A smaller version of #12066 that is somewhat easier to review.
Now that I've been using https://crates.io/crates/top-type-sizes I've
found a lot more of the low hanging fruit that can be tweaks to reduce
the memory usage.
Some context for the optimisations:
Rust's stack allocation in futures is quite naive. Stack variables, even
if moved, often still end up taking space in the future. Rearranging the
order in which variables are defined, and properly scoping them can go a
long way.
`async fn` and `async move {}` have a consequence that they always
duplicate the "upvars" (aka captures). All captures are permanently
allocated in the future, even if moved. We can be mindful when writing
futures to only capture as little as possible.
TlsStream is massive. Needs boxing so it doesn't contribute to the above
issue.
## Measurements from `top-type-sizes`:
### Before
```
10328 {async block@proxy::proxy::task_main::{closure#0}::{closure#0}} align=8
6120 {async fn body of proxy::proxy::handle_client<proxy::protocol2::ChainRW<tokio::net::TcpStream>>()} align=8
```
### After
```
4040 {async block@proxy::proxy::task_main::{closure#0}::{closure#0}}
4704 {async fn body of proxy::proxy::handle_client<proxy::protocol2::ChainRW<tokio::net::TcpStream>>()} align=8
```
This upgrades the `proxy/` crate as well as the forked libraries in
`libs/proxy/` to edition 2024.
Also reformats the imports of those forked libraries via:
```
cargo +nightly fmt -p proxy -p postgres-protocol2 -p postgres-types2 -p tokio-postgres2 -- -l --config imports_granularity=Module,group_imports=StdExternalCrate,reorder_imports=true
```
It can be read commit-by-commit: the first commit has no formatting
changes, only changes to accomodate the new edition.
Part of #10918
Follow up to #9803
See https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/14378
In collaboration with @cloneable and @awarus, we sifted through logs and
simply demoted some logs to debug. This is not at all finished and there
are more logs to review, but we ran out of time in the session we
organised. In any slightly more nuanced cases, we didn't touch the log,
instead leaving a TODO comment.
I've also slightly refactored the sql-over-http body read/length reject
code. I can split that into a separate PR. It just felt natural after I
switched to `read_body_with_limit` as we discussed during the meet.
While setting up some tests, I noticed that we didn't support keycloak.
They make use of encryption JWKs as well as signature ones. Our current
jwks crate does not support parsing encryption keys which caused the
entire jwk set to fail to parse. Switching to lazy parsing fixes this.
Also while setting up tests, I couldn't use localhost jwks server as we
require HTTPS and we were using webpki so it was impossible to add a
custom CA. Enabling native roots addresses this possibility.
I saw some of our current e2e tests against our custom JWKS in s3 were
taking a while to fetch. I've added a timeout + retries to address this.
Follow up on #9344. We want to install the extension automatically. We
didn't want to couple the extension into compute_ctl so instead
local_proxy is the one to issue requests specific to the extension.
depends on #9344 and #9395