Right now TestFastShutdown tries to upload logs to localhost:1234,
which will most likely respond with an error. However if one has an
actual service running on port 1234, it would receive a connection
attempting to POST every time the unit test runs.
Start a local server and direct the upload there instead.
Signed-off-by: Denton Gentry <dgentry@tailscale.com>
Start an HTTP server to accept POST requests, and upload some logs to
it. Check that uploaded logs were received.
Code in logtail:drainPending was not being reliably exercised by other
tests. This shows up in code coverage reports, as lines of code in
drainPending are alternately added and subtracted from code coverage.
This test will reliably exercise and verify this code.
Signed-off-by: Denton Gentry <dgentry@tailscale.com>
Log levels can now be specified with "[v1] " or "[v2] " substrings
that are then stripped and filtered at the final logger. This follows
our existing "[unexpected]" etc convention and doesn't require a
wholesale reworking of our logging at the moment.
cmd/tailscaled then gets a new --verbose=N flag to take a log level
that controls what gets logged to stderr (and thus systemd, syslog,
etc). Logtail is unaffected by --verbose.
This commit doesn't add annotations to any existing log prints. That
is in the next commit.
Updates #924
Updates #282
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Add content length hints to headers.
The server can use these hints to more efficiently select buffers.
Stop attempting to compress tiny requests.
The bandwidth savings are negligible (and sometimes negative!),
and it makes extra work for the server.
Signed-off-by: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josh@tailscale.com>
Also, bit of behavior change: on non-nil err but expired context,
don't reset the consecutive failure count. I don't think the old
behavior was intentional.
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
We want to run bo.Backoff() after every upload, regardless. If
upload==true but err!=nil, we weren't backing off, which caused some
very-high-throughput log upload retries in bad network conditions.
Updates #282.
Signed-off-by: Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@tailscale.com>
If a test calls log.Printf, 'go test' horrifyingly rearranges the
output to no longer be in chronological order, which makes debugging
virtually impossible. Let's stop that from happening by making
log.Printf panic if called from any module, no matter how deep, during
tests.
This required us to change the default error handler in at least one
http.Server, as well as plumbing a bunch of logf functions around,
especially in magicsock and wgengine, but also in logtail and backoff.
To add insult to injury, 'go test' also rearranges the output when a
parent test has multiple sub-tests (all the sub-test's t.Logf is always
printed after all the parent tests t.Logf), so we need to screw around
with a special Logf that can point at the "current" t (current_t.Logf)
in some places. Probably our entire way of using subtests is wrong,
since 'go test' would probably like to run them all in parallel if you
called t.Parallel(), but it definitely can't because the're all
manipulating the shared state created by the parent test. They should
probably all be separate toplevel tests instead, with common
setup/teardown logic. But that's a job for another time.
Signed-off-by: Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@tailscale.com>
Some programs use frequent short-duration backoffs even under non-error
conditions. They can set this to avoid logging short backoffs when
things are operating normally, but still get messages when longer
backoffs kick in.
Signed-off-by: Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@tailscale.com>
We'll be fixing the server so this won't trigger in practice,
but it demos the connection reuse problem.
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Its semantics has changed slightly, this will let us use it to
drive batched logging in special circumstances.
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
In particular, the Dup2 syscall is not defined in the syscall
package on arm64, but is defined in x/sys/unix.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <dave@natulte.net>