the concept of Warnable introduced by @bradfitz a few weeks ago. Each Warnable is a component of the backend (for instance, things like 'dns' or 'magicsock' are Warnables). Each Warnable has a unique identifying code. A Warnable is an entity we can warn the user about, by setting (or unsetting) a WarningState for it. Warnables have: - an identifying Code, so that the GUI can track them as their WarningStates come and go - a Title, which the GUIs can use to tell the user what component of the backend is broken - a Text, which is a function that is called with a set of Args to generate a more detailed error message to explain the unhappy state Additionally, this PR also begins to send Warnables and their WarningStates through LocalAPI to the clients, using ipn.Notify messages. An ipn.Notify is only issued when a warning is added or removed from the Tracker. In a next PR, we'll get rid of subsystems entirely, and we'll start using structured warnings for all errors affecting the backend functionality. Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
5 months ago
},
ImpactsConnectivity: true,
health: begin work to use structured health warnings instead of strings, pipe changes into ipn.Notify (#12406) Updates tailscale/tailscale#4136 This PR is the first round of work to move from encoding health warnings as strings and use structured data instead. The current health package revolves around the idea of Subsystems. Each subsystem can have (or not have) a Go error associated with it. The overall health of the backend is given by the concatenation of all these errors. This PR polishes the concept of Warnable introduced by @bradfitz a few weeks ago. Each Warnable is a component of the backend (for instance, things like 'dns' or 'magicsock' are Warnables). Each Warnable has a unique identifying code. A Warnable is an entity we can warn the user about, by setting (or unsetting) a WarningState for it. Warnables have: - an identifying Code, so that the GUI can track them as their WarningStates come and go - a Title, which the GUIs can use to tell the user what component of the backend is broken - a Text, which is a function that is called with a set of Args to generate a more detailed error message to explain the unhappy state Additionally, this PR also begins to send Warnables and their WarningStates through LocalAPI to the clients, using ipn.Notify messages. An ipn.Notify is only issued when a warning is added or removed from the Tracker. In a next PR, we'll get rid of subsystems entirely, and we'll start using structured warnings for all errors affecting the backend functionality. Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
5 months ago
})
// derpTimeoutWarnable is a Warnable that warns the user that Tailscale hasn't heard from the home DERP region for a while.
var derpTimeoutWarnable = Register(&Warnable{
Code: "derp-timed-out",
Title: "Relay server timed out",
Severity: SeverityMedium,
DependsOn: []*Warnable{NetworkStatusWarnable},
Text: func(args Args) string {
if n := args[ArgDERPRegionName]; n != "" {
return fmt.Sprintf("Tailscale hasn't heard from the '%s' relay server in %v. The server might be temporarily unavailable, or your Internet connection might be down.", n, args[ArgDuration])
} else {
return fmt.Sprintf("Tailscale hasn't heard from the home relay server (region ID '%v') in %v. The server might be temporarily unavailable, or your Internet connection might be down.", args[ArgDERPRegionID], args[ArgDuration])
}
health: begin work to use structured health warnings instead of strings, pipe changes into ipn.Notify (#12406) Updates tailscale/tailscale#4136 This PR is the first round of work to move from encoding health warnings as strings and use structured data instead. The current health package revolves around the idea of Subsystems. Each subsystem can have (or not have) a Go error associated with it. The overall health of the backend is given by the concatenation of all these errors. This PR polishes the concept of Warnable introduced by @bradfitz a few weeks ago. Each Warnable is a component of the backend (for instance, things like 'dns' or 'magicsock' are Warnables). Each Warnable has a unique identifying code. A Warnable is an entity we can warn the user about, by setting (or unsetting) a WarningState for it. Warnables have: - an identifying Code, so that the GUI can track them as their WarningStates come and go - a Title, which the GUIs can use to tell the user what component of the backend is broken - a Text, which is a function that is called with a set of Args to generate a more detailed error message to explain the unhappy state Additionally, this PR also begins to send Warnables and their WarningStates through LocalAPI to the clients, using ipn.Notify messages. An ipn.Notify is only issued when a warning is added or removed from the Tracker. In a next PR, we'll get rid of subsystems entirely, and we'll start using structured warnings for all errors affecting the backend functionality. Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
5 months ago
},
})
// derpRegionErrorWarnable is a Warnable that warns the user that a DERP region is reporting an issue.
var derpRegionErrorWarnable = Register(&Warnable{
Code: "derp-region-error",
Title: "Relay server error",
Severity: SeverityLow,
health: begin work to use structured health warnings instead of strings, pipe changes into ipn.Notify (#12406) Updates tailscale/tailscale#4136 This PR is the first round of work to move from encoding health warnings as strings and use structured data instead. The current health package revolves around the idea of Subsystems. Each subsystem can have (or not have) a Go error associated with it. The overall health of the backend is given by the concatenation of all these errors. This PR polishes the concept of Warnable introduced by @bradfitz a few weeks ago. Each Warnable is a component of the backend (for instance, things like 'dns' or 'magicsock' are Warnables). Each Warnable has a unique identifying code. A Warnable is an entity we can warn the user about, by setting (or unsetting) a WarningState for it. Warnables have: - an identifying Code, so that the GUI can track them as their WarningStates come and go - a Title, which the GUIs can use to tell the user what component of the backend is broken - a Text, which is a function that is called with a set of Args to generate a more detailed error message to explain the unhappy state Additionally, this PR also begins to send Warnables and their WarningStates through LocalAPI to the clients, using ipn.Notify messages. An ipn.Notify is only issued when a warning is added or removed from the Tracker. In a next PR, we'll get rid of subsystems entirely, and we'll start using structured warnings for all errors affecting the backend functionality. Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
5 months ago
DependsOn: []*Warnable{NetworkStatusWarnable},
Text: func(args Args) string {
return fmt.Sprintf("The relay server #%v is reporting an issue: %v", args[ArgDERPRegionID], args[ArgError])
health: begin work to use structured health warnings instead of strings, pipe changes into ipn.Notify (#12406) Updates tailscale/tailscale#4136 This PR is the first round of work to move from encoding health warnings as strings and use structured data instead. The current health package revolves around the idea of Subsystems. Each subsystem can have (or not have) a Go error associated with it. The overall health of the backend is given by the concatenation of all these errors. This PR polishes the concept of Warnable introduced by @bradfitz a few weeks ago. Each Warnable is a component of the backend (for instance, things like 'dns' or 'magicsock' are Warnables). Each Warnable has a unique identifying code. A Warnable is an entity we can warn the user about, by setting (or unsetting) a WarningState for it. Warnables have: - an identifying Code, so that the GUI can track them as their WarningStates come and go - a Title, which the GUIs can use to tell the user what component of the backend is broken - a Text, which is a function that is called with a set of Args to generate a more detailed error message to explain the unhappy state Additionally, this PR also begins to send Warnables and their WarningStates through LocalAPI to the clients, using ipn.Notify messages. An ipn.Notify is only issued when a warning is added or removed from the Tracker. In a next PR, we'll get rid of subsystems entirely, and we'll start using structured warnings for all errors affecting the backend functionality. Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
5 months ago
},
})
// noUDP4BindWarnable is a Warnable that warns the user that Tailscale couldn't listen for incoming UDP connections.
var noUDP4BindWarnable = Register(&Warnable{
Code: "no-udp4-bind",
Title: "Incoming connections may fail",
Severity: SeverityMedium,
health: begin work to use structured health warnings instead of strings, pipe changes into ipn.Notify (#12406) Updates tailscale/tailscale#4136 This PR is the first round of work to move from encoding health warnings as strings and use structured data instead. The current health package revolves around the idea of Subsystems. Each subsystem can have (or not have) a Go error associated with it. The overall health of the backend is given by the concatenation of all these errors. This PR polishes the concept of Warnable introduced by @bradfitz a few weeks ago. Each Warnable is a component of the backend (for instance, things like 'dns' or 'magicsock' are Warnables). Each Warnable has a unique identifying code. A Warnable is an entity we can warn the user about, by setting (or unsetting) a WarningState for it. Warnables have: - an identifying Code, so that the GUI can track them as their WarningStates come and go - a Title, which the GUIs can use to tell the user what component of the backend is broken - a Text, which is a function that is called with a set of Args to generate a more detailed error message to explain the unhappy state Additionally, this PR also begins to send Warnables and their WarningStates through LocalAPI to the clients, using ipn.Notify messages. An ipn.Notify is only issued when a warning is added or removed from the Tracker. In a next PR, we'll get rid of subsystems entirely, and we'll start using structured warnings for all errors affecting the backend functionality. Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
5 months ago
DependsOn: []*Warnable{NetworkStatusWarnable},
Text: StaticMessage("Tailscale couldn't listen for incoming UDP connections."),
ImpactsConnectivity: true,
})
// mapResponseTimeoutWarnable is a Warnable that warns the user that Tailscale hasn't received a network map from the coordination server in a while.
var mapResponseTimeoutWarnable = Register(&Warnable{
Code: "mapresponse-timeout",
Title: "Network map response timeout",
Severity: SeverityMedium,
DependsOn: []*Warnable{NetworkStatusWarnable},
Text: func(args Args) string {
return fmt.Sprintf("Tailscale hasn't received a network map from the coordination server in %s.", args[ArgDuration])
},
})
// tlsConnectionFailedWarnable is a Warnable that warns the user that Tailscale could not establish an encrypted connection with a server.
var tlsConnectionFailedWarnable = Register(&Warnable{
Code: "tls-connection-failed",
Title: "Encrypted connection failed",
Severity: SeverityMedium,
DependsOn: []*Warnable{NetworkStatusWarnable},
Text: func(args Args) string {
return fmt.Sprintf("Tailscale could not establish an encrypted connection with '%q': %v", args[ArgServerName], args[ArgError])
},
})
// magicsockReceiveFuncWarnable is a Warnable that warns the user that one of the Magicsock functions is not running.
var magicsockReceiveFuncWarnable = Register(&Warnable{
Code: "magicsock-receive-func-error",
Title: "MagicSock function not running",
Severity: SeverityMedium,
Text: func(args Args) string {
return fmt.Sprintf("The MagicSock function %s is not running. You might experience connectivity issues.", args[ArgMagicsockFunctionName])
},
})
// testWarnable is a Warnable that is used within this package for testing purposes only.
var testWarnable = Register(&Warnable{
Code: "test-warnable",
Title: "Test warnable",
Severity: SeverityLow,
Text: func(args Args) string {
return args[ArgError]
},
})
// applyDiskConfigWarnable is a Warnable that warns the user that there was an error applying the envknob config stored on disk.
var applyDiskConfigWarnable = Register(&Warnable{
Code: "apply-disk-config",
Title: "Could not apply configuration",
Severity: SeverityMedium,
Text: func(args Args) string {
return fmt.Sprintf("An error occurred applying the Tailscale envknob configuration stored on disk: %v", args[ArgError])
},
})
// controlHealthWarnable is a Warnable that warns the user that the coordination server is reporting an health issue.
var controlHealthWarnable = Register(&Warnable{
Code: "control-health",
Title: "Coordination server reports an issue",
Severity: SeverityMedium,
Text: func(args Args) string {
return fmt.Sprintf("The coordination server is reporting an health issue: %v", args[ArgError])
},
})
// warmingUpWarnableDuration is the duration for which the warmingUpWarnable is reported by the backend after the user
// has changed ipnWantRunning to true from false.
const warmingUpWarnableDuration = 5 * time.Second
// warmingUpWarnable is a Warnable that is reported by the backend when it is starting up, for a maximum time of
// warmingUpWarnableDuration. The GUIs use the presence of this Warnable to prevent showing any other warnings until
// the backend is fully started.
var warmingUpWarnable = Register(&Warnable{
Code: "warming-up",
Title: "Tailscale is starting",
Severity: SeverityLow,
Text: StaticMessage("Tailscale is starting. Please wait."),
})