This commit upgrades gRPC to protobuf v25.0 and makes some fixes to
account for upb changes. One major change is that upb has been merged
into the protobuf repo, so we can now drop the separate `@upb`
dependency. Another is that `.upb.c` files no longer exist and there are
new `.upb_minitable.h` and `.upb_minitable.c` files. The longer
filenames exceeded a Windows restriction, so to work around that I
renamed the `upb-generated` directory to just `upb-gen`, and likewise
for `upbdefs-generated`.
Changes to fake resolver:
- Add `WaitForReresolutionRequest()` method to fake resolver response
generator to allow tests to tell when re-resolution has been requested.
- Change fake resolver response generator API to have only one mechanism
for injecting results, regardless of whether the result is an error or
whether it's triggered by a re-resolution.
Changes to grpclb_end2end_test:
- Change balancer interface such that instead of setting a list of
responses with fixed delays, the test can control exactly when each
response is set.
- Change balancer impl to always send the initial LB response, as
expected by the grpclb protocol.
- Change balancer impl to always read load reports, even if load
reporting is not expected to be enabled. (The latter case will still
cause the test to fail.) Reads are done in a different thread than
writes.
- Allow each test to directly control how many backends and balancers
are started and the client load reporting interval, so that (a) we don't
waste resources starting servers we don't need and (b) there is no need
to arbitrarily split tests across different test classes.
- Add timeouts to `WaitForAllBackends()` functionality, so that tests
will fail with a useful error rather than timing out.
- Improved ergonomics of various helper functions in the test framework.
In the process of making these changes, I found a couple of bugs:
- A bug in pick_first, which I fixed in #34885.
- A bug in grpclb, in which we were using the wrong condition to decide
whether to propagate a re-resolution request from the child policy,
which I've fixed in this PR. (This bug probably originated way back in
#18344.)
This should address a lot of the flakes seen in grpclb_e2e_test
recently.
As such, `alts_zero_copy_grpc_protector_create` will take a
`GsecKeyFactoryInterface` to create `GsecKeyInterface` objects for the
underlying crypter to use.
This enables the caller to control how all the key related buffers are
prepared and protected.
`gsec_aes_gcm_aead_crypter` holds the raw pointer to `GsecKeyInterface`
instead of a `unique_ptr` possibly because somewhere in the test (and
maybe production code as well), the structure is getting copied. A SEGV
error would be caused with `unique_ptr` which doesn't support copy
operations.
Also break the filter stack and promise based versions apart so that I
can re-understand this code.
---------
Co-authored-by: ctiller <ctiller@users.noreply.github.com>
Add TcpTracer interface for TCP instrumentation. It takes no gRPC
dependencies for use in external TCP implementations. Also add
HttpAnnotation for HTTP transport instrumentation using CallTracer.
<!--
If you know who should review your pull request, please assign it to
that
person, otherwise the pull request would get assigned randomly.
If your pull request is for a specific language, please add the
appropriate
lang label.
-->
Reverse dependency edge, so instead of saying `logging_filter _after_
otel`, instead say `otel _before_ logging_filter` - since this doesn't
inadvertently bring otel into builds where it's unnecessary.
Required moving filter class definitions into the header - which mirrors
all other filters, so I think this is fine.
Also required removing the bespoke visibility rules on logging_filter -
which also seems relatively fine (the defaults limit to grpc usage, and
it's hard to see a firm requirement for tighter visibility that that).
Fixes https://github.com/grpc/grpc/issues/34482.
But this is only a bandaid, there is a bigger issue with build
dependencies. AFAICT,
https://github.com/grpc/grpc/blob/master/tools/distrib/fix_build_deps.py
does not work on many targets, e.g. if the target has specified the
`nofixdeps` tag or if a field is set to a variable, e.g.
```
GRPCXX_SRCS = [
"a",
"b",
"c",
]
...
srcs = GRPCXX_SRCS,
```
<!--
If you know who should review your pull request, please assign it to
that
person, otherwise the pull request would get assigned randomly.
If your pull request is for a specific language, please add the
appropriate
lang label.
-->
Ditch the old priority scheme for ordering filters, instead explicitly
mark up before/after constraints.
---------
Co-authored-by: ctiller <ctiller@users.noreply.github.com>
The basic APIs for the CRL Reloading features.
This adds external types to represent CRL Providers, CRLs, and
CertificateInfo.
Internally we will use `CrlImpl` - this layer is needed to hide OpenSSL
details from the user.
GRFC - https://github.com/grpc/proposal/pull/382
Things Done
* Add external API for `CrlProvider`, `Crl`, `CertInfo` (`CertInfo` is
used during CRL lookup rather than passing the entire certificate).
* Add code paths in `ssl_transport_security` to utilize CRL providers
* Add `StaticCrlProvider`
* Refactor `crl_ssl_transport_security_test.cc` so it is more extensible
and can be used with providers
Instead of fixing a target size for writes, try to adapt it a little to
observed bandwidth.
The initial algorithm tries to get large writes within 100-1000ms
maximum delay - this range probably wants to be tuned, but let's see.
The hope here is that on slow connections we can not back buffer so much
and so when we need to send a ping-ack it's possible without great
delay.
<!--
If you know who should review your pull request, please assign it to
that
person, otherwise the pull request would get assigned randomly.
If your pull request is for a specific language, please add the
appropriate
lang label.
-->
Experiment 1: On RST_STREAM: reduce MAX_CONCURRENT_STREAMS for one round
trip.
Experiment 2: If a settings frame is outstanding with a lower
MAX_CONCURRENT_STREAMS than is configured, and we receive a new incoming
stream that would exceed the new cap, randomly reject it.
---------
Co-authored-by: ctiller <ctiller@users.noreply.github.com>
Cap requests per read, rst_stream handled per read.
If these caps are exceeded, offload processing of the connection to a
backing thread pool, and allow other connections to make progress.
Isolate ping callback tracking to its own file.
Also takes the opportunity to simplify keepalive code by applying the
ping timeout to all pings.
Adds an experiment to allow multiple pings outstanding too (this was
originally an accidental behavior change of the work, but one that I
think may be useful going forward).
---------
Co-authored-by: ctiller <ctiller@users.noreply.github.com>
More changes as part of the dualstack design:
- Change resolver and LB policy APIs to support multiple addresses per
endpoint. Specifically, replace `ServerAddress` with
`EndpointAddresses`, which encodes more than one address. Per-address
channel args are retained at the same level, so they are now
per-endpoint. For now, `EndpointAddress` provides a single-address ctor
and a single-address accessor for backward compatibility, so
`ServerAdress` is an alias for `EndpointAddresses`; eventually, this
alias and the single-address methods will be removed.
- Add an `EndpointAddressSet` class, which represents an unordered set
of addresses to be used as a map key. This will be used in a number of
LB policies that need to store per-endpoint state.
- Change the LB policy API's `ChannelControlHelper::CreateSubchannel()`
method to take the address and per-endpoint channel args as separate
parameters, so that we don't need to construct a legacy `ServerAddress`
object as we create a new subchannel for each address in the endpoint.
- Change pick_first to flatten the address list.
- Change ring_hash to use `EndpointAddressSet` as the key for its
endpoint map, and to use the first address of the endpoint as the hash
key.
- Change WRR to use `EndpointAddressSet` as the key for its endpoint
weight map.
Note that support for multiple addresses per endpoint is guarded in RR
by the existing `round_robin_delegate_to_pick_fist` experiment and in
WRR by the existing `wrr_delegate_to_pick_first` experiment.
This PR does *not* include support for multiple addresses per endpoint
for the outlier_detection or xds_override_host LB policies; those will
come in subsequent PRs.
<!--
If you know who should review your pull request, please assign it to
that
person, otherwise the pull request would get assigned randomly.
If your pull request is for a specific language, please add the
appropriate
lang label.
-->
Expand our fuzzing capabilities by allowing fuzzers to choose the bits
that go into random number distribution generators.
---------
Co-authored-by: ctiller <ctiller@users.noreply.github.com>
Add some basic metrics to work serializer, keep them process wide for
now (though it may be interesting to get these into channelz in the
future).
Collected are:
- time spent running a work serializer when it starts
- time spent actually executing work when the work serializer runs
- number of items executed each run
A high disparity between the first two indicates our dispatching
mechanism is adding large amounts of latency (perhaps due to thread
starvation like effects).
A high value for any of these indicate contention on the serializer.
It's likely a future iteration on these will select different metrics -
I'm not *entirely* sure which will be useful in production analysis yet.
I'm using `std::chrono::steady_clock` here for precision (nanoseconds)
with a compact representation (better than timespec) and a robust &
portable api - I think it's appropriate for metrics, but wouldn't use it
much beyond that at this point.
This reverts commit 2db446aa9a.
<!--
If you know who should review your pull request, please assign it to
that
person, otherwise the pull request would get assigned randomly.
If your pull request is for a specific language, please add the
appropriate
lang label.
-->
Original PR was #34307, reverted in #34318 due to internal test
failures.
The first commit is a revert of the revert. The second commit contains
the fix.
The original idea here was that `SubchannelWrapper::Orphan()`, which is
called when the strong refcount reaches 0, would take a new weak ref and
then hop into the `WorkSerializer` before dropping that weak ref, thus
ensuring that the `SubchannelWrapper` is destroyed inside the
`WorkSerializer` (which is needed because the `SubchannelWrapper` dtor
cleans up some state in the channel related to the subchannel). The
problem is that `DualRefCounted<>::Unref()` itself actually increments
the weak ref count before calling `Orphan()` and then decrements it
afterwards. So in the case where the `SubchannelWrapper` is unreffed
outside of the `WorkSerializer` and no other thread happens to be
holding the `WorkSerializer`, the weak ref that we were taking in
`Orphan()` was unreffed inline, which meant that it wasn't actually the
last weak ref -- the last weak ref was the one taken by
`DualRefCounted<>::Unref()`, and it wasn't released until after the
`WorkSerializer` was released.
To this this problem, we move the code from the `SubchannelWrapper` dtor
that cleans up the channel's state into the `WorkSerializer` callback
that is scheduled in `Orphan()`. Thus, regardless of whether or not the
last weak ref is released inside of the `WorkSerializer`, we are
definitely doing that cleanup inside the `WorkSerializer`, which is what
we actually care about.
Also adds an experiment to guard this behavior.
I've added channel args to `CreateNewServerCallTracer` on the
`ServerCallTracerFactory`.
The motivation is for CSM Observability where the OTel plugin will be
configured to only do stats on servers which are xDS enabled, so I plan
to check this via channel args.
In the future, with the new scopes for metrics, I think I'll be able to
change this to only check once per server or server connection instead
of per call.
<!--
If you know who should review your pull request, please assign it to
that
person, otherwise the pull request would get assigned randomly.
If your pull request is for a specific language, please add the
appropriate
lang label.
-->