Summary:
I have manually audited the entire RocksJava code base.
Sorry for the large pull-request, I have broken it down into many small atomic commits though.
My initial intention was to fix the warnings that appear when running RocksJava on Java 8 with `-Xcheck:jni`, for example when running `make jtest` you would see many errors similar to:
```
WARNING in native method: JNI call made without checking exceptions when required to from CallObjectMethod
WARNING in native method: JNI call made without checking exceptions when required to from CallVoidMethod
WARNING in native method: JNI call made without checking exceptions when required to from CallStaticVoidMethod
...
```
A few of those warnings still remain, however they seem to come directly from the JVM and are not directly related to RocksJava; I am in contact with the OpenJDK hostpot-dev mailing list about these - http://mail.openjdk.java.net/pipermail/hotspot-dev/2017-February/025981.html.
As a result of fixing these, I realised we were not r
Closes https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/1890
Differential Revision: D4591758
Pulled By: siying
fbshipit-source-id: 7f7fdf4
Summary:
- Deprecated RateLimiterConfig and GenericRateLimiterConfig
- Introduced RateLimiter
It is now possible to use all C++ related methods also in RocksJava.
A noteable method is setBytesPerSecond which can change the allowed
number of bytes per second at runtime.
Test Plan:
make rocksdbjava
make jtest
Reviewers: adamretter, yhchiang, ankgup87
Subscribers: dhruba
Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D35715
Summary:
This pull request solves the jlong overflow problem on 32-Bit machines as described in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/278:
1. There is a new org.rocksdb.test.PlatformRandomHelper to assist in getting random values. For 32 Bit the getLong method is overriden by xpromaches code above. For 64 Bit it behaves as is.
2. The detection should be cross-platform (Windows is supported though it is not ported completely yet).
3. Every JNI method which sets jlong values must check if the value fits into size_t. If it overflows size_t a InvalidArgument Status object will be returned. If its ok a OK Status will be returned.
4. Setters which have this check will throw a RocksDBException if its no OK Status.
Additionally some other parts of code were corrected using the wrong type casts.
Test Plan:
make rocksdbjava
make jtest
Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D24531