* rpc/client: remove the placeholder RunState type.
I added the RunState type in #6971 to disconnect clients from the service
plumbing, which they do not need. Now that we have more complete context
plumbing, the lifecycle of a client no longer depends on this type: It serves
as a carrier for a logger, and a Boolean flag for "running" status, neither of
which is used outside of tests.
Logging in particular is defaulted to a no-op logger in all production use.
Arguably we could just remove the logging calls, since they are never invoked
except in tests. To defer the question of whether we should do that or make the
logging go somewhere more productive, I've preserved the existing use here.
Remove use of the IsRunning method that was provided by the RunState, and use
the Start method and context to govern client lifecycle.
Remove the one test that exercised "unstarted" clients. I would like to remove
that method entirely, but that will require updating the constructors for all
the client types to plumb a context and possibly other options. I have deferred
that for now.
* rpc: fix layout of endpoint list
The output of the default endpoint-list query was not correctly segregating
methods with and without arguments. Fix this, and also clean up the output to
be easier to read (both in code and in generated source).
Fixes#3618.
* rpc: simplify the handling of JSON-RPC request and response IDs
Replace the ID wrapper interface with plain JSON. Internally, the client
libraries use only integer IDs, and the server does not care about the ID
structure apart from checking its validity.
Basic structure of this change:
- Remove the jsonrpcid interface and its helpers.
- Unexport the ID field of request and response.
- Add helpers for constructing requests and responses.
- Fix up usage and tests.
Responses are constructed from requests using MakeResponse, MakeError, and
MakeErrorf. This ensures the response is always paired with the correct ID,
makes cases where there is no ID more explicit at the usage site, and
consolidates the handling of error introspection across transports.
The logic for unpacking errors and assigning JSON-RPC response types was
previously duplicated in three places. Consolidate it in the types package for
the RPC subsystem.
* update test cases
The main change here is to use encoding/json to encode and decode RPC
parameters, rather than the custom tmjson package. This includes:
- Update the HTTP POST handler parameter handling.
- Add field tags to 64-bit integer types to get string encoding (to match amino/tmjson).
- Add marshalers to struct types that mention interfaces.
- Inject wrappers to decode interface arguments in RPC handlers.
The parameters for RPC GET requests are parsed from query arguments in the
request URL. Rework this code to remove the need for tmjson. The structure of a
call still requires reflection, and still works the same way as before, but the
code structure has been simplified and cleaned up a bit.
Points of note:
- Consolidate handling of pointer types, so we only need to dereference once.
- Reduce the number of allocations of reflective types.
- Report errors for unsupported types rather than returning untyped nil.
Update the tests as well. There was one test case that checked for an error on
a behaviour the OpenAPI docs explicitly demonstrates as supported, so I fixed
that test case, and also added some new ones for cases that weren't checked.
Related:
* Update e2e base Go image to 1.17 (to match config).
Require that RPC functions take a context as their first argument, and return
an error as either their only result, or the second of two results.
This does not change how functions are dispatched, but will make it a little
easier to make more invasive changes in the near future.
Instead of taking a comma-separated string of parameter names, take each
parameter name as a separate argument. Now that we no longer have an extra flag
for caching, this fits nicely into a variadic trailer.
* Update all usage of NewRPCFunc and NewWSRPCFunc.
Rather than installing two separate panic handlers, defer the bookkeeping
separately from recovery, and lift the delegated handler call out to the top
level of the wrapper.
Also: Regularize the server middleware wrappers.
Add writeRPCResponse and writeHTTPResponse helpers, that handle the way RPC
responses are written to HTTP replies. These replace the exported helpers.
Visible effects:
- JSON results are now marshaled without indentation.
- HTTP status codes are now normalized.
- Cache control headers are no longer set.
Details:
- When writing a response to a URL (GET) request, do not marshal the whole
JSON-RPC object into the body, only encode the result or the error object.
This is a user-visible change.
- Do not change the HTTP status code for RPC errors. The RPC error already
reports what went wrong, the HTTP status should only report problems with the
HTTP transaction itself. This is a user-visible change.
- Encode JSON without indentation in POST response bodies. This is mainly cosmetic
but saves quite a bit of response data. Indent is still applied to GET responses to make
life easier for code examples.
- Remove an obsolete TODO about reporting an HTTP error on websocket upgrade.
Nothing needed to change; the upgrader already reports an error.
- Report an HTTP error when starting the server loop fails.
- Improve logging for encoding errors.
- Log less aggressively.
We should not set cache-control headers on RPC responses. HTTP caching
interacts poorly with resources that are expected to change frequently, or
whose rate of change is unpredictable.
More subtly, all calls to the POST endpoint use the same URL, which means a
cacheable response from one call may actually "hide" an uncacheable response
from a subsequent one. This is less of a problem for the GET endpoints, but
that means the behaviour of RPCs varies depending on which HTTP method your
client happens to use. Websocket requests were already marked statically
uncacheable, adding yet a third combination.
To address this:
- Stop setting cache-control headers.
- Update the tests that were checking for those headers.
- Remove the flags to request cache-control.
Apart from affecting the HTTP response headers, this change does not modify the
behaviour of any of the RPC methods.
* Rename rpctypes.Context to CallInfo.
Add methods to attach and recover this value from a context.Context.
* Rework RPC method handlers to accept "real" contexts.
- Replace *rpctypes.Context arguments with context.Context.
- Update usage of RPC context fields to use CallInfo.
No functional changes.
- Pull out a some helper code to simplify the control flow within the body of
the HTTP request handler.
- Front-load the URL path check so it does not get repeated for each request.
* Update Caller interface and its documentation.
* Rework MapToRequest as ParamsToRequest.
The old interface returned the result as well as populating it. Nothing was
using this, so drop the duplicated value from the return signature. Clarify the
documentation on the Caller type.
Rework the MapToRequest helper to take an arbitrary value instead of only a
map. This is groundwork for getting rid of the custom marshaling code. For now,
however, the implementation preserves the existing behaviour for the map, until
we can replace those.
This continues the push of plumbing contexts through tendermint. I
attempted to find all goroutines in the production code (non-test) and
made sure that these threads would exit when their contexts were
canceled, and I believe this PR does that.
The code in the Tendermint repository makes heavy use of import aliasing.
This is made necessary by our extensive reuse of common base package names, and
by repetition of similar names across different subdirectories.
Unfortunately we have not been very consistent about which packages we alias in
various circumstances, and the aliases we use vary. In the spirit of the advice
in the style guide and https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/CodeReviewComments#imports,
his change makes an effort to clean up and normalize import aliasing.
This change makes no API or behavioral changes. It is a pure cleanup intended
o help make the code more readable to developers (including myself) trying to
understand what is being imported where.
Only unexported names have been modified, and the changes were generated and
applied mechanically with gofmt -r and comby, respecting the lexical and
syntactic rules of Go. Even so, I did not fix every inconsistency. Where the
changes would be too disruptive, I left it alone.
The principles I followed in this cleanup are:
- Remove aliases that restate the package name.
- Remove aliases where the base package name is unambiguous.
- Move overly-terse abbreviations from the import to the usage site.
- Fix lexical issues (remove underscores, remove capitalization).
- Fix import groupings to more closely match the style guide.
- Group blank (side-effecting) imports and ensure they are commented.
- Add aliases to multiple imports with the same base package name.
* rpc: Strip down the base RPC client interface.
Prior to this change, the RPC client interface requires implementing the entire
Service interface, but most of the methods of Service are not needed by the
concrete clients. Dissociate the Client interface from the Service interface.
- Extract only those methods of Service that are necessary to make the existing
clients work.
- Update the clients to combine Start/Onstart and Stop/OnStop. This does not
change what the clients do to start or stop. Only the websocket clients make
use of this functionality anyway.
The websocket implementation uses some plumbing from the BaseService helper.
We should be able to excising that entirely, but the current interface
dependencies among the clients would require a much larger change, and one
that leaks into other (non-RPC) packages.
As a less-invasive intermediate step, preserve the existing client behaviour
(and tests) by extracting the necessary subset of the BaseService
functionality to an analogous RunState helper for clients. I plan to obsolete
that type in a future PR, but for now this makes a useful waypoint.
Related:
- Clean up client implementations.
- Update mocks.
EDIT: Updated, see [comment below]( https://github.com/tendermint/tendermint/pull/6785#issuecomment-897793175)
This change adds a sketch of the `Debug` mode.
This change adds a `Debug` struct to the node package. This `Debug` struct is intended to be created and started by a command in the `cmd` directory. The `Debug` struct runs the RPC server on the data directories: both the state store and the block store.
This change required a good deal of refactoring. Namely, a new `rpc.go` file was added to the `node` package. This file encapsulates functions for starting RPC servers used by nodes. A potential additional change is to further factor this code into shared code _in_ the `rpc` package.
Minor API tweaks were also made that seemed appropriate such as the mechanism for fetching routes from the `rpc/core` package.
Additional work is required to register the `Debug` service as a command in the `cmd` directory but I am looking for feedback on if this direction seems appropriate before diving much further.
closes: #5908
Revert the JSON-RPC/WebSocket response serialization format to the
standard way (i.e. a single RPC response per WebSocket text message) to
avoid breaking clients.
Serialization format changes will be discussed in an upcoming ADR.
Closes: #5373
* docs: goleveldb is much more stable now
Refs https://github.com/syndtr/goleveldb/issues/226#issuecomment-682495490
* rpc/core/events: make sure WS client receives every event
previously, if the write buffer was full, the response would've been
lost without any trace (log msg, etc.)
* rpc/jsonrpc/server: set defaultWSWriteChanCapacity to 1
Refs #3905Closes#3829
setting write buffer capacity to 1 makes transactions count per block
more stable and also reduces the pauses length by 20s.
before: https://github.com/tendermint/tendermint/issues/3905#issuecomment-681854328 net.Read - 20s
after: net.Read - 0.66s
* rpc/jsonrpc/server: buffer writes and avoid io.ReadAll during read
## Description
this log message was marked as not useful and in the issue it was proposed to move it to debug. I am going with this path for now. After we have refactored the logger we shold go through the codebase in order to clean our log statements.
Closes: #2101
## Description
partially cleanup in preparation for errcheck
i ignored a bunch of defer errors in tests but with the update to go 1.14 we can use `t.Cleanup(func() { if err := <>; err != nil {..}}` to cover those errors, I will do this in pr number two of enabling errcheck.
ref #5059
Migrates the `rpc` package to use new JSON encoder in #4955. Branched off of that PR.
Tests pass, but I haven't done any manual testing beyond that. This should be handled as part of broader 0.34 testing.