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;
}
}
}
changes of API schedule row data changed form input form to unique field names
using row pk.
Fix for issue 96 http://bugs.yacy.net/view.php?id=96
IE9-64bit doesn't interprete iframe with align parameter as desired
misaligns following content (in CrawlProfileEditor_p.html)
ready-prepared crawl list but at the stacks of the domains that are
stored for balanced crawling. This affects also the balancer since that
does not need to prepare the pre-selected crawl list for monitoring. As
a effect:
- it is no more possible to see the correct order of next to-be-crawled
links, since that depends on the actual state of the balancer stack the
next time another url is requested for loading
- the balancer works better since the next url can be selected according
to the current situation and not according to a pre-selected order.
parser. This makes it possible that every type of document can be a
crawl start point, not only text documents or html documents. Testet
this with a pdf document.