This reverts commit 826e89b9ce.
The problem with that commit was that it deletes the TempDir while
there are still EphemeralFile instances open.
At first I thought this could be fixed by simply adding
Handle::current().block_on(task_mgr::shutdown(None, Some(tenant_id), None))
to TenantHarness::drop, but it turned out to be insufficient.
So, reverting the commit until we find a proper solution.
refs https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/3385
* Add submodule postgres-15
* Support pg_15 in pgxn/neon
* Renamed zenith -> neon in Makefile
* fix name of codestyle check
* Refactor build system to prepare for building multiple Postgres versions.
Rename "vendor/postgres" to "vendor/postgres-v14"
Change Postgres build and install directory paths to be version-specific:
- tmp_install/build -> pg_install/build/14
- tmp_install/* -> pg_install/14/*
And Makefile targets:
- "make postgres" -> "make postgres-v14"
- "make postgres-headers" -> "make postgres-v14-headers"
- etc.
Add Makefile aliases:
- "make postgres" to build "postgres-v14" and in future, "postgres-v15"
- similarly for "make postgres-headers"
Fix POSTGRES_DISTRIB_DIR path in pytest scripts
* Make postgres version a variable in codestyle workflow
* Support vendor/postgres-v15 in codestyle check workflow
* Support postgres-v15 building in Makefile
* fix pg version in Dockerfile.compute-node
* fix kaniko path
* Build neon extensions in version-specific directories
* fix obsolete mentions of vendor/postgres
* use vendor/postgres-v14 in Dockerfile.compute-node.legacy
* Use PG_VERSION_NUM to gate dependencies in inmem_smgr.c
* Use versioned ECR repositories and image names for compute-node.
The image name format is compute-node-vXX, where XX is postgres major version number.
For now only v14 is supported.
Old format unversioned name (compute-node) is left, because cloud repo depends on it.
* update vendor/postgres submodule url (zenith->neondatabase rename)
* Fix postgres path in python tests after rebase
* fix path in regress test
* Use separate dockerfiles to build compute-node:
Dockerfile.compute-node-v15 should be identical to Dockerfile.compute-node-v14 except for the version number.
This is a hack, because Kaniko doesn't support build ARGs properly
* bump vendor/postgres-v14 and vendor/postgres-v15
* Don't use Kaniko cache for v14 and v15 compute-node images
* Build compute-node images for different versions in different jobs
Co-authored-by: Heikki Linnakangas <heikki@neon.tech>
Now proxy binary accepts `--auth-backend` CLI option, which determines
auth scheme and cluster routing method. Following backends are currently
implemented:
* legacy
old method, when username ends with `@zenith` it uses md5 auth dbname as
the cluster name; otherwise, it sends a login link and waits for the console
to call back
* console
new SCRAM-based console API; uses SNI info to select the destination
cluster
* postgres
uses postgres to select auth secrets of existing roles. Useful for local
testing
* link
sends login link for all usernames
It's a bit annoying that the .zenith state can show up in multiple
places, but since this is how the regression tests run if you launch
them from the git root directory, ignore this one too.
I found I had a few other .zenith directories hanging around in odd
places. I doubt we intended those directories to collect in multiple
locations, so only hide the one in the git root directory.
Use pytest to manage background services, paths, and environment
variables.
Benefits:
- Tests are a little easier to write.
- Cleanup is more reliable. You can CTRL-C a test and it will still shut
down gracefully. If you manually start a conflicting process, the test
fixtures will detect this and abort at startup.
- Don't need to worry about remembering '--test-threads=1'
- Output of sub-processes can be captured to files.
- Test fixtures configure everything to operate under a single test
output directory, making it easier to capture logs in CI.
- Detects all the necessary paths if run from the git root, but can also
run from arbitrary paths by setting environment variables.
There is also a deliberately broken test (test_broken.py) that can be
used to test whether the test fixtures properly clean up after
themselves. It won't run by default; the comment at the top explains how
to enable it.