`-link` does I/O to download the package list, for every javadoc
invocation. There is no caching, so this happens many times per build.
Swap to offline mode to avoid spamming the servers, and avoid build
failures if the servers aren't entirely healthy.
It wasn't actually being used. Since Java 8u252 in early 2020 we've been
using ALPN from the JDK. The Jetty ALPN Agent has been a noop.
We do keep the Jetty ALPN support in the code and tests, but we don't
have the infrastructure to actually run it.
Add the 'fake' dependency to grpc-netty instead of grpc-core.
grpc-okhttp already depends on grpc-util and probably would be fine
without round_robin on Android.
There's not actually a circular dependency, but some tools can't handle
the compile vs runtime distinction. Such tools are broken, but fixes
have been slow and this approach works with no real downfalls.
Works around #10576#10701
This avoids the (often missing) evaluationDependsOn and fixes using
results from other projects without propagating those through
Configuration. It also reduces the number of useless classes pulled in
by down-stream tests, reducing the probability of rebuilds.
The expectation of fixtures is they help testing down-stream code that
use the classes in main. That applies to all the classes here except for
FakeClock and StaticTestingClassLoader. It would also apply to many
internal classes in grpc-testing, but let's consider cleaning that up
future work.
This can avoid creating an additional 736 tasks (previously 502 out of
1591 were not created). That's not all that important as the build time
is essentially the same, but this lets us see the poor behavior of the
protobuf plugin in our own project and increase our understanding of how
to avoid task creation when developing the plugin. Of the tasks still
being created, protobuf is the highest contributor with 165 tasks,
followed by maven-publish with 76 and appengine with 53. The remaining
59 are from our own build, but indirectly caused by maven-publish.
all: Update netty to 4.1.77.Final and netty_tcnative to 2.0.53.Final
Also switches to a non-release version of rules_jvm_external to allow Bazel build to work with artifact classifiers.
This moves our depedencies into a plain file that can be read and
updated by tooling. While the current tooling is not particularly better
than just using gradle-versions-plugin, it should put us on better
footing. gradle-versions-plugin is actually pretty nice, but will be
incompatible with Gradle 8, so we need to wait a bit to see what the
future holds.
Left libraries as an alias for libs to reduce the commit size and make
it easier to revert if we don't end up liking this approach.
We're using Gradle 7.3.3 where it was an incubating fetaure. But in
Gradle 7.4 is became stable.
* netty: implement UdsNameResolver and UdsNettyChannelProvider
When the scheme is "unix:" we get the UdsNettyChannelProvider to
create a NettyChannelBuilder with DomainSocketAddress type and
other related params needed for UDS sockets
These changes make the build compatible with Gradle 7, except for
Android which requires plugin updates.
I removed animalsniffer from binder because it did nothing (as there
were no signatures) and it was failing after setting toolVersion. It
failed because animalsniffer is only compatible with java plugin. After
this change I put the withId(animalsniffer) loading inside the
withId(java) to avoid a plugin ordering failure. That made it safe again
for binder to load animalsniffer, but it is still best to remove the
plugin from binder as it is misleading.
I did not upgrade Android plugin versions as newer versions (even 3.6)
require dealing with androidx (#8421).
failOnVersionConflict has never been good for us. It is equivalent to
Maven dependencyConvergence which we discourage our users to use because
it is too tempermental and _creates_ version skew issues over time.
However, we had no real alternative for determining if our deps would be
misinterpeted by Maven.
failOnVersionConflict has been a constant drain and makes it really hard
to do seemingly-trivial upgrades. As evidenced by protobuf/build.gradle
in this change, it also caused _us_ to introduce a version downgrade.
This introduces our own custom requireUpperBoundDeps implementation so
that we can get back to simple dependency upgrades _and_ increase our
confidence in a consistent dependency tree.
- Use gradle configuration `api` for dependencies that are part of grpc public api signatures.
- Replace deprecated gradle configurations `compile`, `testCompile`, `runtime` and `testRuntime`.
- With minimal change in dependencies: If we need dep X and Y to compile our code, and if X transitively depends on Y, then our build would still pass even if we only include X as `compile`/`implementation` dependency for our project. Ideally we should include both X and Y explicitly as `implementation` dependency for our project, but in this PR we don't add the missing Y if it is previously missing.
Http2ControlFrameLimitEncoder is from Netty. It is copied here as a
temporary measure until we upgrade to the version of Netty that includes
the class.
See CVE-2019-9515
Motivation:
To support TCP_USER_TIMEOUT(proposal). Nio doesn't support TCP_USER_TIMEOUT while Epoll and KQueue supports TCP_USER_TIME. Since most users/servers are using linux based system, adding Epoll is necessary. KQueue maybe supported later, but not in this PR.
To make it backward compatible for cases where channelType and eventLoop is mixed in with default and user provided object(s), we will fallback to Nio (NioSocketChannel, NioEventLoop). This ensures not breaking existing code (same as existing behavior). Users not specified both channelType and EventLoops will be affect by this Epoll change if netty-epoll is available.
In later version (possibly 1.22.0), the backward compatible behavior will be removed and it will start to throw exception since this is error prone.
This PR adds an automatic gradle format checker and reformats all the *.gradle files. After this, new changes to *.gradle files will fail to build if not in good format, just like checkStyle failure.
The benchmarks should be close to the code they're benchmarking, like
we do with tests.
This includes a bugfix to SerializingExecutorBenchmark to let it run.
The io.grpc.benchmarks.netty benchmarks in benchmarks/ depend on
ByteBufOutputMarshaller from benchmarks's main, so they were not moved.
I'm quite confused how we went this long using Jetty ALPN for the Netty
tests. Anyway, we strongly prefer tcnative, so we should be using it in
the tests.
The new plugin uses a newer version of animalsniffer, allows overriding
the animalsniffer version used, and has up-to-date handling. The
up-to-date handling cuts fully incremental parallel build times in half,
from 5.5s to 2.7s.
The previous plugin was supposed to be verifying tests. However, either
it wasn't verifying them or its verification was broken.
This is a squash and modification of master commits that also includes:
netty,okhttp: Fix CONNECT and its error handling
This commit has been modified to reduce its size to substantially reduce
risk of it breaking Netty error handling. But that also means proxy
error handling just provides a useless "there was an error" sort of
message.
There is no Java API to enable the proxy support. Instead, you must set
the GRPC_PROXY_EXP environment variable which should be set to a
host:port string. The environment variable is temporary; it will not
exist in future releases. It exists to provide support without needing
explicit code to enable the future, while at the same time not risking
enabling it for existing users.