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handle FSM.Apply
errors in raftApply
#16287
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tgross
added
type/bug
backport/1.3.x
backport to 1.3.x release line
backport/1.4.x
backport to 1.4.x release line
backport/1.5.x
backport to 1.5.x release line
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Mar 1, 2023
`Job.Deregister` should not emit evals once the job has been purged and should return an error if the job doesn't exist.
schmichael
approved these changes
Mar 1, 2023
@@ -1554,7 +1554,7 @@ func TestJobs_Deregister(t *testing.T) { | |||
must.NoError(t, err) | |||
assertWriteMeta(t, wm) | |||
|
|||
// Attempting delete on non-existing job returns an error | |||
// Attempting delete on non-existing job does not return an error |
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Good catch! I can imagine that has provoked some unnecessary 🤔
tgross
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Mar 2, 2023
The signature of the `raftApply` function requires that the caller unwrap the first returned value (the response from `FSM.Apply`) to see if it's an error. This puts the burden on the caller to remember to check two different places for errors, and we've done so inconsistently. Update `raftApply` to do the unwrapping for us and return any `FSM.Apply` error as the error value. Similar work was done in Consul in hashicorp/consul#9991. This eliminates some boilerplate and surfaces a few minor bugs in the process: * job deregistrations of already-GC'd jobs were still emitting evals * reconcile job summaries does not return scheduler errors * node updates did not report errors associated with inconsistent service discovery or CSI plugin states Note that although _most_ of the `FSM.Apply` functions return only errors (which makes it tempting to remove the first return value entirely), there are few that return `bool` for some reason and Variables relies on the response value for proper CAS checking.
tgross
added a commit
that referenced
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Mar 2, 2023
The signature of the `raftApply` function requires that the caller unwrap the first returned value (the response from `FSM.Apply`) to see if it's an error. This puts the burden on the caller to remember to check two different places for errors, and we've done so inconsistently. Update `raftApply` to do the unwrapping for us and return any `FSM.Apply` error as the error value. Similar work was done in Consul in hashicorp/consul#9991. This eliminates some boilerplate and surfaces a few minor bugs in the process: * job deregistrations of already-GC'd jobs were still emitting evals * reconcile job summaries does not return scheduler errors * node updates did not report errors associated with inconsistent service discovery or CSI plugin states Note that although _most_ of the `FSM.Apply` functions return only errors (which makes it tempting to remove the first return value entirely), there are few that return `bool` for some reason and Variables relies on the response value for proper CAS checking.
tgross
added a commit
that referenced
this pull request
Mar 2, 2023
The signature of the `raftApply` function requires that the caller unwrap the first returned value (the response from `FSM.Apply`) to see if it's an error. This puts the burden on the caller to remember to check two different places for errors, and we've done so inconsistently. Update `raftApply` to do the unwrapping for us and return any `FSM.Apply` error as the error value. Similar work was done in Consul in hashicorp/consul#9991. This eliminates some boilerplate and surfaces a few minor bugs in the process: * job deregistrations of already-GC'd jobs were still emitting evals * reconcile job summaries does not return scheduler errors * node updates did not report errors associated with inconsistent service discovery or CSI plugin states Note that although _most_ of the `FSM.Apply` functions return only errors (which makes it tempting to remove the first return value entirely), there are few that return `bool` for some reason and Variables relies on the response value for proper CAS checking.
tgross
added a commit
that referenced
this pull request
Mar 2, 2023
The signature of the `raftApply` function requires that the caller unwrap the first returned value (the response from `FSM.Apply`) to see if it's an error. This puts the burden on the caller to remember to check two different places for errors, and we've done so inconsistently. Update `raftApply` to do the unwrapping for us and return any `FSM.Apply` error as the error value. Similar work was done in Consul in hashicorp/consul#9991. This eliminates some boilerplate and surfaces a few minor bugs in the process: * job deregistrations of already-GC'd jobs were still emitting evals * reconcile job summaries does not return scheduler errors * node updates did not report errors associated with inconsistent service discovery or CSI plugin states Note that although _most_ of the `FSM.Apply` functions return only errors (which makes it tempting to remove the first return value entirely), there are few that return `bool` for some reason and Variables relies on the response value for proper CAS checking. Co-authored-by: Tim Gross <tgross@hashicorp.com>
tgross
added a commit
that referenced
this pull request
Mar 2, 2023
The signature of the `raftApply` function requires that the caller unwrap the first returned value (the response from `FSM.Apply`) to see if it's an error. This puts the burden on the caller to remember to check two different places for errors, and we've done so inconsistently. Update `raftApply` to do the unwrapping for us and return any `FSM.Apply` error as the error value. Similar work was done in Consul in hashicorp/consul#9991. This eliminates some boilerplate and surfaces a few minor bugs in the process: * job deregistrations of already-GC'd jobs were still emitting evals * reconcile job summaries does not return scheduler errors * node updates did not report errors associated with inconsistent service discovery or CSI plugin states Note that although _most_ of the `FSM.Apply` functions return only errors (which makes it tempting to remove the first return value entirely), there are few that return `bool` for some reason and Variables relies on the response value for proper CAS checking. Co-authored-by: Tim Gross <tgross@hashicorp.com>
philrenaud
pushed a commit
that referenced
this pull request
Mar 14, 2023
The signature of the `raftApply` function requires that the caller unwrap the first returned value (the response from `FSM.Apply`) to see if it's an error. This puts the burden on the caller to remember to check two different places for errors, and we've done so inconsistently. Update `raftApply` to do the unwrapping for us and return any `FSM.Apply` error as the error value. Similar work was done in Consul in hashicorp/consul#9991. This eliminates some boilerplate and surfaces a few minor bugs in the process: * job deregistrations of already-GC'd jobs were still emitting evals * reconcile job summaries does not return scheduler errors * node updates did not report errors associated with inconsistent service discovery or CSI plugin states Note that although _most_ of the `FSM.Apply` functions return only errors (which makes it tempting to remove the first return value entirely), there are few that return `bool` for some reason and Variables relies on the response value for proper CAS checking.
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backport/1.3.x
backport to 1.3.x release line
backport/1.4.x
backport to 1.4.x release line
backport/1.5.x
backport to 1.5.x release line
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The signature of the
raftApply
function requires that the caller unwrap the first returned value (the response fromFSM.Apply
) to see if it's an error. This puts the burden on the caller to remember to check two different places for errors, and we've done so inconsistently.Update
raftApply
to do the unwrapping for us and return anyFSM.Apply
error as the error value. Similar work was done in Consul in hashicorp/consul#9991. This eliminates some boilerplate and surfaces a few minor bugs in the process:Note that although most of the
FSM.Apply
functions return only errors (which makes it tempting to remove the first return value entirely), there are few that returnbool
for some reason and Variables relies on the response value for proper CAS checking.