This was triggered when the initial Introducer connection failed, so the
node read the introducer_cache.yaml from disk. That always returns
unicode strings, and the StorageFarmBroker insisted that it's
server-IDs (aka "key_s") were bytestrings.
The tests were extended to exercise the code that loads from disk and
delivers to the StorageFarmBroker, and more preconditions were put in
place to catch this sort of thing earlier next time.
closes ticket:2817
The yaml.SafeLoader.add_constructor() should probably only be done once,
and moving this all into a module gives us an opportunity to test it
directly.
Historical note: V2 introducers have been around for three years
now (released in 1.10.0), so it's time to drop v1. This branch removes a
lot of fallback code, and tests which exercised it. refs ticket:2784
This patch removes some now-unused code: v1-related support functions on
the client, "stub-client" handlers, and v1-tolerant remote methods on
the server. The unit tests have been cleaned up a bit too, now that
there are fewer cases to exercise.
* use yaml.safe_load and yaml.safe_dump
* configure SafeLoader to return unicode consistently, not str
* log+ignore bad cache, instead of throwing error, since we're already
in the log+ignore chain from connect_failed()
* use a local exception type, instead of one from storage_client.py
* delegate delivery to self._deliver_announcements
Using yaml.safe_dump gives us:
- ann:
my-version: tahoe-lafs/1.11.0.post96.dev0
nickname: node-4
instead of:
- ann:
!!python/unicode 'my-version': !!python/unicode 'tahoe-lafs/1.11.0.post96.dev0'
!!python/unicode 'nickname': !!python/unicode 'node-4'
We want SafeLoader to consistently return unicode instead of sometimes
plain strings (for ASCII-safe values) and sometimes unicode
(for everything else). The data we write into the cache was all unicode
to start with (it came from a JSON parser), so it seems better to get
back unicode too.
* Use tempfile for cache to avoid collisions
* Fix pyflakes complaints
* Remove test_client_cache_2, which exercises unsigned announcements.
These are scheduled to be removed soon (see ticket:2784) and don't
need to be tested.
This fixes some of the upcoming-deprecation warnings against Foolscap
(>=0.11.0). There are still a bunch related to the key-generator and the
stats gatherer.
This test was depending upon the storage announcement happening *after*
startup, but the upcoming synchronous-Tub-startup change will modify the
ordering. Fix it in both cases by disabling storage in the client being
tested.
A long time ago, the introducer's status web page would show the
advertised IP addresses for all published services, by parsing their
FURL's connection hints. This hasn't worked since about 12-Aug-2014 when
foolscap-0.6.5 changed the internal format of these hints (the column
has been empty this whole time).
This removes the "Advertised IPs" column from the Service Announcements
table. Instead, the service's full connection hints (not just the IP
address) is displayed in a tooltip/popup on the "Announced" timestamp
column.
The code that pulls these connection hints is now tolerant of all three
foolscap styles:
* foolscap<=0.6.4 : tuples of ("ipv4",host,port)
* 0.6.5 .. 0.8.0 : tuples of ("tcp",host,port)
* foolscap>=0.9.0 : strings
fixes ticket:2510
Previously, Introducers always used a swissnum of "introducer", so
anyone who could learn the (public) tubid of the introducer would be
able to connect to and use it. This changes new Introducers to use the
same randomly-generated swissnum as clients and storage servers do, so
that you absolutely must learn the introducer.furl from someone who
knows it already before you can connect.
This change also moves the location of the file that stores
introducer.furl from BASEDIR/introducer.furl to
BASEDIR/private/introducer.furl, since that's where we keep the private
things. The first time an introducer is started with the new code, it
will move any existing BASEDIR/introducer.furl into the new place.
Note that this will not change the FURL of existing introducers: it will
only affect newly created ones. When you change an introducer's FURL,
you must also update all of the nodes (clients and storage servers)
which connect to it, so upgrading it to an unguessable one isn't
something we should do automatically.
This stores the sequence number in BASEDIR/announcement-seqnum, and
increments it each time any service is published (every service
announcement is regenerated with the new sequence number). As everyone
knows, time is an illusion, and occasionally goes backwards, so a
counter is generally safer (and reveals less information about the
node).
Later, we'll improve the introducer client to tolerate rollbacks (where,
perhaps due to a VM being restarted from an earlier checkpoint, the
stored sequence number reverts to an earlier version).
'serverid' is the pubkey (for V2 clients), falling back to the tubid (for V1
clients). This also required cleaning up the way the index is created for the
old V1 introducer.
This significantly cleans up the IntroducerServer web-status renderers.
Instead of poking around in the introducer's internals, now the web-status
renderers get clean AnnouncementDescriptor and SubscriberDescriptor
objects. They are still somewhat foolscap-centric, but will provide a clean
abstraction boundary for future improvements.
The specific #1721 bug was that old (V1) subscribers were handled by
wrapping their RemoteReference in a special WrapV1SubscriberInV2Interface
object, but the web-status display was trying to peek inside the object to
learn what host+port it was associated with, and the wrapper did not proxy
those extra attributes.
A test was added to test_introducer to make sure the introweb page renders
properly and at least contains the nicknames of both the V1 and V2 clients.
SystemTest has a couple of different phases, separated by a poller which
waits for everything to be idle (all messages delivered, none in flight). It
does this by watching some internal "_debug_outstanding" counters in the
server and in each client, and waiting for them to hit zero.
Just before the last phase, we replace the server with a new one (to make
sure clients re-send their messages properly). Unfortunately, the polling
function closed over the variable holding the original server, and didn't see
the replacement. It kept polling the old server, and failed to notice the
outstanding messages for the new server. The last phase of the test (check3)
was started too early, which failed (since some messages had not yet been
delivered), and then exploded in a flurry of dirty-reactor errors (because
some messages were delivered after test shutdown).
This replaces the closed-over-variable with a "self.the_introducer", which
seems to fix the race.
One additional place to look at in the future: the client
announcement-receive path (remote_announce) uses an eventually(). If the
message has been received and the eventual-send posted (but not yet executed)
when the poller sees it, the poller might erroneously conclude that the
client is idle and cause the same problem as above. To fix this, the poller
(probably all pollers) could be enhanced to do a flushEventualQueue before
querying the are-we-done-yet predicate function.
This introduces new client and server halves to the Introducer (renaming the
old one with a _V1 suffix). Both have fallbacks to accomodate talking to a
different version: the publishing client switches on whether the server's
.get_version() advertises V2 support, the server switches on which
subscription method was invoked by the subscribing client.
The V2 protocol sends a three-tuple of (serialized announcement dictionary,
signature, pubkey) for each announcement. The V2 server dispatches messages
to subscribers according to the service-name, and throws errors for invalid
signatures, but does not otherwise examine the messages. The V2 receiver's
subscription callback will receive a (serverid, ann_dict) pair. The
'serverid' will be equal to the pubkey if all of the following are true:
the originating client is V2, and was told a privkey to use
the announcement went through a V2 server
the signature is valid
If not, 'serverid' will be equal to the tubid portion of the announced FURL,
as was the case for V1 receivers.
Servers will create a keypair if one does not exist yet, stored in
private/server.privkey .
The signed announcement dictionary puts the server FURL in a key named
"anonymous-storage-FURL", which anticipates upcoming Accounting-related
changes in the server advertisements. It also provides a key named
"permutation-seed-base32" to tell clients what permutation seed to use. This
is computed at startup, using tubid if there are existing shares, otherwise
the pubkey, to retain share-order compatibility for existing servers.