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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/NIFI-3495?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=15871979#comment-15871979
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ASF subversion and git services commented on NIFI-3495:
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Commit ec868362f3317a79b6518c780af1b9debb843f32 in nifi's branch
refs/heads/master from [~ozhurakousky]
[ https://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf?p=nifi.git;h=ec86836 ]
NIFI-3495 fixed the index issue with TextLineDemarcator
This closes #1518.
> TextLineDemarcator sets the wrong index when read ahead is performed in isEol
> operation
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: NIFI-3495
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/NIFI-3495
> Project: Apache NiFi
> Issue Type: Bug
> Reporter: Oleg Zhurakousky
> Assignee: Oleg Zhurakousky
> Priority: Critical
> Fix For: 1.2.0
>
>
> This condition is very rare. It only occurs when read ahead (call to
> _fill()_) is made inside of the _isEol_ operation which essentially sets the
> new index which then is reset inside of the main _nextOffsetInfo_ operation.
> So the fix is to basically monitor if _isEol_ had to perform read ahead and
> if it did do not reset the index.
> More details.
> While this component is modeled after standard Java BufferedReader which
> simply reads and returns lines (delimited by CR or LF or both), this reader
> also holds the information about how each line terminated (i.e., EOF, or CR
> or LF or CR and LF) returning it to the caller as OffsetInfo.
> So for example if you have a record "foo\r\nbar" and you read it with
> BuffereReader you will get 'foo' and 'bar'. However you will not know that
> between the two tokens there was CR and LF and therefore will not be able to
> restore (if need to) the record to its original state. The TextLineDemarcator
> will return OffsetInfo which holds the delimiter and other information.
> So, to accomplish the above every time we see CR (13) we need to peek at the
> next byte and see if its LF(10). When at the end of the buffer such peek
> becomes complicated since we need to read more data and so we did, but didn't
> handle index properly essentially setting it back to the old value when the
> new one was set inside of the fill().
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