this change was created in the same spirit of 505900f18f. because
we are deprecating the operator<< for vector and unorderd_map in
Seastar, some tests do not compile anymore if we disable these
operators. so to be prepared for the change disabling them, let's
include test/lib/test_utils.hh for accessing the printer dedicated
for Boost.test. and also '#include <fmt/ranges.h>' when necessary,
because, in order to format the ranges using {fmt}, we need to
use fmt/ranges.h.
Refs #13245
Signed-off-by: Kefu Chai <kefu.chai@scylladb.com>
Schema related files are moved there. This excludes schema files that
also interact with mutations, because the mutation module depends on
the schema. Those files will have to go into a separate module.
Closes#12858
We have enabled the command line options without changing a
single line of code, we only had to replace old include
with scylla_test_case.hh.
Next step is to add x-log-compaction-groups options, which will
determine the number of compaction groups to be used by all
instantiations of replica::table.
Signed-off-by: Raphael S. Carvalho <raphaelsc@scylladb.com>
Instead of lengthy blurbs, switch to single-line, machine-readable
standardized (https://spdx.dev) license identifiers. The Linux kernel
switched long ago, so there is strong precedent.
Three cases are handled: AGPL-only, Apache-only, and dual licensed.
For the latter case, I chose (AGPL-3.0-or-later and Apache-2.0),
reasoning that our changes are extensive enough to apply our license.
The changes we applied mechanically with a script, except to
licenses/README.md.
Closes#9937
The keys classes (partition_key et al) already use managed_bytes,
but they assume the data is not fragmented and make liberal use
of that by casting to bytes_view. The view classes use bytes_view.
Change that to managed_bytes_view, and adjust return values
to managed_bytes/managed_bytes_view.
The callers are adjusted. In some places linearization (to_bytes())
is needed, but this isn't too bad as keys are always <= 64k and thus
will not be fragmented when out of LSA. We can remove this
linearization later.
The serialize_value() template is called from a long chain, and
can be reached with either bytes_view or managed_bytes_view.
Rather than trace and adjust all the callers, we patch it now
with constexpr if.
operator bytes_view (in keys) is converted to operator
managed_bytes_view, allowing callers to defer or avoid
linearization.
But only non-validation error paths. When validating we do expect it to
maybe fail, so we don't want to generate cores for validation.
Validation is in fact a de-serialization pass with some additional
checks. To be able to keep reusing the same code for de-serialization
and validation just with different error handling, introduce a
`strict_mode` flag that can be passed to `composite::iterator`
constructor. When in strict mode (the default) the iterator will convert
any `marshal_exception` thrown during the de-serialization to
`on_internal_error()`.
We don't want anybody to use the iterator in non-strict mode, besides
validation, so the iterator constructors are made private. This is
standard practice for iterators anyway.
1. Move tests to test (using singular seems to be a convention
in the rest of the code base)
2. Move boost tests to test/boost, other
(non-boost) unit tests to test/unit, tests which are
expected to be run manually to test/manual.
Update configure.py and test.py with new paths to tests.