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Posted to dev@jena.apache.org by "Andy Seaborne (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2011/08/31 15:53:10 UTC

[jira] [Closed] (JENA-91) extremely large buffer is being created in ObjectFileStorage

     [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/JENA-91?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]

Andy Seaborne closed JENA-91.
-----------------------------


> extremely large buffer is being created in ObjectFileStorage
> ------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: JENA-91
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/JENA-91
>             Project: Jena
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: TDB
>            Reporter: Simon Helsen
>            Assignee: Andy Seaborne
>            Priority: Critical
>         Attachments: JENA-91_NodeTableTrans_r1159121.patch, TestTransSystem.patch, TestTransSystem2.patch, TestTransSystem3.patch
>
>
> I tried to debug the OME and check why a bytebuffer is causing my native memory to explode in almost no time. It all seems to happen in this bit of code in com.hp.hpl.jena.tdb.base.objectfile.ObjectFileStorage (lines 243 onwards)
>   // No - it's in the underlying file storage.
>         lengthBuffer.clear() ;
>         int x = file.read(lengthBuffer, loc) ;
>         if ( x != 4 )
>             throw new FileException("ObjectFile.read("+loc+")["+filesize+"]["+file.size()+"]: Failed to read the length : got "+x+" bytes") ;
>         int len = lengthBuffer.getInt(0) ;
>         ByteBuffer bb = ByteBuffer.allocate(len) ;
> My debugger shows that x==4. It also shows the lengthBuffer has the following content: [111, 110, 61, 95]. This amounts to the value of len=1869495647, which is rather a lot :-) Obviously, the next statement (ByteBuffer.allocate) causes the OME.

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