[ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/ZOOKEEPER-2439?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]
Edward Ribeiro reassigned ZOOKEEPER-2439: ----------------------------------------- Assignee: Edward Ribeiro > The order of asynchronous setACL is not correct. > ------------------------------------------------ > > Key: ZOOKEEPER-2439 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/ZOOKEEPER-2439 > Project: ZooKeeper > Issue Type: Bug > Affects Versions: 3.4.8, 3.5.1 > Environment: Linux Ubuntu > Mac OS X > Reporter: Kazuaki Banzai > Assignee: Edward Ribeiro > Labels: acl > Attachments: ZOOKEEPER-2439.patch > > > Within a given client connection, the execution of commands on the ZooKeeper > server is always ordered, as both synchronous and asynchronous commands are > dispatched through queuePacket (directly or indirectly). > In other words, Zookeeper guarantees sequential consistency: updates from a > client will be applied in the order that they were sent. > However, the order of asynchronous setACL is not correct on Ubuntu. > When asynchronous setACL is called BEFORE another API is called, asynchronous > setACL is applied AFTER another API. > For example, if a client calls > (1) asynchronous setACL to remove all permissions of node "/" and > (2) synchronous create to create node "/a", > synchronous create should fail, but it succeeds on Ubuntu. > (We can see all permissions of node "/" are removed when the client calls > getACL to node "/" after (2), so (1) is applied AFTER (2). If we call getACL > between (1) and (2), the synchronous case works correctly but the > asynchronous case still produces the bug.) > The attached unit test reproduces this scenario. It fails on Linux Ubuntu but > succeeds on Mac OS X. If used on a heavily loaded server on Mac OS, the test > sometimes fails as well but only rarely. -- This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA (v6.3.4#6332)