Use info() instead. Also, only log the info if the file actually
existed and was removed. We don't want misleading noise logging about
removing files that were not there. Use std::remove() directly to
avoid unnecessary layers that just make it harder to know whether the
removal worked or not.
All changes are supposed to be persistent. This simplifies the tile
caching code quite a lot.
The TileCache object no longer needs to keep any state whether the
document is being edited or whether it has been modified without
saving etc.
Update the modtime.txt file after saving the document. Otherwise the
tile cache would wrongly be considered invalid next time.
As a sanity check, we put a flag file 'unsaved.txt' into the cache
directory whenever we get a callback that indicates the document has
been modified, and remove it when the document is saved. If the flag
file is present when we take an existing tile cache into use, we can't
trust it.
Even after these changes, we still don't use an existing tile cache as
much (or at all?) as we could, though. The INVALIDATE_TILES EMPTY
callback that LO does early on in a conection causes us to remove all
cached tiles...
Keep track of tiles being rendered in TileCache, and when asked to
render the same tile as is already being rendered, just "subscribe" to
the existing ongoing rendering. When a tile has been rendered and is
being sent out to clients, check if there are "subscriptions" and send
it to them, too.
One problem is that if the client that caused a tile rendering to be
initiated goes away before the rendering has completed, it will never
complete, and the subscribers are left without the tile.
Change-Id: Icca237876a0f466c29eb5bf60ffd4da3d9d68600
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit.libreoffice.org/24228
Reviewed-by: Ashod Nakashian <ashnakash@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ashod Nakashian <ashnakash@gmail.com>
There is nothing that says a client has even requested any tiles, so
there might be none to persist. Don't let an exception thrown by the
DirectoryIterator propagate upwards and cause potential
issues.
Noticed the issue when testing using the 'connect' test program,
giving it input that did not request any tiles.
Otherwise we have a problem when cached information is different than
the actual one maintained by LOKitDocument, keeping the whole
server setup in an inconsistent state.
For example, when client reloads the browser session quickly
after setting the current part (to say 3) of an opened part document.
If the reload occurs soon enough before the 'setclientpart'
message originated from the client is acknowledged by the server,
then the next reload would get the cached 'status' entry asking
the client to set 'currentpart' to something else leading to the
generation of another 'setclientpart' message. This thing would
go on, and we would run into a loop, as I have for the last few
hours.
Change-Id: Ia6260dfb772f2e3f023572aa060fd7da92b196c8
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit.libreoffice.org/22272
Reviewed-by: Ashod Nakashian <ashnakash@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ashod Nakashian <ashnakash@gmail.com>
Nominal logging interface and a fix to using Poco
Application from LOOLKit, which is not a Poco App,
which caused core dump.
Logs now include process name.
Added logs to strategic places and some cleanups.
Change-Id: Ib7dcc4f1033dddf7c87cd2e786a91f5b482fb312
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit.libreoffice.org/20906
Reviewed-by: Ashod Nakashian <ashnakash@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ashod Nakashian <ashnakash@gmail.com>
Fixed a javascript error and a more serious referencing
of the memory of a temp string, which resulted in
random behavior.
When the memory was null, it failed to load any
documents in the browser. Otherwise, accidentally,
when it wasn't, it would load the document (rarely).
Now we have 2 caching directories: 'persistent', and 'editing'.
The Persistent cache always represents the document as it is saved, the
Editing one caches the current edits. The Editing state is copied to
Persistent on save. The Editing state is destroyed on reload.
Remove any intersecting cached tiles. It is the parent process that handles
the tile cache, so it must look for invalidatetiles: messages, too, before
passing them on to the client. To know for which part we should remove tiles,
add an "ephemeral" curpart: message that the child process sends to the parent
process before the invalidatetils: message.
Just call the getStatus() function directly in the child process, which will
always cause a complete status: message to be sent to the client. No
documentsizechanged: messages now sent to the client at all.
When a child process sends a documentsizechanged: message to the parent, to be
forwarded to the client, parse it and update a cached status of the doucment,
if available, and send an updated status: message to the client instead.
Note that clients should not rely on getting only status: messages and never
documentsizechanged: messages, though; the cache might be cleaned at any time
even while the server is running. If there is no cached status of the document
to update and re-use, we have to forward the documentsizechanged: message as
such to the client.
The JS code always passes in 0 for now. The server parses the parameter and
calls LibreOfficeKitDocument::setPart() before calling paintTile().
Probably also the status, key, mouse and selection messages will need a part
number. The intent is after all that the protocol is as stateless as
possible. (So maybe we should also pass the document URL in each message?)