This change required several things:
- Separating out the interfaces that merely do HTTP calls to the backend from those
that require the remote API (only load the remote API for the latter). Only the
tools service provides the remote api endpoint.
- Removing the XSRF token as an authentication mechanism (with OAUTH, we no longer
need this, and trying to provide it requires initialization of the datastore
code which requires the remote API)
I can't think of a compelling unit test for this beyond what already exists.
Tested:
Verified that:
- nomulus tool commands (e.g. "list_tlds") work against the tools service as they
currently do
- The "curl" command hits endpoints on "tools" by default.
- We can use --server to specify endpoints on the default service.
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=211510454
This is one last hanging piece of work left over from last year's Java 8
migration. There's no functionality changes in this CL, just refactoring.
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=201947600
This removes some qualifiers that aren't necessary (e.g. public/abstract on interfaces, private on enum constructors, final on private methods, static on nested interfaces/enums), uses Java 8 lambdas and features where that's an improvement
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=177182945
This was a surprisingly involved change. Some of the difficulties included
java.util.Optional purposely not being Serializable (so I had to move a
few Optionals in mapreduce classes to @Nullable) and having to add the Truth
Java8 extension library for assertion support.
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=171863777
This removes the countless lines of the form "[null, []]" in registry_tool diffs
that are an artifact of the way we handle nulls in Objectify.
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=133409440
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.
2016-05-13 18:55:08 -04:00
Renamed from java/com/google/domain/registry/tools/MutatingCommand.java (Browse further)