We're now using java_import_external instead of maven_jar. This allows
us to specify the relationships between jars, thereby allowing us to
eliminate scores of vendor BUILD files that did nothing but re-export
@foo//jar targets, thus addressing the concerns of djhworld on Hacker
News: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=12738072
We now have redundant failover mirrors, which is a feature I added to
Bazel 0.4.2 in ed7ced0018
A new standard naming convention is now being used for all Maven repos.
Those names are calculated from the group_artifact name using the
following algorithm that eliminates redundancy:
https://gist.github.com/jart/41bfd977b913c2301627162f1c038e55
The JSR330 dep has been removed from java targets if they also depend
on Dagger, since Dagger always exports JSR330.
Annotation processor dependencies should now be leaner and meaner, by
more appropriately managing what needs to be on the classpath at
runtime. This should trim down the production jar by >1MB. As it stands
currently in the open source world:
- backend_jar_deploy.jar: 50MB
- frontend_jar_deploy.jar: 30MB
- tools_jar_deploy.jar: 45MB
-------------
Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=143487929
This allows separate Bazel projects to reference Nomulus as an external
repository. They can then copy the []
directory structure into their own project and customize the Action
and Module lists for the GAE modules in their own deployment.
-------------
Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=136863886
This change replaces all Ref objects in the code with Key objects. These are
stored in datastore as the same object (raw datastore keys), so this is not
a model change.
Our best practices doc says to use Keys not Refs because:
* The .get() method obscures what's actually going on
- Much harder to visually audit the code for datastore loads
- Hard to distinguish Ref<T> get()'s from Optional get()'s and Supplier get()'s
* Implicit ofy().load() offers much less control
- Antipattern for ultimate goal of making Ofy injectable
- Can't control cache use or batch loading without making ofy() explicit anyway
* Serialization behavior is surprising and could be quite dangerous/incorrect
- Can lead to serialization errors. If it actually worked "as intended",
it would lead to a Ref<> on a serialized object being replaced upon
deserialization with a stale copy of the old value, which could potentially
break all kinds of transactional expectations
* Having both Ref<T> and Key<T> introduces extra boilerplate everywhere
- E.g. helper methods all need to have Ref and Key overloads, or you need to
call .key() to get the Key<T> for every Ref<T> you want to pass in
- Creating a Ref<T> is more cumbersome, since it doesn't have all the create()
overloads that Key<T> has, only create(Key<T>) and create(Entity) - no way to
create directly from kind+ID/name, raw Key, websafe key string, etc.
(Note that Refs are treated specially by Objectify's @Load method and Keys are not;
we don't use that feature, but it is the one advantage Refs have over Keys.)
The direct impetus for this change is that I am trying to audit our use of memcache,
and the implicit .get() calls to datastore were making that very hard.
-------------
Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=131965491
We've continuously had concurrent modification exceptions for our regularly
occurring []s that run on thousands of shards, perhaps unnecessarily so.
These exceptions started after the last major [] framework refactoring,
which changed the default number of shards from 100 to essentially infinite. I
don't think infinite is the way to go, and 100 shards should be more than
sufficient for anything we're currently running.
-------------
Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=131175353
This is an internal-only feature that breaks the open source build.
CL created with:
dr-replace '(compatible_with.*)' '\1 # MOE:strip_line'
-------------
Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=128852873
The dark lord Gosling designed the Java package naming system so that
ownership flows from the DNS system. Since we own the domain name
registry.google, it seems only appropriate that we should use
google.registry as our package name.
This change renames directories in preparation for the great package
rename. The repository is now in a broken state because the code
itself hasn't been updated. However this should ensure that git
correctly preserves history for each file.