The type parameters can now be inferred when creating
ConcurrentHashMap.
A for loop over the keys of a ConcurrentHashMap doesn't
need to use an Iterator<Map.Entry>; loop syntax handles
this just fine over keySet().
Change-Id: I1f85bb81b77f7cd1caec77197f2f0bf78e4a82a1
Java 8 fixed the silent flush during close issue by
FilterOutputStream (base class of BufferedOutputStream)
using try-with-resources to close the stream, getting a
behavior matching what JGit's SafeBufferedOutputStream
was doing:
try {
flush();
} finally {
out.close();
}
With Java 8 as the minimum required version to run JGit
it is no longer necessary to override close() or have
this class. Deprecate the class, and use the JRE's version
of close.
Change-Id: Ic0584c140010278dbe4062df2e71be5df9a797b3
This simplifies testing for Gerrit Code Review where
application code is updating the repository description
and the test harness uses InMemoryRepository.
Change-Id: I9fbcc028ae24d90209a862f5f4f03e46bfb71db0
This method pair allows the caller to read and modify the description
file that is traditionally used by gitweb and cgit when rendering a
repository on the web.
Gerrit Code Review has offered this feature for years as part of
its GitRepositoryManager interface, but its fundamentally a feature
of JGit and its Repository abstraction.
git-core typically initializes a repository with a default value
inside the description file. During getDescription() this string
is converted to null as it is never a useful description.
Change-Id: I0a457026c74e9c73ea27e6f070d5fbaca3439be5
Bazel runs ErrorProne by default and ErrorProne rightly complains that
allowing the user to specify any Cipher can lead to insecure code
(in particular, getCipher("AES") operates in ECB mode). Unfortunately
this is required to support existing repositories insecurely stored
on S3.
Extract the insecure factory code to its own class so this can be built
as a java_library() with this check disabled.
Change-Id: I34f381965bdaa25d5aa8ebf6d8d5271b238334e0
Because flush calls interrupt with writeLock held, it cannot interrupt
a write. Simplify by no longer defending against that.
Change-Id: Ib0b39b425335ff7b0ea1b1733562da5392576a15
StreamCopyThread#run consistently interrupts itself whenever it
discovers it has been interrupted by StreamCopyThread#flush while not
reading. The flushCount is not needed to avoid lost flushes.
All in-tree users of StreamCopyThread never flush. As a nice side
benefit, this avoids the expense of atomic operations that have no
purpose for those users.
Change-Id: I1afe415cd09a67f1891c3baf712a9003ad553062
Now that RepositoryCache have a time based eviction strategy, get rid
of the strategy to evict cache entries if heap memory is running low,
i.e. soft references. Main reason why time based eviction was
implemented was to offer an alternative to the unpredictable soft
references.
Relying on soft references is not working, especially in large heap. The
JVM GC will consider collecting soft references as last resort before
throwing an out of memory error. For example, an application like Gerrit
configured with a 128GB heap, GC will wait until all 128GB is filled
before collecting the soft references so the application will be
suffering long pauses caused by GC for a long time already. In other
words, you will have to restart application because it's unusable before
JVM eviction kicks in.
Keeping the SoftReference in RepositoryCache is causing more harm than
good. If you use the time based eviction (which is the default strategy)
and want to tune JVM to release soft references more aggressively, it
will release repositories from the cache even though they are not
expired which defeats the purpose of the repository cache.
Gerrit uses Lucene library which uses soft references and this is
causing a "memory leak" except if you configure JVM to release soft
references more aggressively which have the nasty side effect of
evicting non expired repositories from the cache.
Change-Id: I9940bd800464c7f007696d0ccde52ea617b2ebce
Signed-off-by: Hugo Arès <hugo.ares@ericsson.com>
Work around issues with JSch not handling interrupts by
isolating the JSch interactions onto another thread.
Run write and flush on a single threaded Executor using
simple Callable operations wrapping the method calls,
waiting on the future to determine the outcome before
allowing the caller to continue.
If any operation was interrupted the state of the stream
becomes fuzzy at close time. The implementation tries to
interrupt the pending write or flush, but this is very
likely to corrupt the stream object, so exceptions are
ignored during such a dirty close.
Change-Id: I42e3ba3d8c35a2e40aad340580037ebefbb99b53
In case a value is used which isn’t a power of 2 there will be a high
chance of java.lang.ArrayIndexOutBoundsException and
org.eclipse.jgit.errors.CorruptObjectException due to a mismatching
assumption for the DfsBlockCache#blockSizeShift parameter.
Change-Id: Ib348b3704edf10b5f93a3ffab4fa6f09cbbae231
Signed-off-by: Philipp Marx <smigfu@googlemail.com>
* GC.tooManyLooseObjects() always responded true since the loop missed
to advance the iterator so it always incremented until the threshold was
exceeded.
* Also fix loop exit criterion which was off by 1.
* Add some tests.
Change-Id: I70976dfaa026efbcf3c46bd45941f37277a18e04
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Update to the same version used on Gerrit's master branch.
Change-Id: I20e4edd099a095c42f23df8cc57241efad2de2ce
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
StreamCopyThread.flush was introduced in
61645b938bc934fda3b0624c5bac1e3495634750 (Add timeouts to smart
transport clients, 2009-06-19) to support timeouts on write in JSch.
The commit message from that change explains:
JSch made a timeout on write difficult because they explicitly do
a catch for InterruptedException inside of their OutputStream. We
have to work around that by creating an additional thread that just
shuttles data between our own OutputStream and the real JSch stream.
The code that runs on that thread is structured as follows:
while (!done) {
int n = src.read(buf);
dst.write(buf, 0, n);
}
with src being a PipedInputStream representing the data to be written
to JSch. To add flush support, that change wanted to add an extra step
if (wantFlush)
dst.flush();
but to handle the case where the thread is blocked in the read() call
waiting for new input, it needs to interrupt the read. So that is how
it works: the caller runs
pipeOut.write(some data);
pipeOut.flush();
copyThread.flush();
to write some data and force it to flush by interrupting the read.
After the pipeOut.flush(), the StreamCopyThread reads the data that was
written and prepares to copy it out. If the copyThread.flush() call
interrupts the copyThread before it acquires writeLock and starts
writing, we throw away the data we just read to fulfill the flush.
Oops.
Noticed during the review of e67d59df3f
(StreamCopyThread: Do not let flush interrupt a write, 2016-11-04),
which introduced this bug.
Change-Id: I4aceb5610e1bfb251046097adf46bca54bc1d998
flush calls interrupt() to interrupt a pending read and trigger a
flush. Unfortunately that interrupt() call can also interrupt a
pending write, putting Jsch in a bad state and triggering "Short read
of block" errors. Add locking to ensure the flush only interrupts
reads as intended.
Change-Id: Ib105d9e107ae43549ced7e6da29c22ee41cde9d8
If there was a new flush() call during flush previous bytes, we need to
catch it in order to process the new bytes between the two flush()
calls instead of going to last catch IOException clause and end the
thread.
Change-Id: Ibc58a1fa97559238c13590aedbb85e482d85e465
Signed-off-by: Zhen Chen <czhen@google.com>
ObjectId is serializable, and so are its subtypes. Ensure that
serialization does not follow the hash collision chain internal to the
ObjectIdOwnerMap, otherwise completely unrelated objects may get
serialized when a RevObject is serialized.
Note that serializing a RevCommit or RevTag may serialize quite a few
objects due to the parent/object links they contain. A user has no real
control over how many objects will be written when a RevCommit is
serialized. C.f [1]. This change does not resolve that, but in any case
this internal hash collision chain link should not participate in
serialization.
[1] https://github.com/gitblit/gitblit/pull/1141
Change-Id: Ice331a9dc80a59ca360fcc04adaff8b5e750d847
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Enhance and use AtomicObjectOutputStream to write temporary files in
CleanFilter.
Change-Id: I28987dad18255a9067344f94b4e836cbd183e4b1
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
The CleanFilter leaked temporary files when a media file already existed
before running clean filter.
Change-Id: Ie20fce3f40d34095ce58e596d25d8d64fe0cde99
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Transferring data byte per byte is slow, running add with CleanFilter on
a 2.9MB file takes 20 seconds. Using a buffer of 8k shrinks this time to
70ms.
Change-Id: I3bc2d8c11fe6cfaffcc99dc2a00643e01ac4e9cc
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Previously, the streamFileThreshold, the threshold at which a file
would be streamed rather than loaded entirely into memory, was only
configurable on a global basis.
This commit makes this threshold configurable on a per-loader basis.
Bug: 490404
Change-Id: I492c18c3155dbf56eedda9044a61d76120fd75f9
Signed-off-by: Kevin Corcoran <kevin.corcoran@puppetlabs.com>
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
With the auto option, gc checks whether any housekeeping is required; if
not, it exits without performing any work. Some JGit commands run gc
--auto after performing operations that could create many loose objects.
Housekeeping is required if there are too many loose objects or too many
packs in the repository.
If the number of loose objects exceeds the value of the gc.auto option
jgit's GC consolidates all existing packs into a single pack (equivalent
to -A option), whereas git-core would combine all loose objects into a
single pack using repack -d -l. Setting the value of gc.auto to 0
disables automatic packing of loose objects.
If the number of packs exceeds the value of gc.autoPackLimit, then
existing packs (except those marked with a .keep file) are consolidated
into a single pack by using the -A option of repack. Setting
gc.autoPackLimit to 0 disables automatic consolidation of packs.
Like git the following jgit commands run auto gc:
- fetch
- merge
- rebase
- receive-pack
The auto gc for receive-pack can be suppressed by setting the config
option receive.autogc = false
Change-Id: I68a2a051b39ec2c53cb7c4b8f6c596ba65eeba5d
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
The new method addPaths(List<String>) allows callers to add multiple
paths without having to iterate over several calls to addPath(String).
Change-Id: I2c3746a97ead7118fb0ed5543a2c843224719031
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
Change-Id: Ie1e59c566b63d0dfac231e44e7ebd7f3f08f3e9f
Signed-off-by: Ned Twigg <ned.twigg@diffplug.com>
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
This SIOOBE happens reproducibly when trying to access
a repository containing Cygwin symlinks
Change-Id: I25f103fcc723bac7bfaaeee333a86f11627a92c7
Signed-off-by: Marc Strapetz <marc.strapetz@syntevo.com>
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
Remove the assumption that the local repository is a file based one.
Change-Id: I8f10fe7a54e9fc07f2a23d7901e52b65aa570d45
Signed-off-by: Thomas Meyer <thomas.mey@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Git barfs on these (and they don't make any sense), so we certainly
shouldn't write them.
Change-Id: I3faf8554a05f0fd147be2e63fbe55987d3f88099
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twosigma.com>
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
Allow for higher concurrency on DfsBlockCache by adding a configuration
for number of estimated concurrent requests.
Change-Id: Ia65e58ecb2c459b6d9c9697a2f715d933270f7e6
Signed-off-by: Philipp Marx <smigfu@googlemail.com>