Look for matching clusters starting from the closest ancestor, then go
up the ancestor tree.
Then use Ruby to get clusters for each group in order. Not that
efficient, considering we will doing up to `NUMBER_OF_ANCESTORS_ALLOWED`
number of queries, but it's a finite number
Explicitly order query by depth
This allows us to control ordering explicitly and also to reverse the
order which is useful to allow us to be consistent with
Clusters::Cluster.on_environment (EE) which does reverse ordering.
Puts querying group clusters behind Feature Flag. Just in case we have
issues with performance, we can easily disable this