This is to avoid shutting down the server on a critical failure in case the message is a few bytes shy
from beyond the max buffer size.
This will prevent the issue.
When deleting a durable scheduled message via the management API the
message would be removed from memory but it wouldn't be removed from
storage so when the broker restarted the message would reappear.
This commit fixes that by acking the message during the delete
operation.
Using a ThreadLocal for the audit user information works in most cases,
but it can fail when dispatching messages to consumers because threads
are taken out of a pool to do the dispatching and those threads may not
be associated with the proper credentials. This commit fixes that
problem with the following changes:
- Passes the Subject explicitly when logging audit info during dispatch
- Relocates security audit logging from the SecurityManager
implementation(s) to the SecurityStore implementation
- Associates the Subject with the connection properly with the new
security caching
- Adding a paragraph about addressing and distinct queue names
- Renaming match on peers, senders and receivers as "address-match"
- Changing qpid dispatch test to use a single listener
- Fixing reconnect attemps message
This commit is fixing:
- a missing commit that can make leak a connection
- restricting default specific commons-dbcp2 to the default data source
- setting poolPreparedStatements true by default
- configured embedded Derby to be in-memory to speedup tests
It add additional required fixes:
- Fixed uncommitted deleted tx records
- Fixed JDBC authorization on test
- Using property-based version for commons-dbcp2
- stopping thread pool after activation to allow JDBC lease locks to release the lock
- centralize JDBC network timeout configuration and save repeating it
- adding dbcp2 as the default pooled DataSource to be used
Replaces direct jdbc connections with dbcp2 datasource. Adds
configuration options to use alternative datasources and to alter the
parameters. While adding slight overhead, this vastly improves the
management and pooling capabilities with db connections.
This reverts commit dbb3a90fe6.
The org.apache.activemq.artemis.core.server.Queue#getRate method is for
slow-consumer detection and is designed for internal use only.
Furthermore, it's too opaque to be trusted by a remote user as it only
returns the number of message added to the queue since *the last time
it was called*. The problem here is that the user calling it doesn't
know when it was invoked last. Therefore, they could be getting the
rate of messages added for the last 5 minutes or the last 5
milliseconds. This can lead to inconsistent and misleading results.
There are three main ways for users to track rates of message
production and consumption:
1. Use a metrics plugin. This is the most feature-rich and flexible
way to track broker metrics, although it requires tools (e.g.
Prometheus) to store the metrics and display them (e.g. Grafana).
2. Invoke the getMessageCount() and getMessagesAdded() management
methods and store the returned values along with the time they were
retrieved. A time-series database is a great tool for this job. This is
exactly what tools like Prometheus do. That data can then be used to
create informative graphs, etc. using tools like Grafana. Of course, one
can skip all the tools and just do some simple math to calculate rates
based on the last time the counts were retrieved.
3. Use the broker's message counters. Message counters are the broker's
simple way of providing historical information about the queue. They
provide similar results to the previous solutions, but with less
flexibility since they only track data while the broker is up and
there's not really any good options for graphing.
When performing concurrent user admin actions (e.g. resetUser, addUser,
removeUser on ActiveMQServerControl) when using the
PropertiesLoginModule with reload=true the underlying user and role
properties files can get corrupted.
This commit fixes the issue via the following changes:
- Add synchronization to the management commands
- Add concurrency controls to underlying file access
- Change CLI user commands to use remote methods instead of modifying
the files directly. This avoids potential concurrent changes. This
change forced me to modify the names of some of the commands'
parameters to disambiguate them from connection-related parameters.
In a cluster scenario where non durable subscribers fail over to
backup while another live node forwarding messages to it,
there is a chance that the the live node keeps the old remote
binding for the subs and messages go to those
old remote bindings will result in "binding not found".
The default JAAS security manager doesn't need the address/FQQN for
authorization, but I'm putting it back into the interface because there
are other use cases which *do* need it.
Both authentication and authorization will hit the underlying security
repository (e.g. files, LDAP, etc.). For example, creating a JMS
connection and a consumer will result in 2 hits with the *same*
authentication request. This can cause unwanted (and unnecessary)
resource utilization, especially in the case of networked configuration
like LDAP.
There is already a rudimentary cache for authorization, but it is
cleared *totally* every 10 seconds by default (controlled via the
security-invalidation-interval setting), and it must be populated
initially which still results in duplicate auth requests.
This commit optimizes authentication and authorization via the following
changes:
- Replace our home-grown cache with Google Guava's cache. This provides
simple caching with both time-based and size-based LRU eviction. See more
at https://github.com/google/guava/wiki/CachesExplained. I also thought
about using Caffeine, but we already have a dependency on Guava and the
cache implementions look to be negligibly different for this use-case.
- Add caching for authentication. Both successful and unsuccessful
authentication attempts will be cached to spare the underlying security
repository as much as possible. Authenticated Subjects will be cached
and re-used whenever possible.
- Authorization will used Subjects cached during authentication. If the
required Subject is not in the cache it will be fetched from the
underlying security repo.
- Caching can be disabled by setting the security-invalidation-interval
to 0.
- Cache sizes are configurable.
- Management operations exist to inspect cache sizes at runtime.
This is allowing journal appends to happen in burst
during replication, by batching replication response
into the network at the end of the append burst.
I couldn't reproduce this with a test, but static code analysis led me
to this solution which is similar to the fix done for ARTEMIS-2592 via
e397a17796.
Due to a lack of concurrency protections it's possible to create a
consumer on a closed session. I've not been able to reproduce this with
a test, but I've seen it in the wild. Static code analysis points to a
need for better concurrency controls around closing the session and
creating consumers.
This is almost a NO-JIRA, but since I'm fixing ManagementServiceImplTest.testGetResources broken after this
I'm commiting this change associated with ARTEMIS-2828
Since getDiskStoreUsage on the ActiveMQServerControl is converting a
double to a long the value is always 0 in the management API. It should
return a double instead.
Adding this metric required moving the meter registration code from the
AddressInfo class to the ManagementService in order to get clean access
to both the AddressInfo and AddressControl classes.
The calculation used by
ActiveMQServerControlImpl.getDiskStoreUsagePercentage() is incorrect. It
uses disk space info with global-max-size which is for address memory.
Also, the existing getDiskStoreUsage() method *already* returns a
percentage of total disk store usage so this method seems redundant.