Throughout the years, the standard mechanism for storing passwords has evolved.
In the beginning, passwords were stored in plaintext. Developers are now
encouraged to leverage adaptive one-way functions to store a password. Using a
two-way function by default for storing passwords without a warning could lead
users to a false sense of security.
PriorityLinkedList has multiple sub-lists, before this commit PriorityLinkedList::setNodeStore would set the same node store between all the lists.
When a removeWithID was called for an item on list[0] the remove from list[4] would always succeed first. This operation would work correctly most of the time except
when tail and head is being used. Many NullPointerExceptions would be seen while iterating on the list for remove operations, and the navigation would be completely broken.
A test was added to PriorityLinkedListTest to make sure the correct lists were used however I was not able to reproduce the NPE condition in that test.
AccumulatedInPageSoakTest reproduced the exact condition for the NPE when significant load is used.
We've traditionally used org.apache.activemq.artemis.utils.Base64 for
Base64 encoding/decoding. This implementation is based on public domain
code from http://iharder.net/base64.
In Java 8 java.util.Base64 was introduced. I assumed we hadn't switched
to this implementation for performance reasons so I created a simple
JMH-based test to compare the two implementations and it appears to me
that java.util.Base64 is significantly faster than our current
implementation. Using the JDK's class will simplify our code and
improve performance. Also, it should be 100% backwards compatible
since Base64 encoding/decoding is standardized.
The test in this commit was distilled down from a much more complex
integration test that rarely reproduced the problem. It is short and
sweet and reproduces the problem every time.
The problem exists in the iterator's `remove()` method where it uses
`index` instead of `i` when calculating a new highest priority.
Updates artemis-log-annotation-processor to use artemis-project so that
artemis-pom can reference artemis-log-annotation-processor without cycle.
Split out its tests to their own module to faciltate, also exercising the
profile mechanism to enable the processor usage with trigger file.
Simplify disabling processing in the module using maven.compiler.proc prop
available since maven-compiler-plugin 3.13.0
Uses a dummy non-processor path at root to 'disable' processsing on JDK < 23,
accounting for Maven 3 not being able to unset maven.compiler.proc from a
parent, and JDKs < 21 requiring newest builds to support -proc:full value
needed otherwise to reenable processing once explicitly disabled.
This commit uses lambdas or method references wherever possible. There
are still a handful of places that appear like they could be changed but
couldn't mainly because they use "this" and the meaning of "this"
changes when using a lambda.
Remove javadoc plugin config and execution from release profile, add fixed pluginManagement
config and build execution, leverage properties only in profile to govern whether it skips,
stops profile varying in shade-generated pom depending on mvn verion and profiles used.
This commit does the following:
- deprecate all QueueConfiguration ctors
- add `of` static factory methods for all the deprecated ctors
- replace any uses of the normal ctors with the `of` counterparts
This makes the code more concise and readable.
This commit does the following:
- deprecate the verbosely named `toSimpleString` static factory
methods
- add `of` static factory methods for all the ctors
- replace any uses of the normal ctors with the `of` counterparts
This makes the code more concise and readable.
Allow the Source address to provide consumer priority on the address using the
same option value as a core consumer '?consumer-priority=X'. The change parses
any query string appended to an address and uses the address portion as the
actual receiver address and currently only looks at consumer priority values in
the extracted address query parameters and ignores any other options found. The
existing consumer priority taken from link properties takes precedence over the
value placed on the address query options if both are present.
This commit includes the following changes:
- Management operations to get sucess & failure counts for authn and
authz along with the corresponding audit logging.
- Export the aforementioned authn & authz metrics.
- Export metrics for the underlying authn & authz caches including the
ability to enable/disable them.
- Update metrics tests to validate tags in addition to keys and values.
- Update documentation to explain new functionality and clarify
existing metric tags.
This is a list of improvements done as part of this commit / task:
* Page Transactions on mirror target are now optional.
If you had an interrupt mirror while the target destination was paging, duplicate detection would be ineffective unless you used paged transactions
Users can now configure the ack manager retries intervals.
Say you need some time to remove a consumer from a target mirror. The delivering references would prevent acks from happening. You can allow bigger retry intervals and number of retries by tinkiering with ack manager retry parameters.
* AckManager restarted independent of incoming acks
The ackManager was only restarted when new acks were coming in. If you stopped receiving acks on a target server and restarted that server with pending acks, those acks would never be exercised. The AckManager is now restarted as soon as the server is started.