Need to do the channelz bit prior to the finishing the op bit.
<!--
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.
-->
Resolve `TESTING_VERSION` to `dev-VERSION` when the job is initiated by
a user, and not the CI. Override this behavior with setting
`FORCE_TESTING_VERSION`.
This solves the problem with the manual job runs executed against a WIP
branch (f.e. a PR) overriding the tag of the CI-built image we use for
daily testing.
The `dev` and `dev-VERSION` "magic" values supported by the
`--testing_version` flag:
- `dev` and `dev-master` and treated as `master`: all
`config.version_gte` checks resolve to `True`.
- `dev-VERSION` is treated as `VERSION`: `dev-v1.55.x` is treated as
simply `v1.55.x`. We do this so that when manually running jobs for old
branches the feature skip check still works, and unsupported tests are
skipped.
This changes will take care of all langs/branches, no backports needed.
ref b/256845629
Currently, we are not very consistent in what we assume the initial
state of an LB policy will be and whether or not we assume that it will
immediately report a new picker when it gets its initial address update;
different parts of our code make different assumptions. This PR
establishes the convention that LB policies will be assumed to start in
state CONNECTING and will *not* be assumed to report a new picker
immediately upon getting their initial address update, and we now assume
that convention everywhere consistently.
This is a preparatory step for changing policies like round_robin to
delegate to pick_first, which I'm working on in #32692. As part of that
change, we need pick_first to not report a connectivity state until it
actually sees the connectivity state of the underlying subchannels, so
that round_robin knows when to swap over to a new child list without
reintroducing the problem fixed in #31939.
To fix this error
```
test/core/security/grpc_authorization_engine_test.cc:88:32: error: unknown type name 'Json'; did you mean 'experimental::Json'?
ParseAuditLoggerConfig(const Json&) override {
^~~~
experimental::Json
```
This check compares the host portion of the target name to the authority
header, but in common use cases (e.g. GCS) they may not coincide.
Additionally, this check does not happen in the Go and Java ALTS stacks.
This makes the JSON API visible as part of the C-core API, but in the
`experimental` namespace. It will be used as part of various
experimental APIs that we will be introducing in the near future, such
as the audit logging API.
WireWriter implementation schedules actions to be run by `ExecCtx`. We
should flush pending actions before destructing
`end2end_testing::g_transaction_processor`, which need to be alive to
handle the scheduled actions. Otherwise,
we get heap-use-after-free error because the testing fixture
(`end2end_testing::g_transaction_processor`) is destructed before all
the scheduled actions are run.
This lowers end2end binder transport test failure rate from 0.23% to
0.15%, according to internal tool that runs the test for 15000 times
under various configuration.
This file does not contain a shebang, and whenever I try and run it it
wedges my console into some weird state.
There's a .sh file with the same name that should be run instead. Remove
the executable bit of the thing we shouldn't run directly so we, like,
don't.
<!--
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.
-->
Previously the error message didn't provide much context, example:
```py
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/tmpfs/tmp/tmp.BqlenMyXyk/grpc/tools/run_tests/xds_k8s_test_driver/tests/affinity_test.py", line 127, in test_affinity
self.assertLen(
AssertionError: [] has length of 0, expected 1.
```
ref b/279990584.
This PR implements a work-stealing thread pool for use inside
EventEngine implementations. Because of historical risks here, I've
guarded the new implementation behind an experiment flag:
`GRPC_EXPERIMENTS=work_stealing`. Current default behavior is the
original thread pool implementation.
Benchmarks look very promising:
```
bazel test \
--test_timeout=300 \
--config=opt -c opt \
--test_output=streamed \
--test_arg='--benchmark_format=csv' \
--test_arg='--benchmark_min_time=0.15' \
--test_arg='--benchmark_filter=_FanOut' \
--test_arg='--benchmark_repetitions=15' \
--test_arg='--benchmark_report_aggregates_only=true' \
test/cpp/microbenchmarks:bm_thread_pool
```
2023-05-04: `bm_thread_pool` benchmark results on my local machine (64
core ThreadRipper PRO 3995WX, 256GB memory), comparing this PR to
master:
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/295906/236315252-35ed237e-7626-486c-acfa-71a36f783d22.png)
2023-05-04: `bm_thread_pool` benchmark results in the Linux RBE
environment (unsure of machine configuration, likely small), comparing
this PR to master.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/295906/236317164-2c5acbeb-fdac-4737-9b2d-4df9c41cb825.png)
---------
Co-authored-by: drfloob <drfloob@users.noreply.github.com>
One TXT lookup query can return multiple TXT records (see the following
example). `EventEngine::DNSResolver` should return all of them to let
the caller (e.g. `event_engine_client_channel_resolver`) decide which
one they would use.
```
$ dig TXT wikipedia.org
; <<>> DiG 9.18.12-1+build1-Debian <<>> TXT wikipedia.org
;; global options: +cmd
;; Got answer:
;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 49626
;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 3, AUTHORITY: 0, ADDITIONAL: 1
;; OPT PSEUDOSECTION:
; EDNS: version: 0, flags:; udp: 512
;; QUESTION SECTION:
;wikipedia.org. IN TXT
;; ANSWER SECTION:
wikipedia.org. 600 IN TXT "google-site-verification=AMHkgs-4ViEvIJf5znZle-BSE2EPNFqM1nDJGRyn2qk"
wikipedia.org. 600 IN TXT "yandex-verification: 35c08d23099dc863"
wikipedia.org. 600 IN TXT "v=spf1 include:wikimedia.org ~all"
```
Note that this change also deviates us from the iomgr's DNSResolver API
which uses std::string as the result type.
<!--
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.
-->
<!--
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.
-->
---------
Co-authored-by: Sergii Tkachenko <hi@sergii.org>
Reverts grpc/grpc#32924. This breaks the build again, unfortunately.
From `test/core/event_engine/cf:cf_engine_test`:
```
error: module .../grpc/test/core/event_engine/cf:cf_engine_test does not depend on a module exporting 'grpc/support/port_platform.h'
```
@sampajano I recommend looking into CI tests to catch iOS problems
before merging. We can enable EventEngine experiments in the CI
generally once this PR lands, but this broken test is not one of those
experiments. A normal build should have caught this.
cc @HannahShiSFB
<!--
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.
-->
The job run time was creeping to the 2h timeout. Let's bump it to 3h.
Note that this is `master` branch, so it also includes the build time
every time we commit to grpc/grpc.
ref b/280784903
This PR tries to correct a confusing message. For my little
understanding, it seems that if the code reaches that level, it is not
correct to say that setting TCP_USER_TIMEOUT failed, but actually it
succeeded (setsockopt returned 0) but is different to the previous value
option.
I haven't found the `gpr_log` description, so I hope the PR is correct.
---------
Signed-off-by: Joan Fontanals Martinez <joan.martinez@jina.ai>
### Description
Fix https://github.com/grpc/grpc/issues/24470.
Adding one example which demonstrate the following use cases:
* Generate RPC ID on client side and propagate to server.
* Context propagation from client to server.
* Context propagation between different server interceptors and the
server handler.
## Use:
1. Start server: `python3 -m async_greeter_server_with_interceptor`
2. Start client: `python3 -m async_greeter_client`
### Expected Logs:
* On client side:
```
Sending request with rpc id: 73bb98beff10c2dd7b9f2252a1e2039e
Greeter client received: Hello, you!
```
* On server side:
```
INFO:root:Starting server on [::]:50051
INFO:root:Interceptor1 called with rpc_id: default
INFO:root:Interceptor2 called with rpc_id: Interceptor1-default
INFO:root:Handle rpc with id Interceptor2-Interceptor1-73bb98beff10c2dd7b9f2252a1e2039e in server handler.
```
<!--
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.
-->
Reverts grpc/grpc#33002. Breaks internal builds:
`.../privacy_context:filters does not depend on a module exporting
'.../src/core/lib/channel/context.h'`
Change call attributes to be stored in a `ChunkedVector` instead of
`std::map<>`, so that the storage can be allocated on the arena. This
means that we're now doing a linear search instead of a map lookup, but
the total number of attributes is expected to be low enough that that
should be okay.
Also, we now hide the actual data structure inside of the
`ServiceConfigCallData` object, which required some changes to the
`ConfigSelector` API. Previously, the `ConfigSelector` would return a
`CallConfig` struct, and the client channel would then use the data in
that struct to populate the `ServiceConfigCallData`. This PR changes
that such that the client channel creates the `ServiceConfigCallData`
before invoking the `ConfigSelector`, and it passes the
`ServiceConfigCallData` into the `ConfigSelector` so that the
`ConfigSelector` can populate it directly.
The protection is added at `xds_http_rbac_filter.cc` where we read the
new field. With this disabling the feature, nothing from things like
`xds_audit_logger_registry.cc` shall be invoked.
Makes some awkward fixes to compression filter, call, connected channel
to hold the semantics we have upheld now in tests.
Once the fixes described here
https://github.com/grpc/grpc/blob/master/src/core/lib/channel/connected_channel.cc#L636
are in this gets a lot less ad-hoc, but that's likely going to be
post-landing promises client & server side.
We specifically need special handling for server side cancellation in
response to reads wrt the inproc transport - which doesn't track
cancellation thoroughly enough itself.
<!--
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.
-->
---------
Co-authored-by: ctiller <ctiller@users.noreply.github.com>
<!--
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.
-->
1. `GrpcAuthorizationEngine` creates the logger from the given config in
its ctor.
2. `Evaluate()` invokes audit logging when needed.
---------
Co-authored-by: rockspore <rockspore@users.noreply.github.com>
See `event_engine.h` for the contract change. All other changes are
cleanup.
I confirmed that both the Posix and Windows implementations comply with
this already.
On Windows, the `WindowsEventEngineListener` will only call
`on_shutdown` after all `SinglePortSocketListener`s have been destroyed,
which ensures that no `on_accept` callback will be executed, even if
there is still trailing overlapped activity on the listening socket.
On Posix, the `PosixEngineListenerImpl` will only call `on_shutdown`
after all `AsyncConnectionAcceptor`s have been destroyed, which ensures
`EventHandle::OrphanHandle` has been called. The `OrphanHandle` contract
indicates that all existing notify closures must have already run. The
implementation looks to comply, so if it does not, that's a bug.
3aae08d25e/src/core/lib/event_engine/posix_engine/event_poller.h (L48-L50)
<!--
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.
-->
Whilst the per cpu counters probably help single channel contention, we
think it's likely that they're a pessimization when taken fleetwide.
<!--
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.
-->
Spin off from https://github.com/grpc/grpc/pull/32701.
<!--
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.
-->
Spin off from https://github.com/grpc/grpc/pull/32701.
<!--
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.
-->
Add audit condition and audit logger config into `grpc_core::Rbac`.
Support translation of audit logging options from authz policy to it.
Audit logging options in authz policy looks like:
```json
{
"audit_logging_options": {
"audit_condition": "ON_DENY",
"audit_loggers": [
{
"name": "logger",
"config": {},
"is_optional": false
}
]
}
}
```
which is consistent with what's in the xDS RBAC proto but a little
flattened.
---------
Co-authored-by: rockspore <rockspore@users.noreply.github.com>