* context, all: move Context classes to grpc-api
clean up grpc-context since it has no source code: only add dep on grpc-api
add exclusion for all transitive deps of grpc-api - only guava
exclude grpc-context as a dependency from grpc-alts because all context code is in grpc-api now
api: 1.7 as target Java version for Context source-set of grpc-api
* core, census: fix the issues with android project pulling in old grpc-context version
* api,context: make changes to bazel build files to account for context code moving from context to api
Since 44847bf4e, when we upgraded our JUnit version, the JUnit
exclusions have probably not been necessary. e0ac97c4f upgraded
Robolectric to a version that had the auto.service problem fixed.
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.
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.
`io.grpc.internal.testing.StatsTestUtils` in `grpc-testing` is only used internally by `grpc-interop-testing` and unit tests. The opencensus dependency does not need to be exposed to `grpc-interop-testing` maven artifact.
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.
Define util function to exclude guava's transitive dependencies jsr305 and animal-sniffer-annotations, and always manually add them as runtimeOnly dependency. error_prone_annotations is an exception: It is also excluded but manually added not as runtimeOnly. It must always compile with guava, otherwise users will see warning spams if guava is in the compile classpath but error_prone_annotations is not.
The sourceSets.main.output.collect should probably be improved at some point to
improve loading performance, but this is technically better than what we had
before so let's call it a win and move on.
Decouples grpc-core with census, while still preserve the default integration of census in grpc-core. Users wishing to enable census needs to add grpc-census to their runtime classpath.
- Created a grpc-census module:
- Moved CensusStatsModule.java and CensusTracingModule.java into grpc-census from grpc-core. CensusModuleTests.java is also moved. They now belong to io.grpc.census package.
Moved DeprecatedCensusConstants.java into io.grpc.census.internal (is this necessary?) in grpc-census.
- Created CensusStatsAccessor.java and CensusTracingAccessor.java, which are used to create census ClientInterceptor and ServerStreamTracer.Factory.
- Everything in grpc-census are package private, except the accessor classes. They only publicly expose ClientInterceptor and ServerStreamTracer.Factory, no Census specific types are exposed.
- Use runtime reflection to load and apply census stats/tracing to channel/server builders, if grpc-census is found in runtime classpath.
- Removed special APIs on AbstractManagedChannelImplBuilder and AbstractServerImplBuilder for overriding census module. They are only used for testing. Now we changed tests to apply Census ClientInterceptor and ServerStreamTracer.Factory just as normal interceptor/stream tracer factory. Test writer is responsible for taking care of the ordering concerns of interceptors and stream tracer factories.
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.
This will ease a lot of test scenarios that we want to automatically shut down servers and channels, with much more flexibility than `GrpcServerRule`. Resolves#3624
**ManagedChannel/Server cleanup details:**
- If the test has already failed, call `shutdownNow()` for each of the resources registered. Throw (an exception including) the original failure. End.
- If the test is successful, call `shutdown()` for each of the resources registered.
- Call `awaitTermination()` with `timeout = deadline - current time` and assert termination for each resource. If any error occurs, break immediately and call `shutdownNow()` for the current resource and all the rest resources.
- Throw the first exception encountered if any.
GrpcServerRule configures an in-process server and channel. It is
useful for asserting requests being made to a service. A consumer can
create a mock implementation of their service that records each
request, then make assertions on those records in their test.
This is lower-level than the existing AbstractTransportTest. It should
be used by all transports, but InProcessTransport is the only one as
part of this commit.