* deduplicate QueryParams->QueryRequest and Format->QueryFormat
* move WriteParams into influxdb3_types crate
* DRY up client HTTP request handling code in *RequestBuilder.send
methods.
* DRY up a bunch of other non-Builder http request handling
Partially fixes https://github.com/influxdata/influxdb/issues/24672
* move most HTTP req/resp types into `influxdb3_types` crate
* removes the use of locally-scoped request type structs from the `influxdb3_client` crate
* fix plugin dependency/package install bug
* it looks like the `DELETE` http method was being used where `POST` was expected for `/api/v3/configure/plugin_environment/install_packages` and `/api/v3/configure/plugin_environment/install_requirements`
This commit restructures our tests to look like Enterprise in their
layout. We break cli.rs into it's own module, combine the server tests
and cli tests under one lib.rs file and handle the changes for
visibility and import paths needed to make things work. the packages
tests have been cfged out as a module so that it would not need to be
added on a per test basis. Note that those tests fail locally for me
currently, but it seems like we weren't testing these in CI at the
moment.
There is no issue for this.
This updates trigger creation to load the plugin file before creating the trigger.
Another small change is to make Github references use filenames and paths identical to what they would be in the plugin-dir. This makes it a little easier to have the plugins repo local and develop against it and then be able to reference the same file later with gh: once it's up on the repo.
This refactors plugins and triggers so that plugins no longer need to be "created". Since plugins exist in either the configured local directory or on the Github repo, a user now only needs to create a trigger and reference the plugin filename.
Closes#25876
This change allows *both* the write and query commands to accept input
via stdin, string, or by a file. With this change larger queries are more
feasible to write as they can now be written in a file and smaller
writes via a string are now possible. This also makes the program work
more like people would expect it to, especially on unix based systems.
This commit also contains three tests to make sure the functionality works
as expected.
Closes#25772Closes#25892
This updates plugins so that they will reload the code if the local file is modified. Github pugins continue to be loaded only once when they are initially created or loaded on startup.
This will make iterating on plugin development locally much easier.
Closes#25863
* feat: Add request plugin capability
Adds the request plugin type. Triggers can be bound to an API endpoint at /api/v3/engine/<path>. Requests will get yielded to the plugin with the query parameters, request parameters, and request body.
I didn't implement the test endpoint for this plugin type as it seems much more natural for users to save the file and make a new request. Once #25863 is done it'll make it very easy.
Closes#25862
* chore: fix spelling in error message
Although the `format` in the request is used, the value coming
through the header is parsed earlier. So, when that lookup in
the header fails an error is returned (`InvalidMimeType`).
In this commit, there are extra checks to allow the default `Accept`
header values that come from the browser by defaulting it to `json`
closes: https://github.com/influxdata/influxdb/issues/25874
* feat(processing_engine): Add cron plugins and triggers to the processing engine.
* feat(processing_engine): switch from 'cron plugin' to 'schedule plugin', use TimeProvider.
* feat(processing_engine): add test for test scheduled plugin.
* feat: improve plugin logging interface
Updates the plugin log functions so they can take any number of Python objects which will be converted into a single log line string.
Closes#25847
* refactor: udpate on PR feedback
* feat: return better plugin execution errors
This sets up the framework for fleshing out more useful plugin execution errors that get returned to the user during testing. We'll also want to capture these for logging in system tables.
Also fixes a test that was broken in previous commit on time limits. Didn't show up because of the feature flag.
* fix: compile errors without system-py feature
This updates the v1 /query API hanlder to handle InfluxDB v1's unique
query response structure when GROUP BY clauses are provided.
The distinction is in the addition of a "tags" field to the emitted series
data that contains a map of the GROUP BY tags along with their distinct
values associated with the data in the "values" field.
This required splitting the QueryExecutor into two query paths for InfluxQL
and SQL, as this allowed for handling InfluxQL query parsing in advance
of query planning.
A set of snapshot tests were added to check that it all works.
This commit sets InfluxDB 3 Core to have a 72 hour limit for queries and
writes. What this means is that writes that contain historical data
older than 72 hours will be rejected and queries will filter out data
older than 72 hours. Core is intended to be a recent timeseries database
and performance over data older than 72 hours will degrade without a
garbage collector, a core feature of InfluxDB 3 Enterprise. InfluxDB 3
Enterprise does not have this write or query limit in place.
Note that this does *not* mean older data is deleted. Older data is
still accessible in object storage as Parquet files that can still be
used in other services and analyzed with dataframe libraries like pandas
and polars.
This commit does a few things:
- Uses timestamps in the year 2065 for tests as these should not break
for longer than many of us will be working in our lifetimes. This is
only needed for the integration tests as other tests use the
MockProvider for time.
- Filters the buffer and persisted files to only show data newer than
3 days ago
- Fixes the integration tests to work with the fact that writes older
than 3 days are rejected
This changes the CLI arg `host-id` to `writer-id` to more accurately
indicate meaning.
This changes also goes through the codebase and changes struct fields,
methods, and variables to use the term `writer_id` or `writer_identifier_prefix`
instead of `host_id` etc., to make the meaning clear in the code.
This also changes the catalog serialization to use the field `writer_id`
instead of `host_id`, which is breaking change.
This updates the create plugin API and CLI so that it doesn't take the pugin code, but instead takes a file name of a file that must be in the plugin-dir of the server. It returns an error if the plugin-dir is not configured or if the file isn't there.
Also updates the WAL and catalog so that it doesn't store the plugin code directly. The code is read from disk one time when the plugin runs.
Closes#25797
This allows the user to specify arguments that will be passed to each execution of a wal plugin trigger. The CLI test was updated to check this end to end.
Closes#25655
This updates the WAL so that it can have new file notifiers added that will get updated when the wal flushes. The processing engine now implements the WALNotifier trait.
I've updated the CLI test for creating a trigger to run and end-to-end test that defines a plugin, creates a trigger, writes data into the database, triggering the plugin, which writes summary statistics back into the database in a different table. The test queries the destination table to confirm that the plugin worked.
* feat: Update WAL plugin for new structure
This ended up being a very large change set. In order to get around circular dependencies, the processing engine had to be moved into its own crate, which I think is ultimately much cleaner.
Unfortunately, this required changing a ton of things. There's more testing and things to add on to this, but I think it's important to get this through and build on it.
Importantly, the processing engine no longer resides inside the write buffer. Instead, it is attached to the HTTP server. It is now able to take a query executor, write buffer, and WAL so that the full range of functionality of the server can be exposed to the plugin API.
There are a bunch of system-py feature flags littered everywhere, which I'm hoping we can remove soon.
* refactor: PR feedback