Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jakob Borg
77970d5113
refactor: use modern Protobuf encoder (#9817)
At a high level, this is what I've done and why:

- I'm moving the protobuf generation for the `protocol`, `discovery` and
`db` packages to the modern alternatives, and using `buf` to generate
because it's nice and simple.
- After trying various approaches on how to integrate the new types with
the existing code, I opted for splitting off our own data model types
from the on-the-wire generated types. This means we can have a
`FileInfo` type with nicer ergonomics and lots of methods, while the
protobuf generated type stays clean and close to the wire protocol. It
does mean copying between the two when required, which certainly adds a
small amount of inefficiency. If we want to walk this back in the future
and use the raw generated type throughout, that's possible, this however
makes the refactor smaller (!) as it doesn't change everything about the
type for everyone at the same time.
- I have simply removed in cold blood a significant number of old
database migrations. These depended on previous generations of generated
messages of various kinds and were annoying to support in the new
fashion. The oldest supported database version now is the one from
Syncthing 1.9.0 from Sep 7, 2020.
- I changed config structs to be regular manually defined structs.

For the sake of discussion, some things I tried that turned out not to
work...

### Embedding / wrapping

Embedding the protobuf generated structs in our existing types as a data
container and keeping our methods and stuff:

```
package protocol

type FileInfo struct {
  *generated.FileInfo
}
```

This generates a lot of problems because the internal shape of the
generated struct is quite different (different names, different types,
more pointers), because initializing it doesn't work like you'd expect
(i.e., you end up with an embedded nil pointer and a panic), and because
the types of child types don't get wrapped. That is, even if we also
have a similar wrapper around a `Vector`, that's not the type you get
when accessing `someFileInfo.Version`, you get the `*generated.Vector`
that doesn't have methods, etc.

### Aliasing

```
package protocol

type FileInfo = generated.FileInfo
```

Doesn't help because you can't attach methods to it, plus all the above.

### Generating the types into the target package like we do now and
attaching methods

This fails because of the different shape of the generated type (as in
the embedding case above) plus the generated struct already has a bunch
of methods that we can't necessarily override properly (like `String()`
and a bunch of getters).

### Methods to functions

I considered just moving all the methods we attach to functions in a
specific package, so that for example

```
package protocol

func (f FileInfo) Equal(other FileInfo) bool
```

would become

```
package fileinfos

func Equal(a, b *generated.FileInfo) bool
```

and this would mostly work, but becomes quite verbose and cumbersome,
and somewhat limits discoverability (you can't see what methods are
available on the type in auto completions, etc). In the end I did this
in some cases, like in the database layer where a lot of things like
`func (fv *FileVersion) IsEmpty() bool` becomes `func fvIsEmpty(fv
*generated.FileVersion)` because they were anyway just internal methods.

Fixes #8247
2024-12-01 16:50:17 +01:00
Jakob Borg
8b19cb1e11
chore(stdiscosrv): use zero-allocation merge in the common case 2024-09-15 15:26:40 +02:00
Jakob Borg
6505e123bb
chore(stdiscosrv): clean up s3 handling 2024-09-13 08:48:04 +02:00
Jakob Borg
f3f5557c8e
chore(stdiscosrv): improve expire, logging 2024-09-13 08:48:04 +02:00
Jakob Borg
aed2c66e52
feat(discosrv): in-memory storage with S3 backing 2024-09-13 08:48:03 +02:00
Jakob Borg
c6334e61aa
all: Support multiple device connections (fixes #141) (#8918)
This adds the ability to have multiple concurrent connections to a single device. This is primarily useful when the network has multiple physical links for aggregated bandwidth. A single connection will never see a higher rate than a single link can give, but multiple connections are load-balanced over multiple links.

It is also incidentally useful for older multi-core CPUs, where bandwidth could be limited by the TLS performance of a single CPU core -- using multiple connections achieves concurrency in the required crypto calculations...

Co-authored-by: Simon Frei <freisim93@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: tomasz1986 <twilczynski@naver.com>
Co-authored-by: bt90 <btom1990@googlemail.com>
2023-09-06 12:52:01 +02:00
Jakob Borg
b49f535834 cmd/stdiscorv: Fix database test (fixes #8828)
The problem was that a statistics/cleanup run is triggered when the
database started and runs concurrently with the test. That cleanup run
removes old entries without valid addresses, and one of the test objects
matched this. The test object would thus randomly be removed in the
middle of the test, causing a failure. This fixes it so the object looks
recent when the cleaner-upper looks, and also uses a RAM database
(faster).
2023-03-24 09:15:12 +01:00
Simon Frei
9524b51708
all: Implement suture v4-api (#6947) 2020-11-17 13:19:04 +01:00
Matic Potočnik
1901a5a9f4 all: Fix typos (#4772)
Skip-check: authors
2018-02-24 08:51:29 +01:00
Jakob Borg
916ec63af6 cmd/stdiscosrv: New discovery server (fixes #4618)
This is a new revision of the discovery server. Relevant changes and
non-changes:

- Protocol towards clients is unchanged.

- Recommended large scale design is still to be deployed nehind nginx (I
  tested, and it's still a lot faster at terminating TLS).

- Database backend is leveldb again, only. It scales enough, is easy to
  setup, and we don't need any backend to take care of.

- Server supports replication. This is a simple TCP channel - protect it
  with a firewall when deploying over the internet. (We deploy this within
  the same datacenter, and with firewall.) Any incoming client announces
  are sent over the replication channel(s) to other peer discosrvs.
  Incoming replication changes are applied to the database as if they came
  from clients, but without the TLS/certificate overhead.

- Metrics are exposed using the prometheus library, when enabled.

- The database values and replication protocol is protobuf, because JSON
  was quite CPU intensive when I tried that and benchmarked it.

- The "Retry-After" value for failed lookups gets slowly increased from
  a default of 120 seconds, by 5 seconds for each failed lookup,
  independently by each discosrv. This lowers the query load over time for
  clients that are never seen. The Retry-After maxes out at 3600 after a
  couple of weeks of this increase. The number of failed lookups is
  stored in the database, now and then (avoiding making each lookup a
  database put).

All in all this means clients can be pointed towards a cluster using
just multiple A / AAAA records to gain both load sharing and redundancy
(if one is down, clients will talk to the remaining ones).

GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/4648
2018-01-14 08:52:31 +00:00