* Implement a util class to manage push queues using Cloud Tasks API
Push queues were part of App Engine when they debuted. As a result the
Task Queue API were part of the App Engine SDK and can only be used in
App Engine classic runtime. The new Cloud Tasks API can be used in any
runtime but it only supports push queues. In this PR we implement a util
class (CloudTasksUtils) like TaskQueueUtils to handle enqueuing tasks to
push queues using Cloud Tasks. One action (TldFanoutAction) was
converted to use the new API as a demo. Mass migration of other call sites of
the old API will follow in a separate PR.
TESTED=deployed to alpha and verified that tasks are corrected enqueued
and executed.
The API provided by the GAE SDK will not be available outside GAE
runtime. This presents a problem when we migrate off of GAE. More
pressingly, the RDE pipeline migration to Beam requires that we write to
GCS on GCE. Previously we were able to sidestep the issue by delegating
the writes to FileIO provided by Beam, which knows how to write to GCS.
However the RDE pipeline cannot use FileIO directly as it needs to write
to multiple files in one go and explicit use of GCS API is needed.
An unfortunate side effect of the API migration is that the new testing
library contains a bug which makes serializing GcsUtils impossible. It
is fixed upstream but not released yet. The fix has been backported for
the time being.
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* Update more dependencies to newer versions
* Add lockfiles and back out 2 problematic dep updates
* Fix the build (backs out more changes)
* Back out qdox 2.0 too
* Properly set up JPA in BEAM workers
Sets up a singleton JpaTransactionManger on each worker JVM for all
pipeline nodes to share.
Also added/updated relevant dependencies. The BEAM SDK version change
caused the InitSqlPipeline's graph to change.
* Upgrade error-prone to 3.3.4
This would fix the failure with openjdk 11.0.9 in
3.3.3.
Fixed new antipatterns raised by the new version:
- Replaced unnecessary lambdas with methods.
- Switched wait/sleep calls to equivalent methods using java.time types
- Types inheriting Object.toString() should not be assigned to string
parameter in logging statements.
For some inexplicable reasons I have to move the javax.mail package one
spot up to avoid its classes being shadowed by those provided in the
appengine package...
* Enable Java 11 features
As of this commit Java 11 must be used to build. The generated bytecode
is still at Java 8 due to App Engine task queue limit.
Also fixed a bug where the included google-java-format jar file is not
used, requiring the user to install it separately.
See: https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/standard/java/taskqueue/push
* Get rid of all remaining JUnit 4 usages except in prober & proxy subprojects
Caveat: Test suites aren't yet implemented in JUnit 5 so we still use the ones
from JUnit 5 in the core subproject.
* Fix some build errors
1. The Gradle apt plugin is no longer needed to process annotations.
2. Without the apt plugin, Gralde puts the source files generated by
annotation processors in build/generated/sources/annotationProcessor.
3. Change the location of custom generated files to be consistent.
4. Fix a javadoc formatting error.
* Add JUnit Params and start using it
* Convert rest of RDE tests
* Don't check headers for generated tests
* Expand visibility to fix build breakage
* Bump JUnit versions to 5.6.2
* Add testcontainers' Junit5 support dependency
Also updated guava, dagger, hibernate, postgresql, and cloud socket factory
to latest version.
Migrated PersistenceModuleTest as an example.
Real changes:
- dependencies.gradle
- core/build.gradle
- PersistenceModuleTest.java
* Add Test suite support for JUnit 5 classes
Added Gradle dependencies and updated lockfiles.
Updated SqlInegrationTestSuite to use new annotations.
Migrated one member class in SqlIntegrationTestSuite (CursorDaoTest)
to JUnit 5, and verified that the new Suite runner can handle a
mixture of JUnit 4 and 5 tests in one suite.
Note that Gradle tests that run TestSuites must choose JUnit 4.
Updated core/build.gradle and integration/build.gradle.
* Start using JUnit 5
This converts a single test class over to JUnit 5 (YamlUtilsTest). The main
differences you'll notice are that @RunWith isn't needed anymore, test classes
and test methods can now be package-private, and the @Test annotation comes from
the org.junit.jupiter.api package instead of org.junit. There's a lot more
differences between 4 and 5 than this that we'll need to keep in mind when
converting more test classes; for some more details, see:
https://www.baeldung.com/junit-5-migration
In order to allow JUnit 4 and 5 test classes to coexist, I've had to add two new
dependencies, org.junit.jupiter:junit-jupiter-engine and
org.junit.vintage:junit-vintage-engine, which exist in addition to junit:junit
for now. Eventually, once we've completed migrating over all JUnit 4 test
classes, then we can remove junit and junit-vintage-engine and just be left with
junit-jupiter-engine.
* Delete no longer needed lockfiles
* Merge branch 'master' into first-junit5
* Upgradle JUnit to 4.13
Removed third_party/junit folder and all usage of the
JunitBackPort class. As a result, third_party is no
longer a Gradle subproject.
Minor code changes were needed to work around an
error-prone pattern: multiple statement in assertThrows'
runnable lambda.
Also third_party/activation and third_party/jsch. These
dependencies are loaded from remote maven repo. The local
copies are not in use.
* Consolidate certificate supplier module
Both the proxy and the proxy needs certificate suppliers. The PR
consolidates the module that providings those bindings to a shared
module and switched the proxy to use that module. The prober currently
uses P12 file to store its certificates. I am debating keeping that
supplier ro converting them to PEM files for simplicity.
* Rename mode enum values to be more descriptive
* Update annotation names to be more descriptive
* Allow project dependency to use runtimeClasspath
Project dependency should use runtimeClasspath. However, if
left unspecified, it uses 'default', which is the same as
the legacy 'runtime' configuration. (runtimeOnly dependencies
are left out).
Since runtimeClasspath cannot be referenced directly, we use
a custom config (deploy_jar) as a proxy.
By excluding testjars (leaked into 'compile' by third-party
dependencies) from runtimeClasspath, we prevent them from
getting into release artifacts.
Two meaningful changes in appengine_war.gradle and java_common.gradle
TESTED=Diffed contents of services/{module}/build/exploded-*
Only three jars are removed: hamcrest-core, junit, and
mockito-core.
Client SSL handler already performs the necessary validation. Only tests are
added.
Server SSL handler does not currently check for the validity period of
the client certificate as the insecure trust manager is used. This PR
added the check but does not actually terminate the connection yet. It
will log the expired certificates so that we can contact the registrars
to update them.
Once we are certain that all certificates are updated, we can turn off
dryrun mode.
We should also consider checking if the certificate has too long a
validity period as it defeats the purpose of using regularly updated
certificates to deprecate insecure cipher suites.