- Undo a bunch of hacks in src/boringssl/gen_build_yaml.py
- Store the structued data in YAML/dependencies.py so
we don't need to recreate the filters.
- Update setup.py accordingly
- Adds a new environment variable for turning on the build of ASM
for boring SSL.
- Only enables for x86_64 for now. I think this is likely the most
common target and the only machine I have readily accessible.
Implement the minimal stuff for making a unary call with the new
experimental gRPC Python implementation for Asyncio, called Aio.
What has been added:
- Minimal iomgr code for performing the required network and timer
calls.
- Minimal Cython code implementing the channel, call and the callback
context.
- Minimal Python code that mimics the synchronous implementation but
designed to be asynchronous.
Testing considerations:
Tests have to be executed using the `GRPC_ENABLE_FORK_SUPPORT=0`
environment variable for skipping the fork handles installed by
the core library. This is due to the usage of a syncrhonous server
used as a fixture executed in another process.
Co-authored-by: Manuel Miranda <manuel.miranda@skyscanner.net>
Co-authored-by: Mariano Anaya <mariano.anaya@skyscanner.net>
Co-authored-by: Zhanghui Mao <zhanghui.mao@skyscanner.net>
Co-authored-by: Lidi Zheng <lidiz@google.com>
It's not the default with older Apple clang builds
and without it c++11 features don't work on at least OS X 10.7:
./src/core/lib/gprpp/ref_counted.h:28:10: fatal error: 'atomic' file not found
#include <atomic>
^~~~~~~~
I manually tested it on macOS 10.11 image and there was not a
regression.
This should fix the "Artifact Build MacOS (internal CI)" test failure.
* Use templates instead of generating them every time
* Theme changed
* Add grpc_* modules
* APIs grouped
* No documentation for class members without docstring
* Add docstring for status code
Add an environmental variable GRPC_PYTHON_DISABLE_LIBC_COMPATIBILITY that unsets the GPR_BACKWARDS_COMPATIBILITY_MODE macro during the C++ build.
The reason I'm interested in this to allow gpr_now to use the vdso rather than a syscall to read the time.