Turns out that putting this in the main build definition starklark file
means that our users will also incur a dependency on the repo rule.
That's no bueno.
This reverts commit 78e443b4f6.
* Remove the toolchains //third_party/toolchains:local and //third_party/toolchains:local_large.
* Remove the platforms :rbe_ubuntu1604, :rbe_ubuntu1604_large, :local and :local_large.
* No longer inherit from @rbe_default//config:platform but instead use it directly. It is now the only non-windows platform.
* When creating @rbe_default//config:platform directly with rbe_autoconfig, set dockerAddCapabilities and dockerPrivileged directly in the exec_properties field. No need to set dockerNetwork to "off" and dockerSiblingContainers to false since these are the defaults.
* Also set gceMachineType = "n1-highmem-2" on the default platform. This value can be overridden by specific targets that want to use LARGE_MACHINE.
* Use create_exec_properties_dict where appropriate.
* Use custom_exec_properties to define LARGE_MACHINE.
I wasn't able to test thoroughly that this PR does not break any existing targets. I was not able to run anything on windows/mac and I also don't have access to gRPC's RBE setup.
Every thread intitiates multiple RPCs. The Callback of the unary RPC then issues a new RPC and this goes until the benchmark shuts down. For shutdown the main thread waits on a conditional variable. After shutdown the callbacks increment a rpcs done variable and once the the rpcs done equate the the total number of outstanding rpcs, the last callback performing the increment operation also issues a signal to wake up the main thread. The mainthread process to join the other threads and perform cleanup