Following the [spec](https://github.com/grpc/grpc/blob/master/doc/PROTOCOL-HTTP2.md) on duplicate header names:
**Custom-Metadata** header order is not guaranteed to be preserved except for values with duplicate header names. Duplicate header names may have their values joined with "," as the delimiter and be considered semantically equivalent. Implementations must split Binary-Headers on "," before decoding the Base64-encoded values.
This will allow enabling Error Prone on JDK 10+ (after
updating the net.ltgt.errorprone plugin), and is also a
prerequisite to that plugin update.
Also remove net.ltgt.apt plugin, as Gradle has native
support for annotationProcessor.
This is a rename of the pre-existing Netty builder method, so aliases
were added to the Netty builders.
Fixes#4050. This API was a minor rename to the pre-existing Netty API,
so has already undergone API review and thus is not ExperimentalApi.
Returns a Channel that allows a LoadBalancer to make auxiliary RPCs on already-established application connections. We need this to implement client-side health-checking (#4932)
See comments on the API for its semantics.
Notable changes:
- Transports are modified to use InUseStateAggregator so that they can exclude RPCs made on Subchannel.asChannel() when reporting in-use state for idle mode.
- OobChannel shares the same Executor as Subchannel.asChannel(). Because the latter is not a ManagedChannel and doesn't have life-cycle, thus can't determine when to return the Executor to a pool, the Executor is now returned only when ManagedChannelImpl is terminated.
This is the first step of smoothly changing the CallCredentials API.
Security level and authority are parameters required to be passed to
applyRequestMetadata(). This change wraps them, along with
MethodDescriptor and the transport attributes to RequestInfo, which is
more clear to the implementers.
ATTR_SECURITY_LEVEL is moved to the internal GrpcAttributes and
annotated as TransportAttr, because transports are required to set it,
but no user is actually reading them from
{Client,Server}Call.getAttributes().
ATTR_AUTHORITY is removed, because no transport is overriding it.
All involved interfaces are changed to abstract classes, as this will
make further API changes smoother.
The CallCredentials name is stabilized, thus we first introduce
CallCredentials2, ask CallCredentials implementations to migrate to
it, while GRPC accepting both at the same time, then replace
CallCredentials with CallCredentials2.
It appears to be stable now. Ran for 1000s of times. I do see some
general flakiness in TransportTest, but it applies to the tests in
general and isn't specific to this one test. It is:
```
org.mockito.exceptions.verification.WantedButNotInvoked:
Wanted but not invoked:
listener.transportReady();
-> at io.grpc.internal.testing.AbstractTransportTest.startTransport(AbstractTransportTest.java:1815)
Actually, there were zero interactions with this mock.
```
This flake is not seen often because it occurs less frequently when
running all the tests (~.1% vs 1%). One of the early tests must warm
something up to make it less likely.
This is an API used to coordinate across packages and must live in
`io.grpc`.
Prepending `Internal` makes it easier to detect and hide this class
from public visibility when using certain build tools.
fixes#4796
Most of the changes are changing the signature of newClientTransport.
Since this is annoying, I choose to introduce a ClientTransportOptions
object to avoid the churn in the future.
With ClientTransportOptions in place, there's only a few lines necessary
of plumbing for the Attributes: add the field to ClientTransportOptions
and populate it in InternalSubchannel. There are no consumers of the
field in this commit.
A new RPC starts with the following steps:
1. Pick a READY transport
2. the READY transport calls `transport.newStream()`
3. the new stream calls `stream.start()`
4. `stream.start()` invokes or enqueus `writeHeaders()` (or for GET request, noop)
A racy GOAWAY could happen between 3 and 4, and by the retry spec, the RPC should be transparent-retry-able in this case. For Netty and OkHttp transport implementation, before step 4, (even if step 1, 2, and 3 excluding 4 are made atomic,) the http2-stream for the RPC is not created, so the current transparent retry logic does not apply and need fix.
Of course, if step 1, 2, and 3 including 4 are made atomic, and not with GET, there will be no such problem.
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 allows ProGuard to remove OkHttp's ConnectionSpec in most cases,
saving about 40 methods. The savings won't be realized until
DEFAULT_CONNECTION_SPEC is removed.
Always set the remote address, no reason why this should be a TLS-only
feature. This is needed for channelz, and is especially useful in unit
tests where we are using plaintext.
This PR adds the attr for plaintext.
Changes:
- `ClientStreamListener.onClose(Status status, RpcProgress rpcProgress, Metadata trailers)` added.
- `AbstractClientStream.transportReportStatus(Status status, RpcProgress rpcProgress, boolean stopDelivery, Metadata trailers)` added
- `ClientCallImpl.ClientStreamListenerImpl` will ignore the arg `rpcProgress` (non retry)
- `RetriableStream.SubListener` will handle `rpcProgress` and decide if transparent retry.
- `NettyClientHandler` and `OkHttpClientTransport` will pass `RpcProgress.REFUSED` to client stream listener for later stream ids when received GOAWAY, or for stream received a RST_STREAM frame with REFUSED code.
- All other files are just a result of refactoring.
ProxyDetector is now responsible for resolving the proxy's
`InetSocketAddress`, and `ProxyParameters` asserts that the address is
resolved. The results are plumbed through using a `PairSocketAddress`,
which is a special `SocketAddress`.
If a proxy should be used but the proxy can not be resolved, we the
`DnsNameResolver` will re-attempt the resolution later.
Remove the unit test testing for unresolved proxy addresses, since
it's no longer applicable.