The two checker tasks run quickly so don't gain much from UP-TO-DATE,
but it is convenient to not see them in the noise (checkUpperBoundDeps
in particular). Gradle only performs UP-TO-DATE checks (on the inputs)
if the task has both inputs and outputs defined.
The biggest saving was for distZip/distTar/shadowDistZip/shadowDistTar
which were using the same name for the non-shadow and shadow versions.
Thus the output file would always be out-of-date because it had been
rewritten and was invalid. This is worrisome because we could have
"randomly" been using the shadow Zip/Tar at times and the non-shadow
ones at others, although I think in practice the shadow tasks always run
last and so those are the files we'd see. Changing the classifier avoids
the colliding file names. These tasks took ~7 seconds, so incremental
builds are considerably shorter now.
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 dramatically shortens build time, even for full builds. A full
assemble of xds on my laptop goes from 1m 46s to 33s at least because
errorprone is disabled for the protos.
* istio-interop-testing: create a separate project and add istio echo server code
after removing from the grpc-interop-testing project
* add jib support
* use imported echo.proto from istio repo
* use context to propagate values from interceptor so the service's echo method has all values required to compose EchoResponse
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
This reverts commit 0963f3151d. This
causes dependency problems when importing into Google, as
google-auth-library-java needs to be upgraded and that requires an
upgrade to google-http-java-client to bring in
https://github.com/googleapis/google-http-java-client/pull/1505 .
Reverting for now and will roll forward once those upgrades are
performed.
Retryable was added in google-auth-library 1.5.3 to make clear the
situations that deserve a retry of the RPC. Bump to that version and
swap away from the imprecise IOException heuristic.
go/auth-correct-retry
Fixes#6808
The Google Auth version is getting quite old. The new version pulls in
newer Guava and Auto Value. Two require Java 8: Google Auth since 1.x,
Guava since 31.x. Google Auth only needs Auto Value 1.8.2, but this
bumps to the latest, so all three are at their latest versions.
Oracle's Premier Support for Java 7 ended in July 2019. Per gRFC P5,
dropping support for the only release. Android is able to desugar many
Java 8 language features.
Previous versions of error prone were incompatible with Java 17 javac.
In grpc-api, errorprone is now api dependency because it is on a public
API. I was happy to see that Gradle failed the build without the dep
change, although the error message wasn't super clear as to the cause.
It seems that previously -PerrorProne=false did nothing. I'm guessing
this is due to a behavior change of Gradle at some point. Swapping to
using the project does build without errorProne, although the build
fails with Javac complaining certain classes are unavailable. It's
unclear why. It doesn't seem to be caused by the error-prone plugin.
I've left it failing as a pre-existing issue.
ClientCalls/ServerCalls had Deprecated removed from some methods because
they were only deprecated in the internal class, not the API. And with
Deprecated, InlineMeSuggester complained.
I'm finding InlineMeSuggester to be overzealous, complaining about
package-private methods. In time we may figure out how to use it better,
or we may request changes to the checker in error-prone.
When messing with error prone for another commit, Gradle started
producing a clear warning the dependsOn was missing. But the warning
was not reliable. However, even when no warning was printed it is clear
the task was broken.
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).
Protobuf uses Guava 30.1.1, so I upgrade it at the same time. It also
caused an update to rules_jvm_external and reworking the Bazel build.
Protobuf no longer requires bind() so they were dropped. Although
Protobuf's protobuf_deps() brings in rules_jvm_external, and so we don't
need to define it ourselves, it seems better to define it directly and
not depend on transitive deps since we use it directly.
Protobuf now has support for maven_install() by exposing
PROTOBUF_MAVEN_ARTIFACTS, which required reorganizing the WORKSPACE to
use maven_install() after loading protobuf. Protobuf still doesn't
define target overrides for itself so we still maintain those. When
reorganizing the WORKSPACE I noticed http_archive should ideally be
above io_grpc_grpc_java as most users will need it there, so I fixed
that since there were lots of other load()-reordering already.
Including the build user's name doesn't provide much value and may
surprise some people. Built-JDK is actually wrong, as it is reporting
Gradle's Java version, not the javac version. And Source-/Target-
Compatibility isn't useful if nobody looks at it. Generally people just
look at the bytecode version itself, which is much more reliable and
doesn't have questions as to whether it should be '8' or '1.8'.
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.
This change can have large impact from two aspects:
1. It calls out a _large_ impact on the _few_ Java 7 users.
2. It may have _small_ impact on the _many_ Android users.
https://github.com/grpc/grpc-java/issues/4671 tracks gRPC's removal of
Java 7 support. We are quite eager to drop Java 7 support as that would
allow using new language features like default methods. Guava is also
dropping Java 7 support and starting in 30.1 it will warn when used on
Java 7. The purpose of the warning is to help discover users that are
negatively impacted by dropping Java 7 before it becomes a bigger
problem.
The Guava logging check was implemented in such a way that there is an
optional class that uses Java 8 bytecode. While the class is optional at
runtime, the Android build system notices when dexing and fails if
Java 8 language featutres are not enabled. We believe this will not be a
problem for most Android users, but they may need to add to their build:
```
android {
compileOptions {
sourceCompatibility JavaVersion.VERSION_1_8
targetCompatibility JavaVersion.VERSION_1_8
}
}
```
See also https://github.com/google/guava/releases/tag/v30.1
This just adds the ServiceBinding class and
BindServiceFlags, internal utils.
Most binderchannel code relies heavily on Java8 features,
so I'm keeping that requirement, since grpc-java plans to
require Java8 eventually anyway.