Exemple #1
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// shouldQueueAgain is a helper function to determine whether the
// replica should be queued according to the current time, the last
// time the replica was processed, and the minimum interval between
// successive processing. Specifying minInterval=0 queues all replicas.
// Returns a bool for whether to queue as well as a priority based
// on how long it's been since last processed.
func shouldQueueAgain(now, last hlc.Timestamp, minInterval time.Duration) (bool, float64) {
	if minInterval == 0 || last == hlc.ZeroTimestamp {
		return true, 0
	}
	if diff := now.GoTime().Sub(last.GoTime()); diff >= minInterval {
		priority := float64(1)
		// If there's a non-zero last processed timestamp, adjust the
		// priority by a multiple of how long it's been since the last
		// time this replica was processed.
		if last != hlc.ZeroTimestamp {
			priority = float64(diff.Nanoseconds()) / float64(minInterval.Nanoseconds())
		}
		return true, priority
	}
	return false, 0
}
Exemple #2
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// selectEventTimestamp selects a timestamp for this log message. If the
// transaction this event is being written in has a non-zero timestamp, then that
// timestamp should be used; otherwise, the store's physical clock is used.
// This helps with testing; in normal usage, the logging of an event will never
// be the first action in the transaction, and thus the transaction will have an
// assigned database timestamp. However, in the case of our tests log events
// *are* the first action in a transaction, and we must elect to use the store's
// physical time instead.
func (ev EventLogger) selectEventTimestamp(input hlc.Timestamp) time.Time {
	if input == hlc.ZeroTimestamp {
		return ev.LeaseManager.clock.PhysicalTime()
	}
	return input.GoTime()
}
Exemple #3
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// selectEventTimestamp selects a timestamp for this log message. If the
// transaction this event is being written in has a non-zero timestamp, then that
// timestamp should be used; otherwise, the store's physical clock is used.
// This helps with testing; in normal usage, the logging of an event will never
// be the first action in the transaction, and thus the transaction will have an
// assigned database timestamp. However, in the case of our tests log events
// *are* the first action in a transaction, and we must elect to use the store's
// physical time instead.
func selectEventTimestamp(s *Store, input hlc.Timestamp) time.Time {
	if input == hlc.ZeroTimestamp {
		return s.Clock().PhysicalTime()
	}
	return input.GoTime()
}