MonotonicClock can be implemented to provide more certainity about
time than the standard System.currentTimeMillis() can provide. This
can be used by classes such as PersonIdent and Ketch to rely on
more certainity about time moving in a strictly ascending order.
Gerrit Code Review can also leverage this interface through its
embedding of JGit and use MonotonicClock and ProposedTimestamp to
provide stronger assurance that NoteDb time is moving forward.
Change-Id: I1a3cbd49a39b150a0d49b36d572da113ca83a786
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
A JUnit TestRule which enables to run the same JUnit test repeatedly.
This may help to identify the root cause why a flaky tests which succeed
most often does fail sometimes.
Add the RepeatRule to the test class containing the test to be repeated:
public class MyTest {
@Rule
public RepeatRule repeatRule = new RepeatRule();
...
}
and annotate the test to be repeated with the @Repeat(n=<repetitions>)
annotation:
@Test
@Repeat(n = 100)
public void test() {
...
}
then this test will be repeated 100 times. If any test execution fails
test repetition will be stopped.
Change-Id: I7c49ccebe1cb00bcde6b002b522d95c13fd3a35e
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Type parameter T extends AnyObjectId in signature of update(String, T)
Change-Id: I9c13ddc572b8e94d5c7854f4de1f8206cb5e99ca
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
The default author and committer objects in TestRepository were
initialized statically and did not use the MockSystemReader passed into
the TestRepository ctor. Make these fields non-static and initialize
them with a consistent clock.
Also make the author and commiter name and email strings public for
tests that want to verify against them.
Change-Id: I88b444b96e22743001b32824d8e4e03c2239aa86
Signed-off-by: Terry Parker <tparker@google.com>
ObjectInserter.Formatter and Git are autocloseable and can be
opened in try-with-resource to prevent a resource leak warning.
Change-Id: I48c4001aaa7d9c1e36369e9799bfbb7c3bb46d8b
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@sonymobile.com>
Require callers to pass in valid sets for both want and have
collections. Offer PackWriter.NONE as a handy constant for an
empty collection for the have part of preparePack instead of null.
Change-Id: Ifda4450f5e488cbfefd728382b7d30797e229217
Today there are plenty of modern build tool systems available in the
wild (in no particular order):
* http://bazel.io
* https://pantsbuild.github.io
* http://shakebuild.com
* https://ninja-build.org
* https://buckbuild.com
The attributes, that all these build tools have in common, are:
* reliable
* correct
* very fast
* reproducible
It must not always be the other build tool, this project is currently
using. Or, quoting Gerrit Code Review maintainer here:
"Friends, don't let friends use <the other build tool system>!"
This change is non-complete implementation of JGit build in Buck,
needed by Gerrit Code Review to replace its dependency with standlone
JGit cell. This is very useful when a developer is working on both
projects and is trying to integrate changes made in JGit in Gerrit.
The supported workflow is:
$ cd jgit
$ emacs <hack>
$ cd ../gerrit
$ buck build --config repositories.jgit=../jgit gerrit
With --config repositories.jgit=../jgit jgit cell is routed through
JGit development tree.
To build jgit, issue:
$ buck build //:jgit
[-] PROCESSING BUCK FILES...FINISHED 0,0s
Yes, you can't measure no-op build time, given that Buck daemon is
used.
Change-Id: I301a71b19fba35a5093d8cc64d4ba970c2877a44
Signed-off-by: David Ostrovsky <david@ostrovsky.org>