- 29 Jan, 2019 2 commits
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Kirill Smelkov authored
Connection has .db and db has .stor - there is no need to keep separate .stor on the Connection. This thinko was there from Connection beginning (533f0c73 "go/zodb: DB - application-level handle to database (very draft)")
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Kirill Smelkov authored
There was a thinko in transaction.Abort - it was spawning synchronizers under a waitgroup, but wg.Wait() call was forgotten. This way, e.g. in ZODB if a transaction was aborted, corresponding connection could be not yet returned back into DB pool. Fix it. Test is TODO for the time when, hopefully, tracetest is generally ready.
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- 28 Jan, 2019 1 commit
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Kirill Smelkov authored
In ZODB transaction ID is connected with time. We already have functionality to convert tid to time (see bac6c953 "go/zodb: Tid connection with time"), but the functionality for converting in another way - time -> tid - was missing. Fix it.
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- 18 Jan, 2019 6 commits
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Kirill Smelkov authored
It is useful in situations where one need to print potentially Broken objects properly, because %T does not print that detail and using %#v creates too much noise.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
This allows for applications to tune eviction strategy for their needs. The interface to do so (LiveCacheControl) was defined previously in c67ff9ea (go/zodb: Connection: Allow applications to tune live-cache eviction policy), but so far there was no way to install cache controller. Fix it.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
Wendelin.core (wcfs) needs to check whether an object is currently cached or not.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
Following-up on 4d2c8b1d (go/zodb: Require drivers to provide notifications for database change events) let's teach FileStorage to support watching for database changes: - add watcher who observes changes to data file via fsnotify. - when we see that the file was updated - there is a tricky case to distinguish in-progress writes from just some garbage added at tail. See comments in _watcher for details. - if the watcher sees there is indeed new transactions, the watcher updates index & txnh{Min,Max} and sends corresponding event to watchq. - since index / txnh{Min,Max} can now be changed (by watcher) -> they are now protected by mu. - consequently operations like LastTid, LastOid, Load, ... are all taught to observe index / txnh{Min,Max} state in read-snapshot way. - add down & friends to indicate that the storage is no longer operational, if watcher sees there is a problem with data file. - Open is reworked to start from loading/rebuilding index first, and then tail to watcher to detect whether what's after found topPos is garbage or another in-progress transaction. Consequently it is now possible to correctly open filestorage that is being currently written to and has in-progress transaction at tail. The patch is a bit big, but the changes here are all tightly interrelated.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
It is already 3 places where we return zodb.OpError and it will be more. Make a helper function to create those errors with higher signal/noise.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
A ZODB database can be changed by local client as well as another process. A notification channel is thus needed for local cache and database view to know they have to update to current database state. This patch builds the interface of how such notifications should be provided by drivers. Contrary to ZODB/py it is required that every driver provide it. However we will be providing driver support incrementally and for now all drivers behave as if the database is not changing. A note on why Watchq is passed to driver as options: low-level ZODB users, who might want to work with drivers directly, might not need it, and this way with Watchq not present in driver options they will continue to observe the same driver behaviour as before watchq was introduced. In practice many low-level utilities don't need notification support, and it would be not good to required them all to update open calls and to provide watchq drainer not to get stuck. TODO Watchq should be extended to also receive errors from watcher, so that clients could be notified when there is something wrong with the database.
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- 17 Jan, 2019 9 commits
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Kirill Smelkov authored
OpenOptions is high-level options clients give to ZODB when they want to open a high-level IStorage, and not all of those options apply to drivers - for example NoCache is meaningless since cache is provided by ZODB infrastructure, not a driver. On the other hand we are going to introduce driver-specific options, that either low-lever users, or ZODB infrastructure itself will use when opening drivers. For this reasons decouple driver-specific options from OpenOptions into DriverOptions.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
IStorage is what we give to users. IStorageDriver is what is internally provided by drivers to common ZODB infrastructure that in turn implements easy-to-use IStorage interface for clients. So far those two were close to each other. However we need to decouple them, or else every driver will have to implement the same high-level functionality that users expect from IStorage. What we want to do is to offload drivers from that work. In the next patches IStorageDriver will evolve with driver specific-bits, while IStorage will evolve with higher-level stuff that clients will use.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
We will soon need to check for Python and other modules in more tests. Now the checking function is generic - see xtesting.NeedPy docs.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
Connection options could be prepared/logged not only in DB.Open, so instead of teaching only DB.Open how to print them, teach ConnOptions to represent itself in human-readable form.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
This syncs to nexedi/zodbtools@f7eff5fe (*: Refer to `zodb help tidrange` about how history range should be specified) in zodbtools/py.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
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Kirill Smelkov authored
Done for consistency with 313d2d78 (go/zodb/btree: Expose access to BTree/Bucket entries as public API).
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Kirill Smelkov authored
Provide functionality to query for key-range limit for all children under a tree node.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
- Refer to zodb interfaces as zodb.<name>; - in tests bmapping is about LOBTree, not BTree. This fixes up c1ba9a90 (go/zodb/btree: Turn it into template).
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- 13 Dec, 2018 1 commit
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Kirill Smelkov authored
Moved here: zodbtools@e973d519
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- 04 Dec, 2018 1 commit
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Kirill Smelkov authored
- Put dot after the subject, - Indent lists, - ...
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- 08 Oct, 2018 9 commits
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Kirill Smelkov authored
Sometimes class name of an object changes, but to support loading previously-saved objects, the old class name has to be also supported. For example wendelin.core has ZBlk0 class, but historically used just "ZBlk" name for it: https://lab.nexedi.com/nexedi/wendelin.core/blob/v0.12-6-g318efce/bigfile/file_zodb.py#L377 Both class names have to be supported on loading and resolve to to ZBlk0-typed runtime object.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
The code here is testing t.zodb.MyObject class, not unknown.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
Currently RegisterClass was catching double registration of a ZODB class (a string), but not a Go type. We want to prevent double registration of a Go type, because when saving in-RAM state to ZODB we have to translate Go type -> ZODB class. Fix it.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
Traditionally BTrees in ZODB/py expose point query and iteration APIs. However they don't allow a BTree to be scanned through concurrently. For example in wendelin.core each ZBlk1 consists of a IOBTree with 512 chunks https://lab.nexedi.com/nexedi/wendelin.core/blob/v0.12-6-g318efce/bigfile/file_zodb.py#L267 and loading those chunks from ZODB one-by-one serially is very slow. Expose a way to retrieve all children of a B⁺ tree node. This way loading them all could be started in parallel thus significantly reducing overall latency if a range or whole BTree needs to be fetched.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
In the next patch we are going to expose access to BTree/Bucket entries as public API. This will turn _BTreeItem into Entry and will also add BucketEntry data type. Before doing that rearrange the order in which the data structure go: - BTree, - Entry (_BTreeItem for now), - Bucket - BucketEntry (not present for now). Only code movement - no other change.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
Very brief and incomplete.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
They are all either BTree or all Buckets. See https://github.com/zopefoundation/ZODB/blob/3.10.7-4-gb8d7a8567/src/BTrees/Development.txt#L231 for details
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Kirill Smelkov authored
This is one of BTree invariants - check it on load.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
2dba8607 (go/zodb/btree: New package to work with ZODB BTrees (draft)) added btree module with btree.BTree essentially being LOBTree (int64 key -> object). Since for wendelin.core we also need IOBTree (int32 key -> object), which is used in ZBlk1 https://lab.nexedi.com/nexedi/wendelin.core/blob/v0.12-6-g318efce/bigfile/file_zodb.py#L267 https://lab.nexedi.com/nexedi/wendelin.core/blob/v0.12-6-g318efce/bigfile/file_zodb.py#L374 let's turn btree module into template internally and generate code for both LOBTree and IOBTree. For the reference BTree/py takes similar approach with respect to templating.
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- 02 Oct, 2018 1 commit
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Kirill Smelkov authored
To know database state corresponding to the connection.
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- 01 Oct, 2018 1 commit
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Kirill Smelkov authored
The format of tid assumes ~ ns precision, and it is only formatted to µs precision by default. So don't truncate TimeStamp value when computing it from Tid, and perform the µs-rounding only on formatting. The float numbers are not always exactly as in python. For example the following program tidv = [ 0x0000000000000000, 0x0285cbac258bf266, 0x0285cbad27ae14e6, 0x037969f722a53488, 0x03b84285d71c57dd, 0x03caa84275fc1166, ] for tid in tidv: t = TimeStamp.TimeStamp(p64(tid)) print '0x%016x %s %.9f\t%.9f' % (tid, t, t.timeTime(), t.second()) prints: 0x0000000000000000 1900-01-01 00:00:00.000000 -2208988800.000000000 0.000000000 0x0285cbac258bf266 1979-01-03 21:00:08.800000 284245208.800000191 8.800000185 0x0285cbad27ae14e6 1979-01-03 21:01:09.300001 284245269.300001621 9.300001496 <-- ex here 0x037969f722a53488 2008-10-24 05:11:08.120000 1224825068.119999886 8.119999878 0x03b84285d71c57dd 2016-07-01 09:41:50.416574 1467366110.416574001 50.416573989 0x03caa84275fc1166 2018-10-01 16:34:27.652650 1538411667.652649879 27.652650112 the difference is due to floating point operation ordering, because TimeStamp.timeTime() looses precision - e.g. for marked case: In [8]: '%.10f' % (281566860.000000000 + 9.300001496) Out[8]: '281566869.3000015020' We don't try to mimic float64 behaviour to Python exactly - because it is even different for PURE_PYTHON=y or C TimeStamp implementations. However we don't limit due to that our timestamp precision to only 1µs. In other words we keep on maintaining exact compatibility with Python on printing, but timestamp values itself are now ~ ns precision.
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- 28 Sep, 2018 1 commit
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Kirill Smelkov authored
As https://github.com/kisielk/og-rek/pull/57 maybe shows []byte was pickling as string only unintentionally and that might change. We are already explicitly checking for string in corresponding index load place: https://lab.nexedi.com/kirr/neo/blob/2dba8607/go/zodb/storage/fs1/index.go#L282 so it is better we also explicitly save the bits as string. If we don't and https://github.com/kisielk/og-rek/pull/57 gets accepted, tests will fail: --- FAIL: TestIndexSaveLoad (0.00s) index_test.go:176: index load: /tmp/t-index893650059/458967662/1.fs.index: pickle @6: invalid oidPrefix: type []uint8 Traceback (most recent call last): File "./py/indexcmp", line 41, in <module> main() File "./py/indexcmp", line 29, in main d2 = fsIndex.load(path2) File "/home/kirr/src/wendelin/z/ZODB/src/ZODB/fsIndex.py", line 138, in load data[ensure_bytes(k)] = fsBucket().fromString(ensure_bytes(v)) File "/home/kirr/src/wendelin/z/ZODB/src/ZODB/fsIndex.py", line 71, in ensure_bytes return s.encode('ascii') if not isinstance(s, bytes) else s AttributeError: 'bytearray' object has no attribute 'encode' --- FAIL: TestIndexSaveToPy (0.04s) index_test.go:218: zodb/py read/compare index: exit status 1
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- 09 Aug, 2018 8 commits
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Kirill Smelkov authored
Provide minimal support for BTrees.LOBTree Get for now.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
DB represents a handle to database at application level and contains pool of connections. DB.Open opens database connection. The connection will be automatically put back into DB pool for future reuse after corresponding transaction is complete. DB thus provides service to maintain live objects cache and reuse live objects from transaction to transaction. Note that it is possible to have several DB handles to the same database. This might be useful if application accesses distinctly different sets of objects in different transactions and knows beforehand which set it will be next time. Then, to avoid huge cache misses, it makes sense to keep DB handles opened for every possible case of application access. TODO handle invalidations.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
For example Wendelin.core wcfs will need to keep some types of objects (e.g. BigFile index) always in RAM for efficiency. Provide corresponding interface that application could use to install such live-cache eviction decision-making tuning.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
Connection represents an application-level view of a ZODB database. It has groups of in-RAM application-level objects associated with it. The objects are isolated from both changes in further database transactions and from changes to in-RAM objects in other connections. Connection, as objects group manager, is responsible for handling object -> object database references. For this to work it keeps {} oid -> obj dict and uses it to find already loaded object when another object persistently references particular oid. Since it related pydata handling of persistent references is correspondingly implemented in this patch. The dict must keep weak references on objects. The following text explains the rationale: if Connection keeps strong link to obj, just obj.PDeactivate will not fully release obj if there are no references to it from other objects: - deactivate will release obj state (ok) - but there will be still reference from connection `oid -> obj` map to this object, which means the object won't be garbage-collected. -> we can solve it by using "weak" pointers in the map. NOTE we cannot use regular map and arbitrarily manually "gc" entries there periodically: since for an obj we don't know whether other objects are referencing it, we can't just remove obj's oid from the map - if we do so and there are other live objects that reference obj, user code can still reach obj via those references. On the other hand, if another, not yet loaded, object also references obj and gets loaded, traversing reference from that loaded object will load second copy of obj, thus breaking 1 object in db <-> 1 live object invariant: A → B → C ↓ | D <--------- - - -> D2 (wrong) - A activate - D activate - B activate - D gc, A still keeps link on D - C activate -> it needs to get to D, but D was removed from objtab -> new D2 is wrongly created that's why we have to depend on Go's GC to know whether there are still live references left or not. And that in turn means finalizers and thus weak references. some link on the subject: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/golang-nuts/PYWxjT2v6ps
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Kirill Smelkov authored
We will need weak references to handle {} oid -> obj inside zodb.Connection . In Go world they often say that weak references are not needed at all. Please see however the next patch for detailed rationale for why weak references (finalizers and cooperation from Go's GC in other words) are _required_ in that case.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
As promised in 354e0e51 (go/zodb: Persistent - the base type to implement IPersistent objects) add support to persistency machinery to set object state from python pickles serialized by ZODB/py. Persistent references are not yet handled. As promised add some very minimal persistent tests.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
Currently we handle many ways ZODB could serialize a Python class in PyData.ClassName. Since we'll be using this functionality in other places soon - extract it into dedicated function. Since will be also frequently using class.__module__ + "." + class.__name__ don't inline it in ClassName and instead put it into pyclassPath() right away.
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Kirill Smelkov authored
Add the base type, that types which want to implement persistency could embed, and this way inherit persistent functionality. For example type MyObject struct { Persistent ... } type myObjectState MyObject func (o *myObjectState) DropState() { ... } func (o *myObjectState) SetState(state *mem.Buf) error { ... } Here state management methods (DropState and SetState) will be automatically used by persistency machinery on activation and deactivation. For this to work MyObject class has to be registered to ZODB func init() { t := reflect.TypeOf zodb.RegisterClass("mymodule.MyObject", t(MyObject{}), t(myObjectState)) } and new instances of MyObject has to be created via zodb.NewPersistent: obj := zodb.NewPersistent(reflect.TypeOf(MyObject{}), jar).(*MyObject) SetState corresponds to __setstate__ in Python. However in Go version it is explicitly separated from class's public API - as it is the contract between a class and persistency machinery, not between the class and its user. Notice that SetState takes raw buffer as its argument. In the following patch we'll add SetState cousing (PySetState) that will be taking unpickled objects as the state - exactly how __setstate__ operates in Python. Classes will be able to choose whether to accept state as raw bytes or as a python object. The activation/deactivation is implemented via reference counting. Tests are pending (for PySetState).
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