5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
hashicorp-copywrite[bot]
a9d61ea3fd Update copyright file headers to BUSL-1.1 2023-08-10 17:27:29 -05:00
hashicorp-copywrite[bot]
f005448366 [COMPLIANCE] Add Copyright and License Headers 2023-04-10 15:36:59 +00:00
Michael Schurter
d29d613c02 client: expose task state to client
The interesting decision in this commit was to expose AR's state and not
a fully materialized Allocation struct. AR.clientAlloc builds an Alloc
that contains the task state, so I considered simply memoizing and
exposing that method.

However, that would lead to AR having two awkwardly similar methods:
 - Alloc() - which returns the server-sent alloc
 - ClientAlloc() - which returns the fully materialized client alloc

Since ClientAlloc() could be memoized it would be just as cheap to call
as Alloc(), so why not replace Alloc() entirely?

Replacing Alloc() entirely would require Update() to immediately
materialize the task states on server-sent Allocs as there may have been
local task state changes since the server received an Alloc update.

This quickly becomes difficult to reason about: should Update hooks use
the TaskStates? Are state changes caused by TR Update hooks immediately
reflected in the Alloc? Should AR persist its copy of the Alloc? If so,
are its TaskStates canonical or the TaskStates on TR?

So! Forget that. Let's separate the static Allocation from the dynamic
AR & TR state!

 - AR.Alloc() is for static Allocation access (often for the Job)
 - AR.AllocState() is for the dynamic AR & TR runtime state (deployment
   status, task states, etc).

If code needs to know the status of a task: AllocState()
If code needs to know the names of tasks: Alloc()

It should be very easy for a developer to reason about which method they
should call and what they can do with the return values.
2018-10-16 16:56:55 -07:00
Alex Dadgar
e05cd42063 Use helper for forwarding 2018-02-15 13:59:03 -08:00
Alex Dadgar
4ac1e25478 Refactor determining the handler for a node id call 2018-02-15 13:59:02 -08:00