## Development Environment Changes
* Added stringer to build deps
## New HTTP APIs
* Added scheduler worker config API
* Added scheduler worker info API
## New Internals
* (Scheduler)Worker API refactor—Start(), Stop(), Pause(), Resume()
* Update shutdown to use context
* Add mutex for contended server data
- `workerLock` for the `workers` slice
- `workerConfigLock` for the `Server.Config.NumSchedulers` and
`Server.Config.EnabledSchedulers` values
## Other
* Adding docs for scheduler worker api
* Add changelog message
Co-authored-by: Derek Strickland <1111455+DerekStrickland@users.noreply.github.com>
Meant for development purposes only, so one can compile binary on a
macos host then start a Docker container or scp the binary to a linux
host easily.
The resulting binary is statically linked and has very subtle
differences. e.g. static binaries use go native network stack that
honor /etc/hosts and /etc/resolve differently from the glibc
implementation. In development environment, I don't expect these to
materially change our experience.
Also format terraform scripts with hclfmt, equivalent to terraform fmt.
I opted not to use terraform fmt, because I didn't want to introduce dev dependency on the terraform CLI.
Also, I've optimized the find command to ignore spurious directories (e.g. .git, node_modules) that seem to be populated with too many files! make hclfmt takes 0.3s on my mac down from 7 seconds!
This PR removes the vendor directory from the Nomad repository.
Contributers will no longer need to deal with our `make sync`
step when working on Nomad, which was suprising when making changes
to the api. It also causes huge diffs in PRs that nobody looks at.
Adopts [`go-changelog`](https://github.com/hashicorp/go-changelog) for managing Nomad's changelog. `go-changelog` is becoming the HashiCorp defacto standard tool for managing changelog, e.g. [Consul](https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/pull/8387), [Vault](https://github.com/hashicorp/vault/pull/10363), [Waypoint](https://github.com/hashicorp/waypoint/pull/1179). [Consul](https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/pull/8387) seems to be the first product to adopt it, and its PR has the most context - though I've updated `.changelog/README.md` with the relevant info here.
## Changes to developers workflow
When opening PRs, developers should add a changelog entry in `.changelog/<PR#>.txt`. Check [`.changelog/README.md`](https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad/blob/docs-adopt-gochangelog/.changelog/README.md#developer-guide).
For the WIP release, entries can be amended even after the PR merged, and new files may be added post-hoc (e.g. during transition period, missed accidentally, community PRs, etc).
### Transitioning
Pending PRs can start including the changelog entry files immediately.
For 1.1.3/1.0.9 cycle, the release coordinator should create the entries for any PR that gets merged without a changelog entry file. They should also move any 1.1.3 entry in CHANGELOG.md to a changelog entry file, as this PR done for GH-10818.
## Changes to release process
Before cutting a release, release coordinator should update the changelog by inserting the output of `make changelog` to CHANGELOG.md with appropriate headers. See [`.changelog/README.md`](https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad/blob/docs-adopt-gochangelog/.changelog/README.md#how-to-generate-changelog-entries-for-release) for more details.
## Details
go-changelog is a basic templating engine for maintaining changelog in HashiCorp environment.
It expects the changelog entries as files indexed by their PR number. The CLI generates the changelog section for a release by comparing two git references (e.g. `HEAD` and the latest release, e.g. `v1.1.2`), and still requires manual process for updating CHANGELOG.md and final formatting.
The approach has many nice advantages:
* Avoids changelog related merge conflicts: Each PR touches different file!
* Copes with amendments and post-PR updates: Just add or update a changelog entry file using the original PR numbers.
* Addresses the release backporting scenario: Cherry-picking PRs will cherry-pick the relevant changelog entry automatically!
* Only relies on data available through `git` - no reliance on GitHub metadata or require GitHub credentials
The approach has few downsides though:
* CHANGELOG.md going stale during development and must be updated manually before cutting the release
* Repository watchers can no longer glance at the CHANGELOG.md to see upcoming changes
* We can periodically update the file, but `go-changelog` tool does not aid with that
* `go-changelog` tool does not offer good error reporting. If an entry is has an invalid tag (e.g. uses `release-note:bugfix` instead of `release-note:bug`), the entry will be dropped silently
* We should update go-changelog to warn against unexpected entry tags
* TODO: Meanwhile, PR reviewers and release coordinators should watch out
## Potential follow ups
We should follow up with CI checks to ensure PR changes include a warning. I've opted not to include that now. We still make many non-changelog-worth PRs for website/docs, for large features that get merged in multiple small PRs. I did not want to include a check that fails often.
Also, we should follow up to have `go-changelog` emit better warnings on unexpected tag.
Previously installing buf was left out of `make bootstrap` because it
had conflicts with the `tools/go.mod` file and dependencies used by
other tools. With Go 1.16 we eliminated that `go.mod` file, and can
now just install `buf` with `go install` like everything else.
This change disables using msgpack generated serializers in dev by
default.
In released binaries, we use code-generated msgpack serializers to
improve performance. However, in development, code generated
serializers are a pain. If a developer forgets to re-generate code, the
code generated gets out of sync with the go structs, and result into
subtle bugs where some values appear not to persist as expected.
The CI and release scripts will continue to use the msgpack
code-generation. Devs who want to test locally can set
`GO_TAGS=codegen_generated` as well.
This is required because Go does not pull CC from the make variable. This uses
whatever Go's default CC unless CC is overridden, as it is for the ARM targets.
This also makes it easier to build Nomad on a native ARM device, via:
```
make CC= pkg/linux_arm/nomad
```
* Set 'only' ALL_TARGETS rather than append
This is functionally no different than before, but it's more correct.
* Re-scope VERBOSE=true
Previously this was only set when the OS was Linux; this was added in
805ade7d3.
* Warn about unsupported OS rather than error
Also:
* Only print the warning when trying to build Nomad
* Print correct list of supported OSes
This removes small differences between the targets, like the statement
about what's being built.
The CGO/Windows related comments were deleted as being not relevant.
See https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad/pull/9643 for context.
Add a build target for Apple Silicon (m1) macs.
Note that Go must have been built with c4f497da6f for
Nomad to work on darwin/arm64 (i.e. wait for go1.16).
Closes#9408
Parameterize it so we can arbitrary target other versions, if we
are doing some manual checking, specially in the beginning when we may
want to validate compatibilities for skip release upgrades.
Also, introduce `checkbuf` target so we can run buf linter without the
rest.
use beta
Previously, it was required that you `go get github.com/hashicorp/nomad` to be
able to build protos, as the protoc invocation added an include directive that
pointed to `$GOPATH/src`, which is how dependent protos were discovered. As
Nomad now uses Go modules, it won't necessarily be cloned to `$GOPATH`.
(Additionally, if you _had_ go-gotten Nomad at some point, protoc compilation
would have possibly used the _wrong_ protos, as those wouldn't necessarily be
the most up-to-date ones.)
This change modifies the proto files and the `protoc` invocation to handle
discovering dependent protos via protoc plugin modifier statements that are
specific to the protoc plugin being used.
In this change, `make proto` was run to recompile the protos, which results in
changes only to the gzipped `FileDescriptorProto`.
-I ../../.. is meant to navigate from `GOPATH/src/github.com/hashicorp/nomad` to `GOPATH/src`
This is fine but it assumes a few things about how the dev has setup nomad, which is also fine if that is the expected dev environment, however the `../../..` is not as explicit as "GOPATH/src" and it would also enable a few more scenarios so it seems strictly better to me.
Random example: nomad is a subrepo of ours, but with this change we can symlink from GOPATH/src/github.com/hashicorp/nomad and `make proto` will work.
Currently we compile (but don't run) the e2e tests as part of `test-other`,
which is skipped for branches named `e2e-*`. Move this check into the
`test-e2e` job. Split out the vault compatibility integration check as its own
makefile target for clarity.
With Go modules, `go mod tidy` supplants `vendorfmt`. Unfortunately,
`tidy` will try to reach out to the network and download modules, and
there is no way to disable that behavior (e.g. the -mod=vendor) option
does not apply. This means we cannot use the `tidy` target in nomad
enterprise, which will be unable to reach private repositories like
consul-enterprise.
This isn't a big deal, since `vendorfmt` served the purpose of rewriting
the output of `govendor`, wheras `tidy` is a part of the `sync` target
that is required to be run when modifying dependencies anyway.
This PR switches the Nomad repository from using govendor to Go modules
for managing dependencies. Aspects of the Nomad workflow remain pretty
much the same. The usual Makefile targets should continue to work as
they always did. The API submodule simply defers to the parent Nomad
version on the repository, keeping the semantics of API versioning that
currently exists.
We have been using fatih/hclfmt which is long abandoned. Instead, switch
to HashiCorp's own hclfmt implementation. There are some trivial changes in
behavior around whitespace.