all unique links! This made it necessary, that a large portion of the
parser and link processing classes must be adopted to carry a different
type of link collection which carry a property attribute which are
attached to web anchors.
- introduction of a new URL class, AnchorURL
- the other url classes, DigestURI and MultiProtocolURI had been renamed
and refactored to fit into a new document package schema, document.id
- cleanup of net.yacy.cora.document package and refactoring
jdk-based logger tend to block
at java.util.logging.Logger.log(Logger.java:476) in concurrent
environments. This makes logging a main performance issue. To overcome
this problem, this is a add-on to jdk logging to put log entries on a
concurrent message queue and log the messages one by one using a
separate process.
- FTPClient uses the concurrent logging instead of the log4j logger
This attribute can be used for ranking and for other purpose (demand by
customer)
The click depth is computed in two steps:
- during indexing the current fill-state of the reverse link index is
used to backtrack the current page to the root page. The length of that
backtrack is the clickdepth. But this does not discover the shortest
click depth. To get this, a second process to check again is needed
- added a process tag that can be used to do operations on the existing
index after a crawl; i.e. calculation the shortest clickpath. Added a
field to control this operation but not a method to operate on this.
- added a visualization of the clickpath length in the host browser
caused by a JRE bug, the PixelGrabber had to be circumvented using an
own frame buffer which can be read without a PixelGrabber. This resulted
in ultra-fast and much less memory-consuming transformation. YaCy images
are now generated really fast!
- added log warnings in case that search processes run into time-out
situations
- better concurrency for Integer formatter (used a non-synchronized
formatter before)
- bugfix for search termination (a poison pill was missing)
- added timeout parameters for search (again) -> target is, that they
are never reached.
See
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/util/concurrent/ConcurrentLinkedQueue.html
and the following test programm:
public class QueueLengthTimeTest {
public static long countTest(Queue<Integer> q, int c) {
long t = System.currentTimeMillis();
for (int i = 0; i < c; i++) {
q.add(q.size());
}
return System.currentTimeMillis() - t;
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
int c = 1;
for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++) {
Runtime.getRuntime().gc();
long t1 = countTest(new ArrayBlockingQueue<Integer>(c), c);
Runtime.getRuntime().gc();
long t2 = countTest(new LinkedBlockingQueue<Integer>(), c);
Runtime.getRuntime().gc();
long t3 = countTest(new ConcurrentLinkedQueue<Integer>(),
c);
System.out.println("count = " + c + ": ArrayBlockingQueue =
" + t1 + ", LinkedBlockingQueue = " + t2 + ", ConcurrentLinkedQueue = "
+ t3);
c = c * 2;
}
}
}