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
This provides canonical BUILD formatting and puts protoxform in charge
of being able to determine import paths, without having to worry about
Bazel implications.
Part of #8082.
Risk level: Low
Testing: tools/proto_sync.py, visual inspection of diffs.
Signed-off-by: Harvey Tuch <htuch@google.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ e53f40f0e5ccc84fca5cd350416fe0f2accf8229
As part of #8082, we want to be able to (1) automatically generate BUILD
files and (2) treat packages as atomic from a "upgrade / do not upgrade"
decision perspective. This is simplified by having our BUILD targets at
package granularity, since this is what the protoxform plugin operates
on.
This PR broadens the package-level treatment that was already introduced
for Go in #8003 to Python and C++. This simplifies BUILD files
significantly and opens the way to automated generation.
There is some technical debt introduced, since all visibility controls
have been removed. This is slated for reintroduction in
https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy/issues/8491.
As a bonus (useful for BUILD file generation), also removed the
inconsistency in BUILD package target naming for packages in envoy.api.*
and envoy.type.*. E.g. //envoy/api/v2:v2 is now //envoy/api/v2:pkg.
Risk level: Low (but this will break internal builds and require BUILD
fixups to consuming projects).
Testing: bazel test //test/... @envoy_api//...
Signed-off-by: Harvey Tuch <htuch@google.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ 4e858f17fe08224c9c089240908ccd0c518e01a7
Via ./api/migration/v3alpha.sh. This picks up the changes since the last
sync, in particular the major reformat in #8309.
Risk level: Low (not used yet).
Testing: bazel build @envoy_api//...
Signed-off-by: Harvey Tuch <htuch@google.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ c41cfbf6a33b8115a7e29a2b4a926aad4cd062be
This patch introduces a new tool, protoxform, that will be the basis of
the v2 -> v3 migration tooling. It operates as a Python protoc plugin,
within the same framework as protodoc, and provides the ability to
operate on protoc AST input and generate proto output.
As a first step, the tool is applied reflexively on v2, and functions as
a formatting tool. In later patches, this will be added to
check_format/fix_format scripts and CI.
Part of #8082.
Risk level: medium (it's possible that some inadvertent wire changes
occur, if they do, this patch should be rolled back).
Testing: manual inspection of diff, bazel test //test/..., some
grep/diff scripts to ensure we haven't lost any comments.
Signed-off-by: Harvey Tuch <htuch@google.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ 08b123a8321d359ea66cbbc0e2926545798dabd3
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
This commit refactors the tap transport socket to use the common
tap extension configuration and tap matching infrastructure. More
match conditions will be added in a future PR as well as additional
cleanups that have been marked with TODOs.
One result of this PR is that the HTTP tap filter can now have a static
configuration as well as write to a file per tap sink.
All future tap PRs should be smaller and more targeted after this one.
Signed-off-by: Matt Klein <mklein@lyft.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ f37ebdc14f4c0adf0e90aabddae833355c0cec1b
This is a rename PR only. It renames the capture transport socket
and associated tools to the tap transport socket. It also updates
some documentation. In a subsequent PR I'm going to refactor the
tap transport socket to use the new common tap framework so that
the tap transport socket can be configured via admin, the HTTP
tap filter can write to a file, the tap transport socket can have
matching, etc.
Signed-off-by: Matt Klein <mklein@lyft.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ 7a5849f2a8bcc55fa16da3eaee94d9c99a11147c
* 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
adds the required visibility rules and delegates the rest to the generic
api_proto_library. I tested the change by doing the following without
getting errors.
./ci/run_envoy_docker.sh './ci/do_ci.sh docs'
I changed the BUILD files using the following commands.
/envoy/api$ find . -type f -name BUILD | xargs sed -i -e 's/api_proto_library(/api_proto_library_internal(/g'
envoy/api$ find . -type f -name BUILD | xargs sed -i -e 's/"api_proto_library"/"api_proto_library_internal"/g'
Signed-off-by: mickey <mickeyju@google.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ 4b871c0ab9350882271a490adcee44e613ed9807
Fixes https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy/issues/743
This is a general cleanup of all of the access logging documentation.
I have reorganized a bunch of things and hidden the various gRPC logging
fields that are not implemented yet.
I've also moved the existing tap protos into a new "output" directory. This
is the best name I could come up for cleanly separating output data that might
be stored outside of any service or configuration.
Signed-off-by: Matt Klein <mklein@lyft.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ c15019e79c832d9f0a09468affaadabc4be3e115
* tap/fuzz: transport socket extension for traffic capture.
This PR introduces a transport socket extension that wraps a given transport socket, interposes on its
plain text traffic and records it into a proto trace file on the filesystem. This can be used for a
number of purposes:
1. As a corpus for fuzzing the data plane.
2. Converted to PCAP using a soon-to-be-written utility, allowing existing tools such as Wireshark
to be used to decode L4/L7 protocol history in the trace. Essentially this lets us take advantage
of the PCAP ecosystem.
Relates to #1413 and #508.
Risk Level: Low (opt-in).
Testing: New SSL integration tests, demonstrating plain text intercept.
Signed-off-by: Harvey Tuch <htuch@google.com>
Mirrored from https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy @ 6c7a91733469f76381487f9ca78bdece6825c8c9