3a9f472161
Related: #4333 #4421 #5128 Motivation: slice(), duplicate() and readSlice() currently create a non-recyclable derived buffer instance. Under heavy load, an application that creates a lot of derived buffers can put the garbage collector under pressure. Modifications: - Add the following methods which creates a non-recyclable derived buffer - retainedSlice() - retainedDuplicate() - readRetainedSlice() - Add the new recyclable derived buffer implementations, which has its own reference count value - Add ByteBufHolder.retainedDuplicate() - Add ByteBufHolder.replace(ByteBuf) so that.. - a user can replace the content of the holder in a consistent way - copy/duplicate/retainedDuplicate() can delegate the holder construction to replace(ByteBuf) - Use retainedDuplicate() and retainedSlice() wherever possible - Miscellaneous: - Rename DuplicateByteBufTest to DuplicatedByteBufTest (missing 'D') - Make ReplayingDecoderByteBuf.reject() return an exception instead of throwing it so that its callers don't need to add dummy return statement Result: Derived buffers are now recycled when created via retainedSlice() and retainedDuplicate() and derived from a pooled buffer |
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java/io/netty |