We were seeing some rollover artifacts where something would be shut down so
a port could be re-used, but it was still being referenced by some running
thing. This gives more time before rolling over.
This patch removes the porter tool which hands out free ports from a
given range with a library which does the same thing. The challenge for
acquiring free ports in concurrent go test runs is that go packages are
tested concurrently and run in separate processes. There has to be some
inter-process synchronization in preventing processes allocating the
same ports.
freeport allocates blocks of ports from a range expected to be not in
heavy use and implements a system-wide mutex by binding to the first
port of that block for the lifetime of the application. Ports are then
provided sequentially from that block and are tested on localhost before
being returned as available.
* Adds client-side retry for no leader errors.
This paves over the case where the client was connected to the leader
when it loses leadership.
* Adds a configurable server RPC drain time and a fail-fast path for RPCs.
When a server leaves it gets removed from the Raft configuration, so it will
never know who the new leader server ends up being. Without this we'd be
doomed to wait out the RPC hold timeout and then fail. This makes things fail
a little quicker while a sever is draining, and since we added a client retry
AND since the server doing this has already shut down and left the Serf LAN,
clients should retry against some other server.
* Makes the RPC hold timeout configurable.
* Reorders struct members.
* Sets the RPC hold timeout default for test servers.
* Bumps the leave drain time up to 5 seconds.
* Robustifies retries with a simpler client-side RPC hold.
* Reverts untended delete.
This has the next wave of RTT integration with the router and also
factors some common RTT-related helpers out to lib. While we were
in here we also got rid of the coordinate disable config so we don't
need to deal with the complexity in the router (there was never a
user-visible way to disable coordinates).
While I'm at it, add a DurationMinusBufferDomain() function to calculate the min/max for a given call to DurationMinusBuffer() in order to keep the implementation details self-contained.
used to schedule a TTL check. e.g.
d := lib.DurationMinusBuffer(60 * time.Duration, 10 * time.Second, 16)
will return a duration between 46.875s and 50s.
Consolidate code duplication and tests into a single lib package. Most of these functions were from various **/util.go functions that couldn't be imported due to cyclic imports. The consul/lib package is intended to be a terminal node in an import DAG and a place to stash various consul-only helper functions. Pulled in hashicorp/go-uuid instead of consolidating UUID access.