Commit Graph

21 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Michael Klishin 968eefa1bb
Bump (c) line year
There are no functional changes to this massive diff.
2025-01-01 17:54:10 -05:00
Jean-Sébastien Pédron debe2a118c
rabbitmq_ct_helpers: Change how Mnesia/Khepri is selected
[Why]
Once `khepr_db` is enabled by default, we need another way to disable it
to select Mnesia instead.

[How]
We use the new relative forced feature flags mechanism to indicate if we
want to explicitly enable or disable `khepri_db`. This way, we don't
touch other stable feature flags and only mess with Khepri.

However, this mechanism is not supported by RabbitMQ 4.0.x and older.
They will ignore the setting. Therefore, to make this work in
mixed-version testing, we set the `$RABBITMQ_FEATURE_FLAGS` variable for
the secondary umbrella. This part will go away once we test against
RabbitMQ 4.1.x as the secondary umbrella in the future.

At the end, we compare the effective metadata store to the expected one.
If they don't match, we skip the test.

While here, change `rjms_topic_selector_SUITE` to only choose Khepri
without specifying any feature flags.
2024-12-17 09:56:54 +01:00
Michal Kuratczyk cfa3de4b2b
Remove unused imports (thanks elp!) 2024-05-23 16:36:08 +02:00
Michael Klishin f414c2d512
More missed license header updates #9969 2024-02-05 11:53:50 -05:00
Diana Parra Corbacho 5f0981c5a3
Allow to use Khepri database to store metadata instead of Mnesia
[Why]

Mnesia is a very powerful and convenient tool for Erlang applications:
it is a persistent disc-based database, it handles replication accross
multiple Erlang nodes and it is available out-of-the-box from the
Erlang/OTP distribution. RabbitMQ relies on Mnesia to manage all its
metadata:

* virtual hosts' properties
* intenal users
* queue, exchange and binding declarations (not queues data)
* runtime parameters and policies
* ...

Unfortunately Mnesia makes it difficult to handle network partition and,
as a consequence, the merge conflicts between Erlang nodes once the
network partition is resolved. RabbitMQ provides several partition
handling strategies but they are not bullet-proof. Users still hit
situations where it is a pain to repair a cluster following a network
partition.

[How]

@kjnilsson created Ra [1], a Raft consensus library that RabbitMQ
already uses successfully to implement quorum queues and streams for
instance. Those queues do not suffer from network partitions.

We created Khepri [2], a new persistent and replicated database engine
based on Ra and we want to use it in place of Mnesia in RabbitMQ to
solve the problems with network partitions.

This patch integrates Khepri as an experimental feature. When enabled,
RabbitMQ will store all its metadata in Khepri instead of Mnesia.

This change comes with behavior changes. While Khepri remains disabled,
you should see no changes to the behavior of RabbitMQ. If there are
changes, it is a bug. After Khepri is enabled, there are significant
changes of behavior that you should be aware of.

Because it is based on the Raft consensus algorithm, when there is a
network partition, only the cluster members that are in the partition
with at least `(Number of nodes in the cluster ÷ 2) + 1` number of nodes
can "make progress". In other words, only those nodes may write to the
Khepri database and read from the database and expect a consistent
result.

For instance in a cluster of 5 RabbitMQ nodes:
* If there are two partitions, one with 3 nodes, one with 2 nodes, only
  the group of 3 nodes will be able to write to the database.
* If there are three partitions, two with 2 nodes, one with 1 node, none
  of the group can write to the database.

Because the Khepri database will be used for all kind of metadata, it
means that RabbitMQ nodes that can't write to the database will be
unable to perform some operations. A list of operations and what to
expect is documented in the associated pull request and the RabbitMQ
website.

This requirement from Raft also affects the startup of RabbitMQ nodes in
a cluster. Indeed, at least a quorum number of nodes must be started at
once to allow nodes to become ready.

To enable Khepri, you need to enable the `khepri_db` feature flag:

    rabbitmqctl enable_feature_flag khepri_db

When the `khepri_db` feature flag is enabled, the migration code
performs the following two tasks:
1. It synchronizes the Khepri cluster membership from the Mnesia
   cluster. It uses `mnesia_to_khepri:sync_cluster_membership/1` from
   the `khepri_mnesia_migration` application [3].
2. It copies data from relevant Mnesia tables to Khepri, doing some
   conversion if necessary on the way. Again, it uses
   `mnesia_to_khepri:copy_tables/4` from `khepri_mnesia_migration` to do
   it.

This can be performed on a running standalone RabbitMQ node or cluster.
Data will be migrated from Mnesia to Khepri without any service
interruption. Note that during the migration, the performance may
decrease and the memory footprint may go up.

Because this feature flag is considered experimental, it is not enabled
by default even on a brand new RabbitMQ deployment.

More about the implementation details below:

In the past months, all accesses to Mnesia were isolated in a collection
of `rabbit_db*` modules. This is where the integration of Khepri mostly
takes place: we use a function called `rabbit_khepri:handle_fallback/1`
which selects the database and perform the query or the transaction.
Here is an example from `rabbit_db_vhost`:

* Up until RabbitMQ 3.12.x:

        get(VHostName) when is_binary(VHostName) ->
            get_in_mnesia(VHostName).

* Starting with RabbitMQ 3.13.0:

        get(VHostName) when is_binary(VHostName) ->
            rabbit_khepri:handle_fallback(
              #{mnesia => fun() -> get_in_mnesia(VHostName) end,
                khepri => fun() -> get_in_khepri(VHostName) end}).

This `rabbit_khepri:handle_fallback/1` function relies on two things:
1. the fact that the `khepri_db` feature flag is enabled, in which case
   it always executes the Khepri-based variant.
4. the ability or not to read and write to Mnesia tables otherwise.

Before the feature flag is enabled, or during the migration, the
function will try to execute the Mnesia-based variant. If it succeeds,
then it returns the result. If it fails because one or more Mnesia
tables can't be used, it restarts from scratch: it means the feature
flag is being enabled and depending on the outcome, either the
Mnesia-based variant will succeed (the feature flag couldn't be enabled)
or the feature flag will be marked as enabled and it will call the
Khepri-based variant. The meat of this function really lives in the
`khepri_mnesia_migration` application [3] and
`rabbit_khepri:handle_fallback/1` is a wrapper on top of it that knows
about the feature flag.

However, some calls to the database do not depend on the existence of
Mnesia tables, such as functions where we need to learn about the
members of a cluster. For those, we can't rely on exceptions from
Mnesia. Therefore, we just look at the state of the feature flag to
determine which database to use. There are two situations though:

* Sometimes, we need the feature flag state query to block because the
  function interested in it can't return a valid answer during the
  migration. Here is an example:

        case rabbit_khepri:is_enabled(RemoteNode) of
            true  -> can_join_using_khepri(RemoteNode);
            false -> can_join_using_mnesia(RemoteNode)
        end

* Sometimes, we need the feature flag state query to NOT block (for
  instance because it would cause a deadlock). Here is an example:

        case rabbit_khepri:get_feature_state() of
            enabled -> members_using_khepri();
            _       -> members_using_mnesia()
        end

Direct accesses to Mnesia still exists. They are limited to code that is
specific to Mnesia such as classic queue mirroring or network partitions
handling strategies.

Now, to discover the Mnesia tables to migrate and how to migrate them,
we use an Erlang module attribute called
`rabbit_mnesia_tables_to_khepri_db` which indicates a list of Mnesia
tables and an associated converter module. Here is an example in the
`rabbitmq_recent_history_exchange` plugin:

    -rabbit_mnesia_tables_to_khepri_db(
       [{?RH_TABLE, rabbit_db_rh_exchange_m2k_converter}]).

The converter module  — `rabbit_db_rh_exchange_m2k_converter` in this
example  — is is fact a "sub" converter module called but
`rabbit_db_m2k_converter`. See the documentation of a `mnesia_to_khepri`
converter module to learn more about these modules.

[1] https://github.com/rabbitmq/ra
[2] https://github.com/rabbitmq/khepri
[3] https://github.com/rabbitmq/khepri_mnesia_migration

See #7206.

Co-authored-by: Jean-Sébastien Pédron <jean-sebastien@rabbitmq.com>
Co-authored-by: Diana Parra Corbacho <dparracorbac@vmware.com>
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
2023-09-29 16:00:11 +02:00
Diana Parra Corbacho a7019824b8 rabbitmq_jms_topic_exchange: support transactions on callbacks
Just semi-durable routes cause this to fail during recovery.
Other callback calls don't contain a transaction.
2023-09-26 15:48:31 +02:00
Diana Parra Corbacho 5b39e7e4ce Move jms topic exchange Mnesia-specific code to rabbit_db_* modules 2023-01-31 10:23:16 +01:00
Michael Klishin ec4f1dba7d
(c) year bump: 2022 => 2023 2023-01-01 23:17:36 -05:00
Michael Klishin c38a3d697d
Bump (c) year 2022-03-21 01:21:56 +04:00
Michael Klishin 52479099ec
Bump (c) year 2021-01-22 09:00:14 +03:00
Luke Bakken 437ba6bc70 wait_for_confirms timeout is in seconds
References rabbitmq/rabbitmq-erlang-client#138

cc @dumbbell
2020-11-02 11:21:24 -08:00
dcorbacho 5d91690e22 Switch to Mozilla Public License 2.0 (MPL 2.0) 2020-07-13 15:28:47 +01:00
Jean-Sébastien Pédron 613ce08a19 Update copyright (year 2020) 2020-03-10 16:16:43 +01:00
Spring Operator 110e448809 URL Cleanup
This commit updates URLs to prefer the https protocol. Redirects are not followed to avoid accidentally expanding intentionally shortened URLs (i.e. if using a URL shortener).

# HTTP URLs that Could Not Be Fixed
These URLs were unable to be fixed. Please review them to see if they can be manually resolved.

* http://blog.listincomprehension.com/search/label/procket (200) with 1 occurrences could not be migrated:
   ([https](https://blog.listincomprehension.com/search/label/procket) result ClosedChannelException).
* http://dozzie.jarowit.net/trac/wiki/TOML (200) with 1 occurrences could not be migrated:
   ([https](https://dozzie.jarowit.net/trac/wiki/TOML) result SSLHandshakeException).
* http://dozzie.jarowit.net/trac/wiki/subproc (200) with 1 occurrences could not be migrated:
   ([https](https://dozzie.jarowit.net/trac/wiki/subproc) result SSLHandshakeException).
* http://e2project.org (200) with 1 occurrences could not be migrated:
   ([https](https://e2project.org) result AnnotatedConnectException).
* http://nitrogenproject.com/ (200) with 2 occurrences could not be migrated:
   ([https](https://nitrogenproject.com/) result ConnectTimeoutException).
* http://proper.softlab.ntua.gr (200) with 1 occurrences could not be migrated:
   ([https](https://proper.softlab.ntua.gr) result SSLHandshakeException).
* http://yaws.hyber.org (200) with 1 occurrences could not be migrated:
   ([https](https://yaws.hyber.org) result AnnotatedConnectException).
* http://choven.ca (503) with 1 occurrences could not be migrated:
   ([https](https://choven.ca) result ConnectTimeoutException).

# Fixed URLs

## Fixed But Review Recommended
These URLs were fixed, but the https status was not OK. However, the https status was the same as the http request or http redirected to an https URL, so they were migrated. Your review is recommended.

* http://fixprotocol.org/ (301) with 1 occurrences migrated to:
  https://fixtrading.org ([https](https://fixprotocol.org/) result SSLHandshakeException).
* http://erldb.org (UnknownHostException) with 1 occurrences migrated to:
  https://erldb.org ([https](https://erldb.org) result UnknownHostException).

## Fixed Success
These URLs were switched to an https URL with a 2xx status. While the status was successful, your review is still recommended.

* http://cloudi.org/ with 27 occurrences migrated to:
  https://cloudi.org/ ([https](https://cloudi.org/) result 200).
* http://erlware.org/ with 1 occurrences migrated to:
  https://erlware.org/ ([https](https://erlware.org/) result 200).
* http://inaka.github.io/cowboy-trails/ with 1 occurrences migrated to:
  https://inaka.github.io/cowboy-trails/ ([https](https://inaka.github.io/cowboy-trails/) result 200).
* http://ninenines.eu with 6 occurrences migrated to:
  https://ninenines.eu ([https](https://ninenines.eu) result 200).
* http://tbaggery.com/2008/04/19/a-note-about-git-commit-messages.html with 1 occurrences migrated to:
  https://tbaggery.com/2008/04/19/a-note-about-git-commit-messages.html ([https](https://tbaggery.com/2008/04/19/a-note-about-git-commit-messages.html) result 200).
* http://www.actordb.com/ with 2 occurrences migrated to:
  https://www.actordb.com/ ([https](https://www.actordb.com/) result 200).
* http://www.apache.org/ with 1 occurrences migrated to:
  https://www.apache.org/ ([https](https://www.apache.org/) result 200).
* http://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/projects/wrangler/Home.html with 1 occurrences migrated to:
  https://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/projects/wrangler/Home.html ([https](https://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/projects/wrangler/Home.html) result 200).
* http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/docs-136352.html with 1 occurrences migrated to:
  https://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/docs-136352.html ([https](https://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/docs-136352.html) result 200).
* http://www.rabbitmq.com/plugin-development.html with 1 occurrences migrated to:
  https://www.rabbitmq.com/plugin-development.html ([https](https://www.rabbitmq.com/plugin-development.html) result 200).
* http://www.rebar3.org with 1 occurrences migrated to:
  https://www.rebar3.org ([https](https://www.rebar3.org) result 200).
* http://contributor-covenant.org with 1 occurrences migrated to:
  https://contributor-covenant.org ([https](https://contributor-covenant.org) result 301).
* http://contributor-covenant.org/version/1/3/0/ with 1 occurrences migrated to:
  https://contributor-covenant.org/version/1/3/0/ ([https](https://contributor-covenant.org/version/1/3/0/) result 301).
* http://inaka.github.com/apns4erl with 1 occurrences migrated to:
  https://inaka.github.com/apns4erl ([https](https://inaka.github.com/apns4erl) result 301).
* http://inaka.github.com/edis/ with 1 occurrences migrated to:
  https://inaka.github.com/edis/ ([https](https://inaka.github.com/edis/) result 301).
* http://lasp-lang.org/ with 1 occurrences migrated to:
  https://lasp-lang.org/ ([https](https://lasp-lang.org/) result 301).
* http://saleyn.github.com/erlexec with 1 occurrences migrated to:
  https://saleyn.github.com/erlexec ([https](https://saleyn.github.com/erlexec) result 301).
* http://www.mozilla.org/MPL/ with 9 occurrences migrated to:
  https://www.mozilla.org/MPL/ ([https](https://www.mozilla.org/MPL/) result 301).
* http://www.pivotal.io/open-source with 1 occurrences migrated to:
  https://www.pivotal.io/open-source ([https](https://www.pivotal.io/open-source) result 301).
* http://zhongwencool.github.io/observer_cli with 1 occurrences migrated to:
  https://zhongwencool.github.io/observer_cli ([https](https://zhongwencool.github.io/observer_cli) result 301).
* http://creativecommons.org/licenses/publicdomain with 1 occurrences migrated to:
  https://creativecommons.org/licenses/publicdomain ([https](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/publicdomain) result 302).
2019-03-20 03:17:00 -05:00
Michael Klishin bfad8e5484 Remove a constant that's no longer used
See c762cb99ec and 9f6de82994.
2016-09-29 16:15:04 +03:00
Michael Klishin c762cb99ec Remove an unused constant and a duplicate test 2016-09-14 17:22:20 +03:00
Michael Klishin 9f6de82994 Eliminate client version check
It made sense when the JMS topic exchange and Java client were
released and versioned in lock step but not anymore. Plus it currently
fails declarations over HTTP API.
2016-09-13 18:00:21 +03:00
Michael Klishin 6e796df935 Use publisher confirms before consuming with basic.get in this test
Otherwise low power Concourse workers get a basic.get-empty
instead of basic.get-ok.
2016-09-08 02:48:43 +03:00
Michael Klishin 59effb412d Switch test suite to Common Test 2016-06-21 16:15:49 +03:00
Michael Klishin 8c0d487cf1 Begin migration to Common Test 2016-06-21 00:58:26 +03:00
Michael Klishin fc7e54cac7 Migrate from legacy (package.mk) build system to erlang.mk 2016-05-16 16:41:34 +03:00