We have many tests that create 100 threads or more, and mounting evidence that
this is harmful to our CI environment.
When the original code for many of these tests was written we ran our tests
under run_tests, which had explicit handling for tracking the number of threads
each test needed and making sure that we weren't over subscribing the test
runner. Bazel has no such facility (and the facility in run_tests has since
been removed) and so we need to adjust.
This PR adjusts down a single test and is part of a series so that we can
review and roll back easily if required.
* service config API: use absl::Status instead of grpc_error
* Automated change: Fix sanity tests
* add missing build deps
* attempt to work around build breakage on older compilers
* trying the work-around in more spots
* more work-arounds
* more workarounds
* Automated change: Fix sanity tests
* work around another compiler problem
* Automated change: Fix sanity tests
* Automated change: Fix sanity tests
Co-authored-by: markdroth <markdroth@users.noreply.github.com>
* Refactor end2end tests to exercise each EventEngine
* fix incorrect bazel_only exclusions
* Automated change: Fix sanity tests
* microbenchmark fix
* sanitize, fix iOS flub
* Automated change: Fix sanity tests
* iOS fix
* reviewer feedback
* first pass at excluding EventEngine test expansion
Also caught a few cases where we should not test pollers, but should
test all engines. And two cases where we likely shouldn't be testing
either product.
* end2end fuzzers to be fuzzed differently via EventEngine.
* sanitize
* reviewer feedback
* remove misleading comment
* reviewer feedback: comments
* EE test_init needs to play with our build system
* fix golden file test runner
Co-authored-by: drfloob <drfloob@users.noreply.github.com>
Based on a handful of https://abseil.io/tips, it's generally advised to
only fully-qualify namespaces when in a `using` statement, or when it's
otherwise required for compilation. In all other cases, the general
recommendation is to not fully-qualify.
This change fixes most `grpc.*` namespace uses. There are potential
challenges in trying to make blanket changes to non-gRPC namespace uses,
such as `::testing`, since there is also a `grpc::testing` namespace.
Based on a handful of https://abseil.io/tips, it's generally advised to
only fully-qualify namespaces when in a `using` statement, or when it's
otherwise required for compilation. In all other cases, the general
recommendation is to not fully-qualify.
This change fixes most `grpc.*` namespace uses. There are potential
challenges in trying to make blanket changes to non-gRPC namespace uses,
such as `::testing`, since there is also a `grpc::testing` namespace.
This reverts commit dc1089a6d1, reversing
changes made to 31843787cc.
This change also includes - Revert "Merge pull request #17932 from soheilhy/gprpp-mutex"
This reverts commit df4b6a763d, reversing
changes made to dc1089a6d1.
Introduce RAII wrappers in the grpc::internal and grpc_core
namespaces, and use them in place of std::mutex and
std::condition_variable.
Note that, since std::mutex is also used by the public
C++ headers we cannot introduce these wrappers in grpc_core.
Also, note that in grpcpp we cannot use gRPC core and vice versa.
So we had to duplicate the code, once using core_codegen_interface
and once using direct calls.