| package net.floodlightcontroller.debugevent; |
| |
| |
| import java.util.ArrayList; |
| import java.util.Iterator; |
| import java.util.concurrent.LinkedBlockingDeque; |
| |
| import org.slf4j.Logger; |
| import org.slf4j.LoggerFactory; |
| |
| public class CircularBuffer<T> implements Iterable<T>{ |
| protected static Logger log = LoggerFactory.getLogger(CircularBuffer.class); |
| private final LinkedBlockingDeque<T> buffer; |
| |
| public CircularBuffer(int capacity) { |
| this.buffer = new LinkedBlockingDeque<T>(capacity); |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * Adding an element to the circular buffer implies adding the element to |
| * the tail of the deque. In doing so, if the capacity of the buffer has |
| * been exhausted, then the deque's head should be removed to preserve the |
| * circular nature of the buffer. A LinkedBlockingDeque is used because of its |
| * concurrent nature and the fact that adding to tail and removing from head are |
| * both O(1) operations. The removed head is returned to the caller for reuse. |
| * |
| * @param e the element to be added |
| * @return removed element (for reuse) or null |
| */ |
| public T add(T e) { |
| T oldE = null; |
| while (!buffer.offerLast(e)) { |
| oldE = buffer.poll(); |
| } |
| return oldE; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * The basic idea here is that an ArrayList has been passed in, which may or may not |
| * have a size bigger that the actual number of elements that are meant to |
| * be flushed to the Circular Buffer. Thus the 'uptoIndex' parameter specifies |
| * the number of elements that need to be flushed starting from index 0. |
| * Note that after flushing, the circular buffer may return a memory unit (of type T) |
| * for reuse in the list, if the circular buffer popped off memory to preserve |
| * its circular nature. Or it may just return null if nothing was popped off. |
| * Either way, the list that is returned by this method, is of the SAME SIZE |
| * as the list passed in, as ArrayLists can hold null elements. The only difference |
| * is that the list returned will have elements that reference old popped-off memory |
| * from the circular-buffer or null. |
| * |
| * @param elist the ArrayList to flush into the circular buffer. |
| * @param uptoIndex flush starting from index 0 upto but not including |
| * index 'uptoIndex'. |
| * @return the 'elist' passed in with members now pointing to |
| * to null or old-memory for reuse. The returned list |
| * if of the same size as 'elist'. |
| */ |
| public ArrayList<T> addAll(ArrayList<T> elist, int uptoIndex) { |
| if (uptoIndex > elist.size()) { |
| log.error("uptoIndex is greater than elist size .. aborting addAll"); |
| return elist; |
| } |
| for (int index=0; index < uptoIndex; index++) { |
| T e = elist.get(index); |
| if (e != null) { |
| elist.set(index, add(e)); |
| } |
| } |
| return elist; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * Returns an iterator over the elements in the circular buffer in proper sequence. |
| * The elements will be returned in order from most-recent to oldest. |
| * The returned Iterator is a "weakly consistent" iterator that will never |
| * throw ConcurrentModificationException, and guarantees to traverse elements |
| * as they existed upon construction of the iterator, and may (but is not |
| * guaranteed to) reflect any modifications subsequent to construction. |
| */ |
| @Override |
| public Iterator<T> iterator() { |
| return buffer.descendingIterator(); |
| } |
| |
| public int size() { |
| return buffer.size(); |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * Atomically removes all elements in the circular buffer |
| */ |
| public void clear() { |
| buffer.clear(); |
| } |
| } |