Replace MakeTempFile usage with MakeTempFilePath and MakeTempFileWithContent
helpers that automatically handle file lifecycle. This prevents resource
leaks by ensuring temporary files are properly closed.
Shoudld also make the tests easier to read.
Signed-off-by: Andrei Aaron <andreifdaaron@gmail.com>
* fix: make config read/write thread safe and fix some other similar issues
1. The config config has a lock, and safe methods to update and read the attributes
2. The config has methods to retrieve copies of specific attributes, such as the extyensions config, the auth config, and the authz config.
These are needed, as the config object may mutate in the middle of an auth/authz requests, and we avoid partial configuration being applied for that request.
3. Fix an issue with the monitoring server not stopping when the controller is shut down.
4. Fix an issue with the HTPasswdWatcher not stopping when the background tasks are supposed to finish.
5. Fix some tests using hardcoded ports.
Moved some of the methods which were on the main config to the auth, access control and extension configs
Signed-off-by: Andrei Aaron <andreifdaaron@gmail.com>
* fix: migrate to Go module v2 for proper semantic versioning
This change updates the module path from 'zotregistry.dev/zot' to
'zotregistry.dev/zot/v2' to comply with Go's semantic versioning rules.
According to Go's module versioning requirements, major version v2+
must include the major version in the module path. The current
module path 'zotregistry.dev/zot' only supports v0.x.x and v1.x.x
versions, making existing v2.x.x tags (like v2.1.8) unusable.
Changes:
- Updated go.mod module path to zotregistry.dev/zot/v2
- Updated all internal import paths across 280+ Go source files
- Updated configuration files (golangcilint.yaml, gqlgen.yml)
- Updated README.md Go reference badge
This fix enables proper use of existing v2.x.x Git tags and allows
external packages to import zot v2+ versions without compatibility
errors.
Resolves: Go module import compatibility for v2+ versions
Fixes: #3071
Signed-off-by: Luca Muscariello <muscariello@ieee.org>
* fix: regenerate GraphQL files with updated v2 import paths
The gqlgen tool needs to regenerate the GraphQL schema files after
the module path change to use the new v2 imports.
Signed-off-by: Luca Muscariello <muscariello@ieee.org>
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Signed-off-by: Luca Muscariello <muscariello@ieee.org>
* fix: migrate from github.com/rs/zerolog to golang-native log/slog
We have been using zerolog for a really long time.
golang now has structured logging using slog.
Best to move to this in interests of long-term support.
This is a tech debt item.
Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Chinchani <rchincha.dev@gmail.com>
* fix: a few changes on top
Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Chinchani <rchincha.dev@gmail.com>
* fix: address comments
Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Chinchani <rchincha.dev@gmail.com>
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Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Chinchani <rchincha.dev@gmail.com>
This causes the "fair" scheduler to run it too often in the detriment of other generators.
The intention was to run it every 2 hours but the measurement unit for 7200 was not specified.
Add more logs, including showing a generator name, in order to troubleshoot this kind of issues easier in the future.
Signed-off-by: Andrei Aaron <aaaron@luxoft.com>
Generators are now ordered by rank in the priority queue.
The rank computation formula is:
- 100/(1+generated_task_count) for high priority tasks
- 10/(1+generated_task_count) for medium priority tasks
- 1/(1+generated_task_count) for low priority tasks
Note the ranks are used when comparing generators both with the same priority and with different priority.
So now we are:
- giving an opportunity to all generators with the same priority to take turns generating tasks
- giving roughly 1 low priority and 10 medium priority tasks the opportunity to run for every 100 high priority tasks running.
After a generator generates a task, the generators are reordered in the priority queue based on rank.
Signed-off-by: Andrei Aaron <aaaron@luxoft.com>
* fix(scheduler): data race when pushing new tasks
the problem here is that scheduler can be closed in two ways:
- canceling the context given as argument to scheduler.RunScheduler()
- running scheduler.Shutdown()
because of this shutdown can trigger a data race between calling scheduler.inShutdown()
and actually pushing tasks into the pool workers
solved that by keeping a quit channel and listening on both quit channel and ctx.Done()
and closing the worker chan and scheduler afterwards.
Signed-off-by: Petu Eusebiu <peusebiu@cisco.com>
* refactor(scheduler): refactor into a single shutdown
before this we could stop scheduler either by closing the context
provided to RunScheduler(ctx) or by running Shutdown().
simplify things by getting rid of the external context in RunScheduler().
keep an internal context in the scheduler itself and pass it down to all tasks.
Signed-off-by: Petu Eusebiu <peusebiu@cisco.com>
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Signed-off-by: Petu Eusebiu <peusebiu@cisco.com>
wait for workers to finish before exiting
should fix tests reporting they couldn't remove rootDir because it's being
written by tasks
Signed-off-by: Petu Eusebiu <peusebiu@cisco.com>
* fix: remove inline GC and set a default value of gc interval
- remove inline GC
- add a default value of GC interval
- run the GC periodically by default with the default value if no interval provided
- generate GC tasks with a random delay(0-30s) between
- add IsReady() method to scheduler.TaskGenerator interface
Signed-off-by: Andreea-Lupu <andreealupu1470@yahoo.com>
* ci: add test for gc with short interval
Signed-off-by: Andreea-Lupu <andreealupu1470@yahoo.com>
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Signed-off-by: Andreea-Lupu <andreealupu1470@yahoo.com>