raft: clarify ApplyConfChange contract for rejected conf changes

Apps typically maintain the raft configuration as part of the state
machine. As a result, they want to be able to reject configuration change
entries at apply time based on the state on which the entry is supposed
to be applied. When this happens, the app should not call
ApplyConfChange, but the comments did not make this clear.

As a result, it was tempting to pass an empty pb.ConfChange or it's V2
version instead of not calling ApplyConfChange.

However, an empty V1 or V2 proto aren't noops when the configuration is
joint: an empty V1 change is treated internally as a single
configuration change for NodeID zero and will cause a panic when applied
in a joint state. An empty V2 proto is treated as a signal to leave a
joint state, which means that the app's config and raft's would diverge.

The comments updated in this commit now ask users to not call
ApplyConfState when they reject a conf change. Apps that never use joint
consensus can keep their old behavior since the distinction only matters
when in a joint state, but we don't want to encourage that.
release-3.5
Tobias Schottdorf 2020-02-25 12:45:45 +01:00
parent 37c7e4d1d8
commit 0544f33248
5 changed files with 12 additions and 5 deletions

View File

@ -168,7 +168,9 @@ type Node interface {
Advance()
// ApplyConfChange applies a config change (previously passed to
// ProposeConfChange) to the node. This must be called whenever a config
// change is observed in Ready.CommittedEntries.
// change is observed in Ready.CommittedEntries, except when the app decides
// to reject the configuration change (i.e. treats it as a noop instead), in
// which case it must not be called.
//
// Returns an opaque non-nil ConfState protobuf which must be recorded in
// snapshots.

View File

@ -1606,7 +1606,9 @@ func (r *raft) abortLeaderTransfer() {
// If the new entries would exceed the limit, the method returns false. If not,
// the increase in uncommitted entry size is recorded and the method returns
// true.
// Configuration changes are never refused.
//
// Empty payloads are never refused. This is used both for appending an empty
// entry at a new leader's term, as well as leaving a joint configuration.
func (r *raft) increaseUncommittedSize(ents []pb.Entry) bool {
var s uint64
for _, e := range ents {

View File

@ -86,7 +86,7 @@ func (env *InteractionEnv) DeliverMsgs(rs ...Recipient) int {
}
toIdx := int(msg.To - 1)
if err := env.Nodes[toIdx].Step(msg); err != nil {
env.Output.WriteString(err.Error())
fmt.Fprintln(env.Output, err)
}
}
}

View File

@ -98,7 +98,9 @@ func (rn *RawNode) ProposeConfChange(cc pb.ConfChangeI) error {
return rn.raft.Step(m)
}
// ApplyConfChange applies a config change to the local node.
// ApplyConfChange applies a config change to the local node. The app must call
// this when it applies a configuration change, except when it decides to reject
// the configuration change, in which case no call must take place.
func (rn *RawNode) ApplyConfChange(cc pb.ConfChangeI) *pb.ConfState {
cs := rn.raft.applyConfChange(cc.AsV2())
return &cs

View File

@ -403,5 +403,6 @@ stabilize
INFO 3 switched to configuration voters=(1)
> 1 receiving messages
2->1 MsgAppResp Term:1 Log:0/9
raft: cannot step as peer not found3->1 MsgAppResp Term:1 Log:0/9
raft: cannot step as peer not found
3->1 MsgAppResp Term:1 Log:0/9
raft: cannot step as peer not found