Make the necessary changes for the code base to compile with JDK 21.
Other changes:
1. Upgraded testcontainer version and the SQL image version (to be the
same as what we use in Cloud SQL). This led to some schema changes and
also changed the order of results in some test queries (for the
better I think, as the new order appears to be alphabetical).
2. Remove dependency on Truth8, which is deprecated.
3. Enable parallel Gradle task execution and greatly increased the
number of parallel tests in standardTest. Removed outcastTest.
* Remove use of shouldPublishField from ReservedList
* Remove from tests
* Update test comment
* Fix indentation
* fix test comment
* Fix test
* fix test
* Make shouldPublish column nullable
* Add java changes for createBillingCostTransitions
* Add negative cost test
* Remove default value
* remove unused variable
* Add check that create cost and trnasitions map are the same
* inject clock, only use key set when checking for missing fields
* Add test for removing map
This PR makes it possible to build the Nomulus code base using Java 17.
Building with Java 11 continue to be possible and the resulting bytecodes are
still at Java 8 level. Also upgraded Gradle to 8.5.
There are several necessary changes to make this happen:
1. Some Gradle plugins need to be upgraded to support Java 17, notably
errorprone. As a result, a lot more "errors" were caught and corrected.
2. All test code are now built and run at Java 8 level. Previously it was left
undefined (which defaults to the version of the compiler) and had led to
situations where we inadvertently called Java 8+ features in production that
are not caught by tests. The change also made the java8compatibility subproject
obsolete, which is therefore removed.
3. Removed the docs subproject. Its main use is to generate flows.md, but it
relies heavily on Java internal APIs that have changed significant with each
version. Upgrading to Java 11 required extensive refactoring of the code there,
and Java 17 again removed many APIs that were used. I don't think it is worth
the maintenance effort just to have a tool to generate flows.md which no one
actually reads.
4. Capped a few GCP dependencies because the latest version depends on
grpc-java >= 1.59.0, which includes a runtime incompatibility
(https://github.com/grpc/grpc-java/releases/tag/v1.59.0).
Supports the full blocklist download cycle (download, diffing, diff-apply, and order-status reporting) and the refreshing of unblockable domains.
Submitted due to tight deadline. We will conduct post-submit review and refactoring.
Add the BsaDomainRefresh class which tracks the refresh actions.
The refresh actions checks for changes in the set of registered and
reserved domains, which are called unblockables to BSA.
Add the BsaDomainRefresh table which tracks the refresh actions.
The refresh actions checks for changes in the set of registered and
reserved domains, which are called unblockables to BSA.
Also adds a placeholder getter in the Tld class, so that it can be
mocked/spied in tests. This way more BSA related code can be submitted
before the schema is deployed to prod.
* Change PackagePromotion to BulkPricingPackage
* More name changes
* Fix some test names
* Change token type "BULK" to "BULK_PRICING"
* Fix missed token_type reference
* Add todo to remove package type
Use a system property to specify whether this check should be executed.
We will update the presubmit test script to run this check only during
foss-pr.
See b/248035435 for more details / reasoning, but basically this will
make it easier if we ever need to restore user actions in the future (or
figure out which user actions went wrong)
We have been using it as a poor man's timed flag that triggers a system
behavior change after a certain time. We have no foreseeable future use
for it now that the DNS pull queue related code is deleted. If in the
future a need for such a flag arises, we are better off implementing a
proper flag system than hijacking this class any way.
This includes renaming the billing classes to match the SQL table names,
as well as splitting them out into their own separate top-level classes.
The rest of the changes are mostly renaming variables and comments etc.
We now use `BillingBase` as the name of the common billing superclass,
because one-time events are called BillingEvents
This includes changes to make sure that we use the proper per-TLD IDN
tables as well as setting/updating/removing them via the Create/Update
TLD commands.
Also adds a DnsUtils class to deal with adding, polling, and removing
DNS refresh requests (only adding is implemented for now). The class
also takes care of choosing which mechanism to use (pull queue vs. SQL)
based on the current time and the database migration schedule map.
The value of the column would be set to START_OF_TIME for new entries.
Every time a row is read, the value is updated to the current time. This
allows concurrent reads to not repeatedly read the same entry that has the
earliest request time, because they would only look for rows that have a value
of process time that is before current time - some padding time.
This basically fulfills the same function that LEASE_PADDING gives us
when using a pull queue, whereas a task would be leased for a certain
time, during which time they would not be leased by anyone else.
See: https://cs.opensource.google/nomulus/nomulus/+/master:core/src/main/java/google/registry/dns/ReadDnsQueueAction.java;l=99?q=readdnsqueue&ss=nomulus%2Fnomulus
We were under the mistaken impression before that there was a reliable
way to, out-of-band, get a GAIA ID for a particular email address.
Unfortunately, that isn't the case (at least, not in a scalable way or
one that support agents could use). As a result, we have to allow null
GAIA IDs in the database.
When we (or the support team) create new users, we will only specify the
email address and not the GAIA ID. Then, when the user logs in for the
first time, we will have the GAIA ID from the provided ID token, and we
can populate it then.
This will replace the ExpandRecurringBillingEventsAction, which has a
couple of issues:
1) The action starts with too many Recurrings that are later filtered out
because their expanded OneTimes are not actually in scope. This is due
to the Recurrings not recording its latest expanded event time, and
therefore many Recurrings that are not yet due for renewal get included
in the initial query.
2) The action works in sequence, which exacerbated the issue in 1) and
makes it very slow to run if the window of operation is wider than
one day, which in turn makes it impossible to run any catch-up
expansions with any significant gap to fill.
3) The action only expands the recurrence when the billing times because
due, but most of its logic works on event time, which is 45 days
before billing time, making the code hard to reason about and
error-prone. This has led to b/258822640 where a premature
optimization intended to fix 1) caused some autorenwals to not be
expanded correctly when subsequent manual renews within the autorenew
grace period closed the original recurrece.
As a result, the new pipeline addresses the above issues in the
following way:
1) Update the recurrenceLastExpansion field on the Recurring when a new
expansion occurs, and narrow down the Recurrings in scope for
expansion by only looking for the ones that have not been expanded for
more than a year.
2) Make it a Beam pipeline so expansions can happen in parallel. The
Recurrings are grouped into batches in order to not overwhelm the
database with writes for each expansion.
3) Create new expansions when the event time, as opposed to billing
time, is within the operation window. This streamlines the logic and
makes it clearer and easier to reason about. This also aligns with
how other (cancelllable) operations for which there are accompanying
grace periods are handled, when the corresponding data is always
speculatively created at event time. Lastly, doing this negates the
need to check if the expansion has finished running before generating
the monthly invoices, because the billing events are now created not
just-in-time, but 45 days in advance.
Note that this PR only adds the pipeline. It does not switch the default
behavior to using the pipeline, which is still done by
ExpandRecurringBillingEventsAction. We will first use this pipeline to
generate missing billing events and domain histories caused by
b/258822640. This also allows us to test it in production, as it
backfills data that will not affect ongoing invoice generation. If
anything goes wrong, we can always delete the generated billing events
and domain histories, based on the unique "reason" in them.
This pipeline can only run after we switch to use SQL sequence based ID
allocation, introduced in #1831.
* Add defaultPromoTokens to Registry
* Remove flyway files from this PR
* Fix merge conflicts
* Add back flyway file
* Add more info to error messages
* Change to a list
* Fix javadoc
* Change error message
* Add note to field declaration