We can't include things with unpredictable iteration order (sets, maps) in our
wire test, but we still want to test those things in our GIANT STREAMABLE CLASS
OF DOOM test. So we now have a separate wire format test which just ensures
that we don't spuriously break the encoding of things that should be
predictable.
If we're going to tell you to use an ArrayList instead of toArray(), let's make
that easy. This would be unnecessary if there was an ArrayList constructor that
took Iterable, but there isn't. And DSet is not a Collection.
Every time a client logs on and back off, another DatagramReader thread
is left around. This seems to fix it, but this method should be called
when either the reader or writer shut down..
Also: the didExit methods look funny:
/**
* Callback called by the datagram writer thread when it goes away.
*/
protected synchronized void datagramWriterDidExit ()
{
// clear out our writer reference
_datagramWriter = null;
if (_datagramReader == null) {
closeDatagramChannel();
}
log.debug("Datagram writer thread exited.");
}
Why would it only try to shut things down if there's no reader?
Perhaps the idea here is that it won't shut down the channel until
both the reader and writer exit? It's not documented...
This has been happening for a while on PX and I've been meaning to track
it down. When a peer shuts down an object that's proxied on other peers,
the other peers receive an ObjectDestroyedEvent, and clear the object
from their omgrs. Other listeners may also receive the event and will need
to clear the proxying information, but that causes an unsubscribe to be
queued up, which when it runs will find the DObject already gone, and log
an error.
At first I considered not queuing up the unsubscribe action if the object
is no longer present in the omgr, but in the case that I'm working with
we have 2 or more objects that will all be destroyed simultaneously.
Even if I test to see if the first object is around or not, this same
test would always pass for the second object even though its death event
is next on the queue. The unsubscribe would be enqueued after THAT, so
there's no test to detect that the two objects are linked.
Instead, just suppress this message if we're a peer client. I didn't
want to suppress it altogether because we might want this message logged for
normal client connections. Maybe not.
Perhaps there is a better way. Maybe the PeerNode should add its own
ObjectDeathListener and clear out the proxy information and ensure that
the proxied object is also destoyed, and clients need not unproxy manually
in that case.
RFC.