open-vault/vendor/github.com/oklog/run
Brian Kassouf 7050c1ca41
gRPC Backend Plugins (#3808)
* Add grpc plugins

* Add grpc plugins

* Translate wrap info to/from proto

* Add nil checks

* Fix nil marshaling errors

* Provide logging through the go-plugin logger

* handle errors in the messages

* Update the TLS config so bidirectional connections work

* Add connectivity checks

* Restart plugin and add timeouts where context is not availible

* Add the response wrap data into the grpc system implementation

* Add leaseoptions to pb.Auth

* Add an error translator

* Add tests for translating the proto objects

* Fix rename of function

* Add tracing to plugins for easier debugging

* Handle plugin crashes with the go-plugin context

* Add test for grpcStorage

* Add tests for backend and system

* Bump go-plugin for GRPCBroker

* Remove RegisterLicense

* Add casing translations for new proto messages

* Use doneCtx in grpcClient

* Use doneCtx in grpcClient

* s/shutdown/shut down/
2018-01-18 13:49:20 -08:00
..
LICENSE gRPC Backend Plugins (#3808) 2018-01-18 13:49:20 -08:00
README.md gRPC Backend Plugins (#3808) 2018-01-18 13:49:20 -08:00
group.go gRPC Backend Plugins (#3808) 2018-01-18 13:49:20 -08:00

README.md

run

GoDoc Build Status Go Report Card Apache 2 licensed

run.Group is a universal mechanism to manage goroutine lifecycles.

Create a zero-value run.Group, and then add actors to it. Actors are defined as a pair of functions: an execute function, which should run synchronously; and an interrupt function, which, when invoked, should cause the execute function to return. Finally, invoke Run, which blocks until the first actor returns. This general-purpose API allows callers to model pretty much any runnable task, and achieve well-defined lifecycle semantics for the group.

run.Group was written to manage component lifecycles in func main for OK Log. But it's useful in any circumstance where you need to orchestrate multiple goroutines as a unit whole. Click here to see a video of a talk where run.Group is described.

Examples

context.Context

ctx, cancel := context.WithCancel(context.Background())
g.Add(func() error {
	return myProcess(ctx, ...)
}, func(error) {
	cancel()
})

net.Listener

ln, _ := net.Listen("tcp", ":8080")
g.Add(func() error {
	return http.Serve(ln, nil)
}, func(error) {
	ln.Close()
})

io.ReadCloser

var conn io.ReadCloser = ...
g.Add(func() error {
	s := bufio.NewScanner(conn)
	for s.Scan() {
		println(s.Text())
	}
	return s.Err()
}, func(error) {
	conn.Close()
})

Comparisons

Package run is somewhat similar to package errgroup, except it doesn't require actor goroutines to understand context semantics.

It's somewhat similar to package tomb.v1 or tomb.v2, except it has a much smaller API surface, delegating e.g. staged shutdown of goroutines to the caller.