This documents some slightly spooky behavior around domains that have an expiration time within their pendingDelete window (meaning the whole period from DomainDeleteFlow running to the actual deletionTime, not just the 5-day pendingDelete grace period). They will experience an autorenew in terms of expiration time and grace period status due to cloneProjectedAtTime(), but without the usual artifacts of an autorenew (billing event and poll message).
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=149019980
It can always be brought back if we find an actual use case for it, but for now, it shouldn't be in the standard distribution given that it has no users.
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=143044153
This also adds a domain update pricing hook to DomainPricingCustomLogic.
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=142286755
A previous CL inadvertently caused the system to always set the transfer status to SERVER_CANCELLED when deleting a resource, even if there was no transfer. This led to RDE problems.
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=140890919
Currently we pass in null. However, from the spec:
<domain:acDate> element that contains the date and time of a
required or completed response. For a PENDING request, the value
identifies the date and time by which a response is required
before an automated response action will be taken by the server.
For all other status types, the value identifies the date and time
when the request was completed."
- https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5731#page-16, section 3.1.3
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=139363370
aka regexing for fun and profit.
This also makes sure that there are no statements after the
throwing statement, since these would be dead code. There
were a surprising number of places with assertions after
the throw, and none of these are actually triggered in tests
ever. When I found these, I replaced them with try/catch/rethrow
which makes the assertions actually happen:
before:
// This is the ExceptionRule that checks EppException marshaling
thrown.expect(FooException.class);
doThrowingThing();
assertSomething(); // Dead code!
after:
try {
doThrowingThing();
assertWithMessage("...").fail();
} catch (FooException e) {
assertSomething();
// For EppExceptions:
assertAboutEppExceptins().that(e).marshalsToXml();
}
To make this work, I added EppExceptionSubject.
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=135793407
Very few flows actually check the phase. Push the checks down to the leaf
flows so that we can remove the inherited code from ResourceFlow and replace
it with utility methods. In the process, document and test two places that
throw the exception but did not previously test it.
This introduces a temporary hack in BaseDomainCreateFlow that does something
specific for DomainApplicationCreateFlow. It will go away literally tomorrow
when I flatten that flow.
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=135480538
TestExtraLogicManager is pretty kludgy, and should be replaced with injection, mocking, etc. But in the meantime, using a dedicated error to signal its success, rather than IllegalArgumentException as was done before, at least makes things a little easier to follow.
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=134832315
They were taking a DateTime "now", which would seem like it would be the time of
when the resource was deleted, but it was actually the time by which the
resource was deleted, with the actual deletion time being hardcoded to a day
prior. The confusion was evident because a fair number of tests were passing
the wrong thing. I renamed the parameter "deletionTime" to make it exactly
clear what it's doing and fixed up some callsites where necessary.
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=134818032
These were historically separate due to the old flow
structure, but now they should be one exception.
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=133984858
It is replaced by loadByForeignKey(), which does the same thing that
loadByUniqueId() did for contacts, hosts, and domains, and also
loadDomainApplication(), which loads domain application by ROID. This eliminates
the ugly mode-switching of attemping to load by other foreign key or ROID.
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=133980156
This CL enhances various domain flows (check, create, delete, renew, restore, transfer, update) so that they invoke the appropriate methods on the object implementing the TLD's RegistryExtraFlowLogic (if any). TldSpecificLogicProxy is also updated to invoke RegistryExtraFlowLogic proxy (if any) to fetch the appropriate price. The tests use a made-up extra flow logic object which can be attached to a test TLD to make sure that the proper routines are being invoked.
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=132486734
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.
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=131965491
We want to support multiple versions of the fee extension, to allow new features while maintaining backward compatibility. This CL extends the framework and adds one new version, 0.11 (spec version 7), to the existing version 0.6 (spec version 3). A follow-on CL will add version 0.12 (spec version 8).
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=127849044
The "SessionSource" has nothing to do with sessions (and it's often
used in sessionless contexts). What it does indicate is the endpoint
used to make the request.
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=125295224
Superuser should only be settable via the tool (see []
which is merged in here but not diffbased, and which removes
the implicit superuser for CharlestonRoad). It is a property
of the request, not of the session (there are no sessions in the tool).
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=125204707
ReferenceUnion is a hack to work around the mismatch between how
we store references (by roid) and how they are represented in EPP
(by foreign key). If it ever needed to exist (not entirely clear...)
it should have remained tightly scoped within the domain commands
and resources. Instead it has leaked everywhere in the project,
causing lots of boilerplate. This CL hides all of that behind
standard Refs, and should be followed by work to remove ReferenceUnion
completely.
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Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=122424416
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 javatests/com/google/domain/registry/flows/domain/DomainDeleteFlowTest.java (Browse further)