This reverts commit eca1f7c1d6.
We want to preserve the status message identical to what the server
sent. We'll need a better way to communicate debugging details.
- Channel builders decide the default port based on whether TLS is used.
- Channel builders populate the default port via an Attributes object
passed to NameResolver.Factory#newNameResolver
- NameResolverRegistry contains all the official NameResolvers. Users
can also add custom NameResolvers to it. It looks up NameResolver by
try-and-fail. It is the default NameResolver.Factory for builders.
DnsNameResolver.
- Pass target as Strings instead of URIs from the channel builder to
ManagedChannelImpl. A target string is not necessarily a valid URI, in
which case ManagedChannelImpl will add "dns:///" to the beginning of
the target and use it as URI.
- DnsNameResolver will require scheme "dns" to be present. It no longer
allows scheme-absent URIs.
- Add NameResolver and LoadBalancer interfaces.
- ManagedChannelImpl now uses NameResolver and LoadBalancer for
transport selection, which may return transports to multiple
addresses.
- Transports are still owned by ManagedChannelImpl, which implements
TransportManager interface that is provided to LoadBalancer, so that
LoadBalancer doesn't worry about Transport lifecycles.
- Channel builders can be created by forTarget() that accepts the fully
qualified target name, which is an URI. (TODO) it's not tested.
- The old address-based construction pattern is supported by using
AbstractManagedChannelImplBuilder.DirectAddressNameResolver.
- (TODO) DnsNameResolver and SimpleLoadBalancer are currently
incomplete. They merely work for the single-address scenario.
We want to allow overriding authority in the ManagedChannelBuilder for
testing. In doing that, we basically require that all Channels support
authority. In reality, this simplifies things and is already being done
by the C implementation, as their unix domain socket support uses
"localhost" just like our in-process transport now does.
We can debate some whether "localhost" is really the most appropriate
authority for the in-process transport, but that should probably happen
later since "localhost" is "good enough" for now.
Negotiation failure results in a RuntimeException, which is not properly handled by the okhttp code, resulting in the client hanging.
Refactored the code to shutdown the transport when TLS negotiation fails.
This provides an API for applications to use gRPC without using
ExperimentalApis. It also allows swapping out a transport implementation
in the future.
Client:
* New ManagedChannel abstract class.
* Adding ping to Channel.
* Moving builders and implementations to internal.
Server:
* Added lifecycle management API to Server (mirroring ManagedChannel).
* Moved ServerImpl, AbstractServerBuilder and handler registries to internal.
* New ServerBuilder abstract class (mirroring ManagedChannelBuilder).
Fixes#545
The URI no longer needs to be provided to the Credential explicitly,
which prevents needing to know a magic string and allows using the same
Credential with multiple services.
The current process of building a channel is a bit complicated in that transports have to provide a own shutdown hook to the channel builder in order to close shared executors. This somewhat entagled creation pattern makes it difficult to separate the process of channel building from transport building. Better separating these two should make the code more readable and maintainable moving forward.
Reserve io.grpc for public API only, and all internal stuff in core to
io.grpc.internal, including the non-stable transport API.
Raise the netty/okhttp/inprocess subpackages one level up to io.grpc,
because they are public API and entry points for most users.
Details:
- Rename io.grpc.transport to io.grpc.internal;
- Move SharedResourceHolder and SerializingExecutor to io.grpc.internal
- Rename io.grpc.transport.{netty|okhttp|inprocess} to
io.grpc.{netty|okhttp|inprocess}
Forgot to add this last file
updated method name
Remove unused function
Remove helper function for threshold edge detection
Remove helper function for threshold edge detection
Re make listener abstract
Resolves#511.
- In generated code, make CONFIG private and METHOD_* fields public.
METHOD_* fields are MethodDescriptors now, users of the CONFIG field
should switch to using the METHOD_* fields.
- Move MethodType into MethodDescriptor (#529).
- Unify the fully qualified method name. It is fully qualified service
name + slash + short method name. It doesn't have the leading slash.
- HandlerRegistry switches the key from short method name to fully
qualified method name.
On Android platform, the constructor using hostname will iterate through all solved ip address for making connection.
Before we implement happy eyeballs, this could be a workaround for Android users.
1. Move DEFAULT_CONNECTION_SPEC to OkHttpChannelBuilder
2. make OkHttpClientTransport package-private
3. Rename OkHttpChannelBuilder.setConnectionSpec to connectionSpec
1. update connection window when receives DATA for existed streams.
2. kill the connection when receives unknown (not exist and never existed) stream id.
isReady() can provide pushback while the call is in progress, but it
can also provide the pushback necessary when the client creates more
streams than permitted by MAX_CONCURRENT_STREAMS.
As part of this commit, OkHttp is now calling onReady() after call
creation (it previously never called onReady()).
Set upper and lower bounds for Netty & OkHttp allocators based on transport limitations and benchmark results.
Fix OkHttp OutboundFlowController to chunk payloads larger than frameWriter.maxDataLength
Allow OkHttp to allocate buffers to FrameWriter larger than max DATA length
MessageFramer allows queing of data and explicit flushing. Sinks
generally can benefit from knowing when they are required to flush, so
we now tell them when MessageFramer received a flush so they only have
to flush when required.
Since the user provided SSLSocketFactory (especially in Android) may already do the handshake when creates the SSLSocket, and it may choose a different protocol name other than the one OkHttp is using.
Resolves#293
If a newStream is called while MAX_CONCURRENT_STREAMS is reached, then get the call blocked and the request queued, until:
1. a running stream closed, and this newStream() request is accepted.
2. receives go-away from server, fail all pending new stream requests.
3. the available ids are exhausted.
1. Adds <property name="separateLineBetweenGroups" value="true"/> to CustomImportOrder to enfore blank line between imports groups.
2. Uses checkstyle 6.5, which fixed a bug of "CustomImportOrder checks import sorting according to ASCII order instead of case-insensitive alphabetical order".
Also add OkHttpReadableBuffer unit test, and increase the test string
length to expose the bug.
Also use array equality assertions in the base test, instead of
comparisons whose return value is discarded.
Fixes#231.
For code style, we either need a comment describing why an exception is
ignored or to actually handle the exception. In this case there doesn't
seem to be a strong reason to ignore the exception, but it isn't all
that important either, so just log at INFO.
The checkstyle.xml is a slightly modified version of the upstream Google
checkstyle configuration. All changes have comment describing them.
Lots of warnings were corrected. Examples is the only project that has
warnings still, as the necessary changes require some thought.
When running benchmarks using the okhttp transport with lots of
streams per channel we would see the occasional GOAWAY frame with
the server logging exceptions of the like "io.netty.handler.codec.http2.Http2Exception: Request stream 575 is behind the next expected stream 583".
As quickly identified by @ejona86, there is a race between creating a new stream id and writing the header on the wire.
Putting both under the same lock ensures that those two always go together.
After this change the errors disappeared. The perf impact should be small as the actual write to
the socket doesn't happen within the lock, but only the scheduling of the write.
OkHttp no longer cancels all calls on shutdown, as we want to allow
graceful shutdown. Such cancelling behavior will likely be provided by
Channel in the future.
OkHttp should now have a thread-safe implementation of newStream.
Previously 'lock' was not held when checking goAway and the checking in
AbstractClientTransport was redundant.
Netty was thread-safe, but it was very hard to tell what guarantees were
necessary and what guarantees each piece was providing.
This change loses asynchronous notification of channel state-change and
a way to wait until the channel is actually connected. Both of these are
expected to be added back as part of a health API. The important
distinction from Service is that ChannelImpl never permanently fails and
can revert from being started to connecting again.
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Created by MOE: http://code.google.com/p/moe-java
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=83875407
Summary of changes:
1) Merged the interfaces MessageDeframer2.Sink and DeframerListener into
MessageDeframer2.Listener. This simplifies the interface of
MessageDeframer2 quite a bit.
2) Added a deliveryPaused() handler to MessageDeframer2.Listener, which
is called by the deframer when there is not enough data to read/deliver
the next message.
3) Modified AbstractStream and AbstractClientStream to manage the timing
of when the closed() event is delivered to the listener. The
transportReportStatus ultimately controls this by creating a task to
close the listener. It either runs this task immediately or when the
next deliveryPaused() event occurs.
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Created by MOE: http://code.google.com/p/moe-java
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=83620903
No major refactorings/simplifications were done. Only gRPC v1 support
infrastructure was removed.
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Created by MOE: http://code.google.com/p/moe-java
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=82737436
Any place that force-sets the protocol to 2 or assumes the old value
is now removed. Unfortunately, it seems InProcessTransportTest has
some non-obvious dependency on gRPC v1.
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Created by MOE: http://code.google.com/p/moe-java
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=81597524
have "-bin" suffix in their names.
Split Metadata.Marshaller into BinaryMarshaller and AsciiMarshaller.
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Created by MOE: http://code.google.com/p/moe-java
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=81306135
Now we pass the host directly into OkHttpClientTranport for 2 reasons:
1. We don't need to call InetAddress/InetSocketAddress.getHostName(), which will do a reverse DNS lookup, may return a different value other than user specified.
2. In some tests, we want to change the host to match TLS cert, in such case, we can use OkHttpChannelBuilder.overrideHostForAuthority(String host) to override the host, then the transport will get the overridden value.
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Created by MOE: http://code.google.com/p/moe-java
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=81169377
check for it, so that we can detect intermediate proxies that do not support
trailers.
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Created by MOE: http://code.google.com/p/moe-java
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=81084983
Remove synchronization on stateLock as we are not required to be thread safe
Add better toString for stream impls
Internal cleanup of various 'status' fields in AbstractClientStream
Remove 'stashTrailers' as we've already extracted status in layer above correctly
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Created by MOE: http://code.google.com/p/moe-java
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=80678356
This required making it no longer depend on GrpcClient. Instead, we now
use the builders that make using GrpcClient almost completely obsolete.
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Created by MOE: http://code.google.com/p/moe-java
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=78860648