We have a bunch of experiments testing against core e2e - and this is
good for robustness, bad for CI times.
We also have a bunch of marginal but overall necessary fixtures in the
e2e suites - again good for robustness, bad for CI times.
We can eliminate some of the cross product though, and I think safely:
run experiments on a broad range of suites, but not *ALL* the suites,
and get a bunch of our CI time back.
Here I introduce an environment variable: `GRPC_CI_EXPERIMENTS` that's
set when running bazel @experiment= configs, cleared otherwise (so we
can still execute those tests directly when necessary). When that env
var is set we filter out a bunch of suites from the test configurations.
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.
Most recent attempt was #34320, reverted in #34335.
The first commit here is a pure revert. The second commit fixes the
outlier_detection unit test to pass both with and without the
experiment.
In certain situations the current flow control algorithm can result in
sending one flow control update write for every write sent (known
situation: rollout of promise based server calls with qps_test).
Fix things up so that the updates are only sent when truly needed, and
then fix the fallout (turns out our fuzzer had some bugs)
I've placed actual logic changes behind an experiment so that it can be
incrementally & safely rolled out.
This API was [removed in Python
3.12](https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/98040).
Fixes Python 3.12 support in `grpcio` tests.
This is relevant to https://github.com/grpc/grpc/issues/33063.
See also https://github.com/grpc/grpc/pull/33492.
----
I have actually only tested this in a form backported to grpc 1.48.4,
and I am not able to test the change to `bazel/_gevent_test_main.py`
directly. However, the backported form allows me to build grpc 1.48.4
for Fedora Rawhide with Python 3.12, and I believe the version in this
PR to be correct—especially, if CI passes for Python 3.11, I believe
this part of the test code will continue to work in Python 3.12.
We added this as an exploratory measure for a customer that thought they
were using open census (this turned out to be emphatically false).
Remove it since it's probably not how we ultimately want to do this, and
wait for something better to come along.
---------
Co-authored-by: ctiller <ctiller@users.noreply.github.com>
- Upgrade bazel
- Reduce the number of places where bazel version needs to be upgraded
in future.
- also make sure the list of bazel versions to test by bazelified tests
is loaded from supported_versions.txt (it was hardcoded before).
- ~~Try upgrading windows RBE build to bazel 6.3.2 as well.~~
The core idea:
- the source of truth for supported bazel versions is in
`bazel/supported_versions.txt`
- the first version listed in `bazel/supported_versions.txt` is
considered to be the "primary" bazel version and is going to be used in
most places thoroughout the repo.
- use templates to include the primary bazel version in testing
dockerfiles and in a newly introduced `.bazelversion` files (which gets
loaded by our existing `tools/bazel` wrapper).
~~Supersedes https://github.com/grpc/grpc/pull/33880~~
The current `py_grpc_library` results in the wrong grpc proto python
code path when grpc is a third-party source code in a Bazel project.
This PR should fix it.
fixes#31011
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---------
Co-authored-by: Richard Belleville <rbellevi@google.com>
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Not adding CMake support yet
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The previous version (`3.12`) is 7 years old and does not support the
newest Python 3 versions. This causes issues to move certain test
targets (which depends on `pyyaml`) to Python 3 when some CI environment
(e.g. `arm64v8/debian:11`) does not have Python 2 installed. And in
general, we should move away from Python 2. Thus, updated `pyyaml` to
the latest version.
This hopefully should also fix the
`prod:grpc/core/master/linux/arm64/grpc_bazel_test_c_cpp` job breakage.
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Over the past 5 days, this experiment has not introduced any new flakes,
nor increased any flake rates. Let's enable it for debug builds. To
prevent issues over the weekend, I plan to merge it next week, July 31st
(with announcement).
This PR implements a c-ares based DNS resolver for EventEngine with the
reference from the original
[grpc_ares_wrapper.h](../blob/master/src/core/ext/filters/client_channel/resolver/dns/c_ares/grpc_ares_wrapper.h).
The PosixEventEngine DNSResolver is implemented on top of that. Tests
which use the client channel resolver API
([resolver.h](../blob/master/src/core/lib/resolver/resolver.h#L54)) are
ported, namely the
[resolver_component_test.cc](../blob/master/test/cpp/naming/resolver_component_test.cc)
and the
[cancel_ares_query_test.cc](../blob/master/test/cpp/naming/cancel_ares_query_test.cc).
The WindowsEventEngine DNSResolver will use the same EventEngine's
grpc_ares_wrapper and will be worked on next.
The
[resolve_address_test.cc](https://github.com/grpc/grpc/blob/master/test/core/iomgr/resolve_address_test.cc)
which uses the iomgr
[DNSResolver](../blob/master/src/core/lib/iomgr/resolve_address.h#L44)
API has been ported to EventEngine's dns_test.cc. That leaves only 2
tests which use iomgr's API, notably the
[dns_resolver_cooldown_test.cc](../blob/master/test/core/client_channel/resolvers/dns_resolver_cooldown_test.cc)
and the
[goaway_server_test.cc](../blob/master/test/core/end2end/goaway_server_test.cc)
which probably need to be restructured to use EventEngine DNSResolver
(for one thing they override the original grpc_ares_wrapper's free
functions). I will try to tackle these in the next step.
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Note that the plugin is still under `grpc::internal` namespace and not
under `experimental` intentionally.
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This was done manually due to a problem with
`tools/distrib/python/make_grpcio_tools.py`. ~I fixed it in this PR
(depends on cl/547979185), so there is a fair chance this upgrade will
work normally for the next release.~ The fix may be problematic for
upgrading protobuf on older release branches, so the improvement will be
worked on separately. CC @jtattermusch
This also updates the UPB dep to the latest commit on the 23.x branch.
The intuition here is that these strings may end up in the hpack table,
and then unnecessarily extend the lifetime of the read blocks.
Instead, take a copy of these short strings when we need to and allow
the incoming large memory object to be discarded.
---------
Co-authored-by: ctiller <ctiller@users.noreply.github.com>
Add bazel dependency on opentelemetry-cpp.
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With some delay, this is a PR for
https://github.com/grpc/grpc/issues/32564 (and previously
https://github.com/grpc/grpc/pull/31791).
I looked into adding a regular `py_test` for this change [as
suggested](https://github.com/grpc/grpc/pull/31791#issuecomment-1423245116)
but I am not aware of any effect that the presence of a .pyi stub file
would have at runtime and where some sort of type-checking in a .py
script would be affected. Stub files are only for use by type checkers &
IDE's. I mean, something like this would work:
```
import helloworld_pb2
py_file = helloworld_pb2.__file__
pyi_file = py_file + 'i’
self.assertTrue(os.path.exists(pyi_file))
```
But that seems really hacky to me. Instead I created a simple rule test
for `py_proto_library` with Bazel Skylib which tests the declared
outputs for an example `py_proto_library` target. Indirectly, this also
tests that the declared output files are actually generated. Please let
me know if this is sufficient.
~Something about the additional load from #33374 has caused some
entirely unrelated ios tests to fail sporadically. I'd prefer not to
roll back that however as it's discovered real bugs that had been
previously masked.~
These tests have been failing sporadically for some time.
We can track these on the daily flakiness reports, but whilst we
investigate let's just universally mark them as flaky so we don't
confuse folks trying to submit.