* rely on git plumbing commands when checking if we've built the site for a particular commit already
* switch to forcing '-e' for bash
* add command line switches for: path to hbase, working directory, and publishing
* only export JAVA/MAVEN HOME if they aren't already set.
* add some docs about assumptions
* Update javadoc plugin to consistently be version 3.0.0
* avoid duplicative site invocations on reactor modules
* update use of cp command so it works both on linux and mac
* manually skip enforcer plugin during build
* still doing install of all jars due to MJAVADOC-490, but then skip rebuilding during aggregate reports.
* avoid the pager on git-diff by teeing to a log file, which also helps later reviewing in the case of big changesets.
Signed-off-by: Michael Stack <stack@apache.org>
Signed-off-by: Misty Stanley-Jones <misty@apache.org>
Certain operations in HBase are known to directly affect
the utilization of tables on HDFS. When these actions
occur, we can circumvent the normal path and notify the
Master directly. This results in a much faster response to
changes in HDFS usage.
This requires FS scanning by the RS to be decoupled from
the reporting of sizes to the Master. An API inside each
RS is made so that any operation can hook into this call
in the face of other operations (e.g. compaction, flush,
bulk load).
Signed-off-by: Ted Yu <yuzhihong@gmail.com>
We don't do checkstyle as part of default "mvn install" since it takes significant
amount of time (~90sec) and slows builds and development. We only need it for pre-commits.
Changes:
- replaced commons-logging to slf4j everywhere
- log.XXX(Throwable) calls were replaced with log.XXX(t.toString(), t)
- log.XXX(Object) calls were replaced with log.XXX(Objects.toString(obj))
- log.fatal() calls were replaced with log.error(HBaseMarkers.FATAL, ...)
- programmatic log4j configuration was removed from the unit test
This commit does not affect the current logging configurations, because log4j
is still on the classpath. slf4j-log4j12 binds log4j to slf4j.
Signed-off-by: Michael Stack <stack@apache.org>
It seems like the original reason this execution filter was added is no
longer an issue for 2.0. Actually, these entries actually preclude
Eclipse from correctly using the Java8 source/target version that we
have specified (which creates numerous compilation errors in Eclipse)
Signed-off-by: Guanghao Zhang <zghao@apache.org>
For a egionserver's view of a table (the regions
that belong to a table hosted on a regionserver),
this change tracks the latencies of operations that
affect the regions for this table.
Tracking at the per-table level avoids the memory bloat
and performance impact that accompanied the previous
per-region latency metrics while still providing important
details for operators to consume.
Signed-Off-By: Andrew Purtell <apurtell@apache.org>
Do a pass with dependency:analyze; remove unused and
explicity list the dependencies we exploit.
Remove the parent dependencies set which had junit, mockito,
log4j, and findbugs annotations (had to put junit back
temporarily in subsequent version of this patch TODO). Listing in
parent set meant these libs were dependencies for all modules
which in practice was not the case. Edited all modules so
those that need any from this parent set now do explicit listing.
Ran the dependency:analyze over the project. Acted on most
suggested removals and requests for explicit listing. Some
grey areas remain around transitives that come in with
hadoop -needs better excludes, another project- and that
the dependency:analyze tool is not always accurate in its
reporting.
Pull in guava 22.0 by using the shaded version up in new hbase-thirdparty project.
In poms, exclude guava everywhere except on hadoop-common. Do this so
we minimize transitive includes. hadoop-common is needed because hadoop
Configuration uses guava doing preconditions.
Everywhere we used guava, instead use shaded so fix a load of imports.
Stopwatch API changed as did hashing and toStringHelper which is now
in MoreObjects class. Otherwise, minimal changes to come up on 22.0