By passing the raw password deeper into the authentication code, it can be
used to verify the user can access some systems. Right now, this is not
required by the simple salted password comparison done in MaxScale.
Previously, runtime monitor modifications could directly alter monitor fields,
which could leave the text-form parameters and reality out-of-sync. Also,
the configure-function was not called for the entire monitor-object, only the
module-implementation.
Now, all modifications go through the overridden configure-function, which calls the
base-class function. As most configuration changes are given in text-form, this
removes the need for specific setters. The only exceptions are the server add/remove
operations, which must modify the text-form serverlist.
Most of the ones still remaining outside are special cases.
Also, removed locking from status manipulation functions as it
has not been required for quite some time.
Minor renaming of the session state enum values. Also exposed the session
state stringification function in the public header and removed the
stringification macro.
See script directory for method. The script to run in the top level
MaxScale directory is called maxscale-uncrustify.sh, which uses
another script, list-src, from the same directory (so you need to set
your PATH). The uncrustify version was 0.66.
Given that worker.hh was public, it made sense to make routingworker.hh
public as well. This removes the need to include private headers in
modules and allows C++ constructs to be used in C++ code when previously
only the C API was available.
Removed skygw_utils and relate files along with the old log manager
code. Also removed file flushing due to it being redundant; messages are
written to the file immediately. Adjusted tests to accommodate this
change.
Removed the explicit setters for the service parameters. Not all of them
were implemented and they were only used internally. Moved the parameter
validation and update processing inside the Service class to reduce the
load on the other parts of the core.
The service now uses a std::vector<SFilterDef> to store the filters it
uses. Most internal parts deal with the SFilterDef but debugcmd.cc still
moves raw pointers around (needs to be changed).