Such endpoint will list the gateway/cluster name, address and port
then list of outbound/inbound connections.
For each remote gateway there will be at most one outbound connection.
There can be 0 or more inbound connections for the same remote
gateway.
For each of these outbound/inbound connection, the connection info
similar to Connz is reported. Optionally, one can include the
interest mode/stats for each account.
Here are possible options:
* No specific options
http://host:port/gatewayz
* Limit to specific remote gateway, say name "B":
http://host:port/gatewayz/gw_name=B
* Include accounts (default limit to 1024 accounts)
http://host:port/gatewayz/accs=1
* Specific limit, say 200 (note accs=1 in this case is optional)
http://host:port/gatewayz/accs=1&accs_limit=200
* Specific account, say "acc_1". Note that accs=1 is not required then
http://host:port/gatewayz/acc_name=acc_1
* Above options can be mixed: specific remote gateway (B), with 100
accounts reported
http://host:port/gatewayz/gw_name=B&accs_limit=200
Signed-off-by: Ivan Kozlovic <ivan@synadia.com>
This addresses the following race:
- client connection creates a subscription on a reply subject
- client connection sends a request
- server sends the subscription to inbound gateway
- server sends the message to outbound gateway (those may be
to different servers)
- receiving server sends to sub interested in request subject
- app sends reply
- its server then check for interest on the reply's subject
In interestOnly mode, there is a possibility that this server
has not received the interest on the reply subject yet and would
then drop the reply.
This PR detects above scenario and will prefix the reply subject
to identify the origin cluster if it is detected that the last
subscription from the sending connection was created less than
a second ago.
Once the destination has this prefix, the destination cluster
will always send back that message to origin cluster even if
there is no registered interest.
Signed-off-by: Ivan Kozlovic <ivan@synadia.com>
Some tests consume too much memory when running with -race which
can cause some failures on Travis.
Moreover, those tests may not be meaningful if they are running
slow, which -race causes.
Signed-off-by: Ivan Kozlovic <ivan@synadia.com>