Test consistency between live and backup, espacially on
a slow live.
The test use MessagePersister::encode to simulate slow IO condition.
After live started, we send 5 message with a delay(default 500ms),
then start backup, wait until replicated, then send more message
without delay. If all message sent successfully, the backup should
has the same messages as live. We assert the message number only.
When live start replication, it must make sure there is
no pending write in message & bindings journal, or we may
lost journal records during initial replication.
So we need flush append executor after acquire StorageManager's
write lock, before Journal's write lock.
Also we set a 10 seconds timeout when flush, the same as
Journal::flushExecutor. If we failed to flush in 10 seconds,
we abort replication, backup will try again later.
Use OrderedExecutorFactory::flushExecutor to flush executor
Flag needs to be set when auto creating an address so that the address
can be removed later if auto delete is configured when creating a
subscription with MQTT
We provide a feature to mask passwords in the configuration files.
However, passwords in the bootstrap.xml (when the console is
secured with HTTPS) cannot be masked. This enhancement has
been opened to allow passwords in the bootstrap.xml to be masked
using the built-in masking feature provided by the broker.
Also the LDAPLoginModule configuration (in login.config) has a
connection password attribute that also needs this mask support.
In addition the ENC() syntax is supported for password masking
to replace the old 'mask-password' flag.
Change all use from Set<RoutingType> to EnumSet<RoutingType>
Deprecating any old exposed interfaces but keeping for back compatibility.
Address info to avoid iterator on getRoutingType hotpath, like wise can be avoided where single RoutingType is passed in.
When an address is removed from the address manager its linked addresses
also need to be removed if there are no more bindings for the address.
Also adding a null check on bindings of linked addresses when a new
binding is added
* add methods to JMSServerManager to be able to create JMS queues and topics
that have distincts names (as returned by the JMS API) and addresses
(as used by Artemis Core API).
* add constructors to ActiveMQQueue and ActiveMQTopic to specify JMS name
distinct from their core address
This allows to emulate Artemis 1.x naming conventions where a JMS queue
would have a name 'foo'and and an address 'jms.queue.foo' (the same
applying for JMS topic as well).
The UTF translations has been improved by:
- zero copy on array based buffers
- zero copy UTF length calculation
- faster array access using Netty PlatformDependent.get|putByte
- improved perf tests UTF8Test
* Move byte util code into ByteUtil
* Re-use the new equals method in SimpleString
* Apply same pools/interners to client decode
* Create String to SimpleString pools/interners for property access via String keys (producer and consumer benefits)
* Lazy init the pools on withing the get methods of CoreMessageObjectPools to get the specific pool, to avoid having this scattered every where.
* reduce SimpleString creation in conversion to/from core message methods with JMS wrapper.
* reduce SimpleString creation in conversion to/from Core in OpenWire, AMQP, MQTT.
Replace GenericSQLProvider and other implementation by a single
PropertySQLProvider that uses properties to define SQL queries.
SQL queries are loaded from the journal-sql.properties file.
Queries specific to a DB dialect can be specified by adding a suffix to
the key of the generic property.
For example, the generic property to create a file Table is:
create-file-table = CREATE TABLE %s (ID BIGINT AUTO_INCREMENT, ...)
This property can be customized for Derby by using the
create-file-table.derby property:
create-file-table.derby=CREATE TABLE %s (ID BIGINT NOT NULL GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY (START WITH 1, INCREMENT BY 1),...
JIRA: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/ARTEMIS-1590
If the Stomp consumer was closed at or near the same time a message was
dispatched then an NPE might result. Throwing an exception is a
relatively expensive operation in the JVM because of the stacktrace
information that needs to be generated, so in cases where it is known
that a null value could be returned one should check and handle it
appropriately.
The test is using the wrong indices for the destinations it uses so they
don't match the one's created in the test support class. Because the
code is now using the default routing type the test fails when it tries
to send a message on a JMS Queue when the auto created address default
to the multicast routing type.