This was added for gRPC server support, but we've decided to use resource names instead to explicitly request the listeners we want by name. This is more in-line with the new naming scheme described in the "xDS Transport Next Steps" design.
Signed-off-by: Mark D. Roth <roth@google.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ 05cbb309b828dc86737c51fd2c79d30e48e397a4
This patch performs a major version freeze and bump by modifying
package_version_status, using the tooling developed in #10636.
Specifically:
v2 APIs are frozen (except for where they are the latest in their
package history and still active)
v3 APIs are transitioned to be active
Candidate v4alpha APIs are generated (not used by Envoy yet)
Fixes#10355
Risk level: medium (entire API's files are modified, visually verified
to ensure things look sane, all tests pass)
Testing: CI
Signed-off-by: Harvey Tuch <htuch@google.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ 549164c42cae84b59154ca4c36009e408aa10b52
Part of https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy/issues/10355, this patch introduces additional
annotations to the API to support automatic inference (and developer documentation) of where the
active developer editable version of a file is, and which files are frozen or machine generated.
Risk level: Low (API annotations only)
Testing: CI
Signed-off-by: Harvey Tuch <htuch@google.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ 4c5f4310bb8a19a38e5377d7a2d2dc6aa4560f47
In which we convert every v3alpha reference to v3. In future revs of the
stable API versioning policy, we will develop better tooling to support
> 2 alpha and stable versions. For v3, it seems reasonable to just mv
v3alpha to v3, since there should be no external consumers yet.
Risk level: Low
Testing: bazel test //test/..., CI.
Signed-off-by: Harvey Tuch <htuch@google.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ 5248a4fb7d4c2a3d1fa151f944d3a63f6b7a06cf
Description:
Move packages around for #8120 and #8121
Risk Level: Med around messing up build.
Testing: CI
Docs Changes: in API/STYLE.md
Release Notes: N/A (v3alpha is not in use yet)
Fixes#8120
Signed-off-by: Lizan Zhou <lizan@tetrate.io>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ 1371f2ef46582a72b5b3971147bd87c534011731
In order to get file level move annotation, import has to be before options.
Signed-off-by: Lizan Zhou <lizan@tetrate.io>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ 062c895f499382ae61dead16db2a7e78b9146525
Instead of formatting options heuristically, which will erase new annotations without changing protoxform, use proto descriptor to format options, and enforce its order as well.
Risk Level: Low
Testing: CI
Docs Changes: N/A
Release Notes: N/A
Signed-off-by: Lizan Zhou <lizan@tetrate.io>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ dfe687d49574ef7eb1bf84867bf571e805a2bf97
This PR avoids having to include an API type database in the Envoy build
by introducing a message annotation option that allows Envoy to
determine earlier corresponding message types via descriptor inspection.
The ApiTypeDb is now ApiTypeOracle and utilizes these annotations.
Risk level: Low
Testing: Existing API and verison upgrade tests pass.
Signed-off-by: Harvey Tuch <htuch@google.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ 297f7a73b3f93bccf8af73c0a555ae52bce6cecb
This patch moves away from the paradigm of sed-style upgrading of every v2
package to v3alpha. Instead, an additional type analysis phase is
performed prior to protoxform by a protoc plugin known as the "type
whisperer".
The type whisperer produces structured type dependency information for
each .proto. The tools/type_whisperer/typedb_gen.py tool then knits
these together to provide an API-wide type dependency graph. This is
then used to determine which types need upgrading (either they have
breaking changes or transitively depend on types with such changes).
Only packages with upgraded types now undergo the v2 -> v3alpha
transition.
The API type database is checked into
source/common/config/api_type_db.pb. This may seem a strange location,
but in the future we will include the type database as a build artifact
for the Envoy binary, as it will be used by the reflection-based version
converter to find the type upgrade path for input proto.
Risk level: Low (the v3alpha protos are not used yet).
Testing: fix_format, manual inspection of diffs, bazel test //test/...,
docs build.
Part of #8082Fixes#8490
Signed-off-by: Harvey Tuch <htuch@google.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ ad57b58cfbb256af41a467260dce2a8013b7a7fa
Fixes#7982
Defines a package level proto library and its associated internal go_proto_library.
Deletes all existing api_go_proto_library, api_go_grpc_library, and go_package annotations in protos (they are not required and pollute the sources).
I deliberately avoided touching anything under udpa since it's being moved to another repository.
Risk Level: low
Testing: build completes
Signed-off-by: Kuat Yessenov <kuat@google.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ d504fde0ffd97017d1ddff8caa9a3b46bba9ae48
This patch establishes a v3alpha baseline API, by doing a simple copy of
v2[alpha] dirs and some sed-style heuristic fixups of BUILD dependencies
and proto package namespaces.
The objective is provide a baseline which we can compare the output from
tooling described in #8083 in later PRs, providing smaller visual diffs.
The core philosophy of the API migration is that every step will be
captured in a script (at least until the last manual steps),
api/migration/v3alpha.sh. This script will capture deterministic
migration steps, allowing v2[alpha] to continue to be updated until we
finalize v3.
There is likely to be significant changes, e.g. in addition to the work
scoped for v3, we might want to reduce the amount of API churn by
referring back to v2 protos where it makes sense. This will be done via
tooling in later PRs.
Part of #8083.
Risk level: Low
Testing: build @envoy_api//...
Signed-off-by: Harvey Tuch <htuch@google.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ 085d72b490c124a02849812798f5513a8df9ae72
* api: add proto options for java
* add ci for checking proto options
Signed-off-by: Penn (Dapeng) Zhang <zdapeng@google.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ 02659d411332e9f20d229f482931c15304ea17fd
This enables generating generic service stubs for all the data-plane-api
proto services when generating Java classes with protoc.
This is generally not needed when implementing a gRPC server but in our case we're implementing
it behind our legacy protobuf RPC framework which rely on these stubs. As far as I know the only negative
with enabling these is generating some potentially unnecessary Java classes.
Signed-off-by: Snow Pettersen <snowp@squareup.com>
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>
In support of https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy/issues/2200 and some
Google internal needs, we are planning on adding support to Envoy to
allow a configuration (or possibly build) driven decision on whether to
using the existing Envoy in-built Grpc::AsyncClient or
the Google C++ gRPC client library (https://grpc.io/grpc/cpp/index.html).
To move in this direction, the idea is we have the xDS ApiConfigSources,
rate limit service config and other filter configurations point at a
GrpcService object. This can be configured to use an Envoy cluster,
where Grpc::AsyncClient will orchestrate communication, or to contain
the config needed to establish a channel in Google C++ gRPC client
library.
Signed-off-by: Harvey Tuch <htuch@google.com>