Some scrapers, e.g. prometheus, add an "instance" tag. This value may not be the same as
the broker name, which results in these metrics becoming more difficult to match up with
the corresponding broker.
legacy-integration-tests is being created to hold LDAP Tests (or any other tests that won't play well with keeping threads clean)
it will have fork-mode=always on the maven-surefire-plugin
The broker process fails to exit if an error is encountered starting the NodeManager. The issue is resolved by converting the critical analyzer thread to a daemon thread. As added protection, the thread is manually stopped when this error is encountered.
Many of the tabs on the web console show up even though the user doesn't
have permission to execute the command corresponding to the tab. For
example the "Connections" tab shows up even though the user can't
execute the `listConnections` management operation.
When skipping the authentication cache details for the original
exception are not logged.
This commit ensures these details are logged and adopts the
ExceptionUtils class from Apache Commons Lang in lieu of the previous
custom implementation.
When sending, for example, to a predefined anycast address and queue
from a multicast (JMS topic) producer, the routed count on the address
is incremented, but the message count on the matching queue is not. No
indication is given at the client end that the messages failed to get
routed - the messages are just silently dropped.
Fixing this problem requires a slight semantic change. The broker is now
more strict in what it allows specifically with regards to
auto-creation. If, for example, a JMS application attempts to send a
message to a topic and the corresponding multicast address doesn't exist
already or the broker cannot automatically create it or update it then
sending the message will fail.
Also, part of this commit moves a chunk of auto-create logic into
ServerSession and adds an enum for auto-create results. Aside from
helping fix this specific issue this can serve as a foundation for
de-duplicating the auto-create logic spread across many of the protocol
implementations.
testSimpleResume is intermittently failing.
This test is forcing another page, while cleanup is happening on the background.
ForceAnotherPage may not put the address back into paging if this happened right after the cleanup call.
To fix the test, we should call startPaging after forceAnotherPage is called.
- activemq.notifications are being transferred to the target node, unless an ignore is setup
- topics are being duplicated after redistribution
- topics sends are being duplicated when a 2 node cluster mirrors to another 2 node cluster, and both nodes are mirrored.
- interrupted message breaking reference counting
After the server writing to the client is interrupted in AMQP, the reference counting was broken what would require the server restarted
in order to cleanup the files of any interrupted sends.
- Removed consumer during large message delivery damaging large messages
If the consumer failed to deliver messages for any reason, the message on the queue would be duplicated. what would wipe out the body of the message
and other journal errors would happen because of this.
extra debug capabilities added into RefCountMessage as part of ARTEMIS-4206 in order to identify these issues
This test is boundless adding data into the journal when there are no syncs.
That's creating 600MIB worth of data on our CIs, and this tests was not meant to be acting like a soak test.
I'm limitting the load the test can generate with a TokenBucketLimiterImpl now.
MQTT5Test::testMaxMessageSize is spiking the memory on the integration testsuite all the way up to 1.5G
what makes this test more like a soak test.
The test is now converted to use a real server like other Soak Tests.
This fix will delay the message.copy to the redistributor itself.
Meaning no copy would be performed if the redistribution itself failed.
No need to remove a copy any longer
The federated queue consumer has to generate a new id for the messages
received from the upstream broker because they have an id generated by
the store manager of the upstream broker.
Co-authored-by: Clebert Suconic <clebertsuconic@apache.org>
- redistribute received the handle call, it then copies the message
- the routing table changes
- the message is left behind
With the new version of the server these messages will be removed. But we should remove these right away
Basically I started the testsuite and attached check leak with "java -jar check-leak.jar --pid <pid> --report testsuite-report --sleep 1000" and saw the allocations of this were pretty high.
This fix is scanning journal and paging for existing large messages. We will remove any large messages that do not have a corresponding record in journals or paging.
This failure was because of a noise from the test itself. as the test is creating a producer, and it's measuring for a producer from the test.
it makes no sense to fix it for OverCore.. we just ignore it on UsingCore
Fixes the CompareUpgradeTest by removing this unimportant difference from a fresh broker instances jolokia-access.xml file, given that we dont actually update jolokia-access.xml currently during upgrade.
Tweaks or unwinds earlier changes in aae65fd527 and 3e7cb24381
There are certain use-cases where addresses will be auto-created and
never have a direct binding created on them. Because of this they will
never be auto-deleted. If a large number of these addresses build up
they will consume a problematic amount of heap space.
One specific example of this use-case is an MQTT subscriber with a
wild-card subscription and a large number of MQTT producers sending one
or two messages a large number of different MQTT topics covered by the
wild-card. Since no bindings are ever created on any of these individual
addresses (e.g. from a subscription queue) they will never be
auto-deleted, but they will eventually consume a large amount of heap.
The only way to deal with these addresses is to manually delete them.
There are also situations where queues may be created and never have
any messages sent to them or never have a consumer connect. These
queues will never be auto-deleted so they must be deleted manually.
This commit adds the ability to configure the broker to skip the usage
check so that these kinds of addresses and queues can be deleted
automatically.
there are two leaks here:
* QueueImpl::delivery might create a new iterator if a delivery happens right after a consumer was removed, and that iterator might belog to a consumer that was already closed
as a result of that, the iterator may leak messages and hold references until a reboot is done. I have seen scenarios where messages would not be dleivered because of this.
* ProtonTransaction holding references: the last transaction might hold messages in the memory longer than expected. In tests I have performed the messages were accumulating in memory. and I cleared it here.
The issue identified with AMQP was under Transaction usage, and while opening and closing sessions.
It seems the leak would be released once the connection is closed.
We added a new testsuite under ./tests/leak-tests To fix and validate these issues
Configurations employing shared-storage with NFS are susceptible to
split-brain in certain scenarios. For example:
1) Primary loses network connection to NFS.
2) Backup activates.
3) Primary reconnects to NFS.
4) Split-brain.
In reality this situation is pretty unlikely due to the timing involved,
but the possibility still exists. Currently the file lock held by the
primary broker on the NFS share is essentially worthless in this
situation. This commit adds logic by which the timestamp of the lock
file is updated during activation and then routinely checked during
runtime to ensure consistency. This effectively mitigates split-brain in
this situation (and likely others). Here's how it works now.
1) Primary loses network connection to NFS.
2) Backup activates.
3) Primary reconnects to NFS.
4) Primary detects that the lock file's timestamp has been updated and
shuts itself down.
When the primary shuts down in step #4 the Topology on the backup can be
damaged. Protections were added for this via ARTEMIS-2868 but only for
the replicated use-case. This commit applies the protection for
removeMember() so that the Topology remains intact.
There are no tests for these changes as I cannot determine how to
properly simulate this use-case. However, there have never been robust,
automated tests for these kinds of NFS use-cases so this is not a
departure from the norm.
For pipelined open cases the events processing should ignore additional begin
and attach events if the open event handler closes the connection to avoid the
processing throwing additional exceptions and replacing the error condition in
the connection with an unrelated error about NPE from the additional events.
I am adding three attributes to Address-settings:
* page-limit-bytes: Number of bytes. We will convert this metric into max number of pages internally by dividing max-bytes / page-size. It will allow a max based on an estimate.
* page-limit-messages: Number of messages
* page-full-message-policy: fail or drop
We will now allow paging, until these max values and then fail or drop messages.
Once these values are retracted, the address will remain full until a period where cleanup is kicked in by paging. So these values may have a certain delay on being applied, but they should always be cleared once cleanup happened.
o.a.a.a.c.p.m.MQTTSubscriptionManager#removeSubscription() had a chunk
of code from 971f673c60 removed. That code
was added under the assumption that there should only ever be one
consumer per queue. That was true for MQTT 3.x, but it's not always true
for MQTT 5 due to shared subscriptions. However, the tests from that
commit all still pass even with it removed now (as well as all the other
MQTT tests) so I think it's safe.
If the client is using address prefixes to define the routing type along with
durable subscriptions then on re-attach the compairon to check if the subscription
address has changed needs to remove the prefix when comparing against the address
since the prefix isn't propagated when creating the address and will always fail
resulting in the subscription queue being deleted in error.
Adds some tests to validate that the destination prefixes if set and
are used properly by the client are honored over the default address
auto create routing type condiguration.
When an AMQP client subscribes to a new address (non-existing) with a receiver link, the
address is created with routing type ANYCAST regardles of the default address creation
configuration of the broker, and ignores even the broker wide default of MULTICAST.
I am adding an option sync=true or false on mirror. if sync, any client blocking operation will wait a roundtrip to the mirror
acting like a sync replica.
Over time org.apache.activemq.artemis.tests.integration.amqp has become
home to many multi-protocol JMS tests even though the package is really
for AMQP-specific tests. This commit splits those tests out into their
own package.
This is a preliminary step to clarify these tests before I add another
one for a different issue.
When the last non-durable subscriber on a JMS topic disconnects the
corresponding queue representing the subscription is deleted as
expected. However, the queue's address will also be deleted no matter
what, which is *not* expected.
Some LDAP servers (e.g. OpenLDAP) do not support the "persistent search"
feature and therefore the existing "listener" feature does not actually
fetch updates. This commit implements a "pull" feature controlled by a
configurable interval equivalent to what is implemented in the cached
LDAP authorization module from ActiveMQ "Classic."
A handful of tests started to fail after the original fix was committed.
This commit fixes those failures mainly by using a mock
`TransactionSynchronizationRegistry`.
I changed `o.a.a.a.r.ActiveMQRAManagedConnection#checkTransactionActive`
slightly because `getTransactionStatus` will never return `null` unlike
`getTransaction` would. The semantics should still be the same, though.
Adds support for standard Java TLS and ActiveMQ Artemis-specific override
encrypted system property values for the key store and trust store
passwords, including a separate codec property
Allow setting id-cache-size to 0 from broker.xml and ensure the broker
handles this gracefully. Previously you could only set the cache size to
0 via broker properties or programmatically and it would throw an
ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException when adding an item to the cache.
- From now on we will save snapshots of page-counters on the journal (basically for compatibility with previous verions).
And we will recount the records on startup.
- While the rebuild is being done the value from the previous snapshot is still available with current updates.