the net package does not make it easy to know if DialContext
failed because the context was done. it's important for some
of our tests that canceled contexts are detected as such, so
we accept the small race that's arguably correct (the context
must be canceled asynchronously) to ensure we always return
the context error if available.
Change-Id: I058064d5c666e5353b74fb5bd300bf7abe537ff5
all of the packages and tests work with both grpc and
drpc. we'll probably need to do some jenkins pipelines
to run the tests with drpc as well.
most of the changes are really due to a bit of cleanup
of the pkg/transport.Client api into an rpc.Dialer in
the spirit of a net.Dialer. now that we don't need
observers, we can pass around stateless configuration
to everything rather than stateful things that issue
observations. it also adds a DialAddressID for the
case where we don't have a pb.Node, but we do have an
address and want to assert some ID. this happened
pretty frequently, and now there's no more weird
contortions creating custom tls options, etc.
a lot of the other changes are being consistent/using
the abstractions in the rpc package to do rpc style
things like finding peer information, or checking
status codes.
Change-Id: Ief62875e21d80a21b3c56a5a37f45887679f9412
It provides an abstraction around the rpc details so that one
can use dprc or gprc with the same code. It subsumes using the
protobuf package directly for client interfaces as well as
the pkg/transport package to perform dials.
Change-Id: I8f5688bd71be8b0c766f13029128a77e5d46320b