Change was created by the release automation script. See go/grpc-release.
Closes#35580
COPYBARA_INTEGRATE_REVIEW=https://github.com/grpc/grpc/pull/35580 from stanley-cheung:bump_dev_version_202401171835 b363888ca5
PiperOrigin-RevId: 599267642
- Fixed the bazel distrib tests with Bazel 7 by disabling bzlmod option.
- Added a new note for bzlmod to the doc.
Closes#35390
PiperOrigin-RevId: 593816700
- Added Bazel 7 to the support bazel versions.
- Changed the default Bazel version to 7.
- Fixed Android Binder build issue.
Closes#35362
PiperOrigin-RevId: 592946781
The Server Reflection Protocol v1 is already released. I think v1 is a better link to the Protocol, not v1alpha now.
Closes#35330
COPYBARA_INTEGRATE_REVIEW=https://github.com/grpc/grpc/pull/35330 from y-yagi:patch-1 a89cb60b1e
PiperOrigin-RevId: 592356694
more strict --> stricter
<!--
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.
-->
Closes#34907
COPYBARA_INTEGRATE_REVIEW=https://github.com/grpc/grpc/pull/34907 from lixin963:patch-1 9081eb445e
PiperOrigin-RevId: 591176601
`succeed-on-retry-attempt-<int>` is what is being currently used in the
Java server implementation and also by the test client. The spec was
probably written after the stuff was implemented and this typo is better
fixed before other languages implement their server side logic. Go is in
the process of doing so.
- add entry for aggregate and logical DNS cluster support
- add entry for least_request LB policy
- add a bunch of missing versions in various languages
Fix b/304114403
- adds a new experimental tracer useful for diagnosing ping timeout
failures in unit tests
- adds a pair of experimental tracers for fuzzing event engine
- fix the behavior of FuzzingEventEngine so that a RunAfter(0, ...) runs
in the same tick
- up the rate of sends (reduce the send delay) so we guarantee to be
able to send 200kb/sec in fuzzed e2e unit tests
---------
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.
-->
- 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~~
This adds a new channel argument `GRPC_ARG_DSCP` which allows users to
create classified gRPC streams with a
Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) marking on the IP frames.
The channel argument is handled on both clients and servers, but
currently only on posix based systems.
Fixes#17225
**Background**:
In addition to what is already described is #17225, when gRPC is used in
telco systems there is often a need to classify streams of importance.
There can be multiple hops between two endpoints (e.g. between 2 telecom
operators) and some streams that are more important than others (e.g.
emergency call related or similar). By marking the IP packets using DSCP
the aware routers can make a sound decision of the prioritization.
This PR propose to use DSCP as the configuration value since its common
for both IPv4/IPv6, an alternative would be to use a config name that
includes TOS and Traffic Class.
There might be more needed regarding documentation and end2end testing,
but there I need some advice.
**References**
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc2474https://www.iana.org/assignments/dscp-registry/dscp-registry.xhtml
<!--
Your pull request will be routed to the following person by default for
triaging.
If you know who should review your pull request, please remove the
mentioning below.
-->
@yashykt
Revert "Revert "[core] Add support for vsock transport"
(https://github.com/grpc/grpc/pull/33276)"
This reverts commit
c5ade3011a.
And fix the issue which broke the python build.
@markdroth@drfloob please review this PR. Thank you very much.
---------
Co-authored-by: AJ Heller <hork@google.com>
This is another attempt to add support for vsock in grpc since previous
PRs(#24551, #21745) all closed without merging.
The VSOCK address family facilitates communication between
virtual machines and the host they are running on.
This patch will introduce new scheme: [vsock:cid:port] to
support VSOCK address family.
Fixes#32738.
---------
Signed-off-by: Yadong Qi <yadong.qi@intel.com>
Co-authored-by: AJ Heller <hork@google.com>
Co-authored-by: YadongQi <YadongQi@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.
-->
each oob test runs at least 2s (2 verifications with each server sending
report each 1s), current configuration allows at most 3 clients run in
parallel. In reality, probably only the two clients against one server.
Currently 8 jobs are running each batch, and it happens that each batch
has at most 2 oob clients against one server.
Since 3 languages support orca, so we should allow 3 clients running
against one server so the timeout is at least 4s. We give some buffers
to allow tests running more reliably.
10s in theory support 5-6 clients running against one server.
### 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.
```
Oops I missed important changes from
https://github.com/grpc/grpc/pull/32712. And it turned out that there
are two problems that I couldn't fix at this point.
- Windows Bazel RBE Linker Error: This may be caused by how new Bazel 6
invokes build tools chain but it's not clear. I put workaround to use
Bazel 5 by using `OVERRIDE_BAZEL_VERSION=5.4.1`
- Rule `rules_pods` to fetch CronetFramework from CocoaPod has
incompatibility with sort of built-in apple toolchain.
(https://github.com/bazel-xcode/PodToBUILD/issues/232): I couldn't find
a workaround to fix this so I ended up disabling all tests depending
this target.
<!--
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.
-->
I'm opening this PR to (hopefully!) stimulate a discussion. In brief,
I'd like to amend the gRPC-Web protocol docs to encourage
implementations to follow HTTP semantics and compare HTTP field names
case-insensitively.
The gRPC-Web specification is a nicely-designed way for proxies to
expose standard HTTP/2 gRPC servers to clients using less
tightly-controlled HTTP stacks, such as web browsers. To serve that
goal, it seems valuable to have the gRPC-Web specification follow [RFC
9110 (HTTP
Semantics)](https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc9110.html#name-field-names).
Like previous RFCs, 9110 specifies that "field names are
case-insensitive." However, the current gRPC-Web specification requires
that servers and proxies "use lower-case header/trailer names" on the
wire. In principle, mandating casing on the wire is normal for HTTP/2
and fine (if unusual) for HTTP/1.1; however, it encourages
implementations to violate HTTP semantics and require lower-case names
when _reading_ headers and trailers.
I'd like to loosen the gRPC-Web specification to permit any casing on
the wire for HTTP/1.1. I'd also like to emphasize that gRPC-Web
implementations ought to follow standard HTTP semantics when _reading_
fields and compare names case-insensitively. Implementations that can't
treat names case-insensitively without breaking backward compatibility
should instead normalize field names to lowercase. Among the
Google-maintained gRPC implementations, at least `grpc-go` and
`grpc-java` already compare names case-insensitively (even though
they're HTTP/2-only). `grpc-dart` does the opposite and compares names
case-sensitively. `grpc-web` is sometimes case-insensitive (when reading
`grpc-status` and `grpc-message` from trailers-only responses) and
sometimes case-sensitive (when hand-parsing a block of length-prefixed
trailers).
The proposed amendment does not affect the correctness of Envoy (which
may continue to use lower-case field names). It partially affects
`grpc-web`, which would require a small patch to always normalize names.
(Both patched and unpatched versions of `grpc-web` would work with
Envoy.) `grpc-dart` would need to either begin treating field names
case-insensitively or normalize names, depending on what's possible in
Dart without breaking backward compatibility.
Relates to https://github.com/improbable-eng/grpc-web/issues/228,
https://github.com/bufbuild/connect-go/issues/453/, and
https://github.com/grpc/grpc-dart/issues/594.