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RocksDB fat jar that contains .so files for linux32 and linux64 (glibc and musl-libc), jnilib files for Mac OSX, and a .dll for Windows x64.

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// Copyright (c) 2011-present, Facebook, Inc.  All rights reserved.
//  This source code is licensed under both the GPLv2 (found in the
//  COPYING file in the root directory) and Apache 2.0 License
//  (found in the LICENSE.Apache file in the root directory).

package org.rocksdb;

public class TransactionDBOptions extends RocksObject {

  public TransactionDBOptions() {
    super(newTransactionDBOptions());
  }

  /**
   * Specifies the maximum number of keys that can be locked at the same time
   * per column family.
   * 

* If the number of locked keys is greater than {@code #getMaxNumLocks()}, * transaction writes (or GetForUpdate) will return an error. * * @return The maximum number of keys that can be locked */ public long getMaxNumLocks() { assert(isOwningHandle()); return getMaxNumLocks(nativeHandle_); } /** * Specifies the maximum number of keys that can be locked at the same time * per column family. *

* If the number of locked keys is greater than {@link #getMaxNumLocks()}, * transaction writes (or GetForUpdate) will return an error. * * @param maxNumLocks The maximum number of keys that can be locked; * If this value is not positive, no limit will be enforced. * * @return this TransactionDBOptions instance */ public TransactionDBOptions setMaxNumLocks(final long maxNumLocks) { assert(isOwningHandle()); setMaxNumLocks(nativeHandle_, maxNumLocks); return this; } /** * The number of sub-tables per lock table (per column family) * * @return The number of sub-tables */ public long getNumStripes() { assert(isOwningHandle()); return getNumStripes(nativeHandle_); } /** * Increasing this value will increase the concurrency by dividing the lock * table (per column family) into more sub-tables, each with their own * separate mutex. *

* Default: 16 * * @param numStripes The number of sub-tables * * @return this TransactionDBOptions instance */ public TransactionDBOptions setNumStripes(final long numStripes) { assert(isOwningHandle()); setNumStripes(nativeHandle_, numStripes); return this; } /** * The default wait timeout in milliseconds when * a transaction attempts to lock a key if not specified by * {@link TransactionOptions#setLockTimeout(long)} * * If 0, no waiting is done if a lock cannot instantly be acquired. * If negative, there is no timeout. * * @return the default wait timeout in milliseconds */ public long getTransactionLockTimeout() { assert(isOwningHandle()); return getTransactionLockTimeout(nativeHandle_); } /** * If positive, specifies the default wait timeout in milliseconds when * a transaction attempts to lock a key if not specified by * {@link TransactionOptions#setLockTimeout(long)} * * If 0, no waiting is done if a lock cannot instantly be acquired. * If negative, there is no timeout. Not using a timeout is not recommended * as it can lead to deadlocks. Currently, there is no deadlock-detection to * recover from a deadlock. *

* Default: 1000 * * @param transactionLockTimeout the default wait timeout in milliseconds * * @return this TransactionDBOptions instance */ public TransactionDBOptions setTransactionLockTimeout( final long transactionLockTimeout) { assert(isOwningHandle()); setTransactionLockTimeout(nativeHandle_, transactionLockTimeout); return this; } /** * The wait timeout in milliseconds when writing a key * OUTSIDE of a transaction (ie by calling {@link RocksDB#put}, * {@link RocksDB#merge}, {@link RocksDB#delete} or {@link RocksDB#write} * directly). *

* If 0, no waiting is done if a lock cannot instantly be acquired. * If negative, there is no timeout and will block indefinitely when acquiring * a lock. * * @return the timeout in milliseconds when writing a key OUTSIDE of a * transaction */ public long getDefaultLockTimeout() { assert(isOwningHandle()); return getDefaultLockTimeout(nativeHandle_); } /** * If positive, specifies the wait timeout in milliseconds when writing a key * OUTSIDE of a transaction (ie by calling {@link RocksDB#put}, * {@link RocksDB#merge}, {@link RocksDB#delete} or {@link RocksDB#write} * directly). *

* If 0, no waiting is done if a lock cannot instantly be acquired. * If negative, there is no timeout and will block indefinitely when acquiring * a lock. *

* Not using a timeout can lead to deadlocks. Currently, there * is no deadlock-detection to recover from a deadlock. While DB writes * cannot deadlock with other DB writes, they can deadlock with a transaction. * A negative timeout should only be used if all transactions have a small * expiration set. *

* Default: 1000 * * @param defaultLockTimeout the timeout in milliseconds when writing a key * OUTSIDE of a transaction * @return this TransactionDBOptions instance */ public TransactionDBOptions setDefaultLockTimeout(final long defaultLockTimeout) { assert (isOwningHandle()); setDefaultLockTimeout(nativeHandle_, defaultLockTimeout); return this; } // /** // * If set, the {@link TransactionDB} will use this implementation of a mutex // * and condition variable for all transaction locking instead of the default // * mutex/condvar implementation. // * // * @param transactionDbMutexFactory the mutex factory for the transactions // * // * @return this TransactionDBOptions instance // */ // public TransactionDBOptions setCustomMutexFactory( // final TransactionDBMutexFactory transactionDbMutexFactory) { // // } /** * The policy for when to write the data into the DB. The default policy is to * write only the committed data {@link TxnDBWritePolicy#WRITE_COMMITTED}. * The data could be written before the commit phase. The DB then needs to * provide the mechanisms to tell apart committed from uncommitted data. * * @return The write policy. */ public TxnDBWritePolicy getWritePolicy() { assert(isOwningHandle()); return TxnDBWritePolicy.getTxnDBWritePolicy(getWritePolicy(nativeHandle_)); } /** * The policy for when to write the data into the DB. The default policy is to * write only the committed data {@link TxnDBWritePolicy#WRITE_COMMITTED}. * The data could be written before the commit phase. The DB then needs to * provide the mechanisms to tell apart committed from uncommitted data. * * @param writePolicy The write policy. * * @return this TransactionDBOptions instance */ public TransactionDBOptions setWritePolicy( final TxnDBWritePolicy writePolicy) { assert(isOwningHandle()); setWritePolicy(nativeHandle_, writePolicy.getValue()); return this; } private static native long newTransactionDBOptions(); private native long getMaxNumLocks(final long handle); private native void setMaxNumLocks(final long handle, final long maxNumLocks); private native long getNumStripes(final long handle); private native void setNumStripes(final long handle, final long numStripes); private native long getTransactionLockTimeout(final long handle); private native void setTransactionLockTimeout(final long handle, final long transactionLockTimeout); private native long getDefaultLockTimeout(final long handle); private native void setDefaultLockTimeout(final long handle, final long transactionLockTimeout); private native byte getWritePolicy(final long handle); private native void setWritePolicy(final long handle, final byte writePolicy); @Override protected final native void disposeInternal(final long handle); }





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