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.
This commit does the following:
- Replaces non-inclusive terms (e.g. master, slave, etc.) in the
source, docs, & configuration.
- Supports previous configuration elements, but logs when old elements
are used.
- Provides migration documentation.
- Updates XSD with new config elements and simplifies by combining some
overlapping complexTypes.
- Removes ambiguous "live" language that's used with regard to high
availability.
- Standardizes use of "primary," "backup," "active," & "passive" as
nomenclature to describe both configuration & runtime state for high
availability.
When big messages are produced if a consumer receives an expired message, the credits are not updated, so if the consumer is too slow and an expiry delay has been set, we can end up with a situation where there are no more credits which prevents the consumer from receiving any more messages.
This commit contains the following changes:
- eliminate used, undeclared dependencies
- eliminate unused, declared dependencies
- fix scope for test dependencies
- eliminate org.hamcrest completely as its use involved deprecated code
as well as dependencies from multiple versions
Currently JavaDoc is generated for many classes that don't need it.
JavaDoc should be reserved for user-facing classes (e.g. those used by
client application developers and developers embedding a broker into
their application). This commit narrows down the configuration to just
the classes that are needed. This will save time during release builds,
and save disk space wherever these files are stored (e.g. Apache
website).
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.
Attempt to standardize all Logger declaration to a singular variable name
which makes the code more consistent and make finding usages of loggers in
the code a bit easier.