Hi Martijn, Thanks for the reply.
Yes the files look like bin1965159231182123515.tmp. Ok I'll try to configure smaller cache sizes. As fare as I know the import/export API use XML. My source database is about 60go so I don't believe it will work out of the box... Best regards, Julien On Mon, Nov 23, 2009 at 4:33 PM, Martijn Hendriks <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi Julien, > > Do these files look like bin1965159231182123515.tmp? If so, these are > the contents of binary properties which are cached by Jackrabbit and I > know no way to avoid them. These files should be deleted automatically > when the associated properties are garbage collected. If you have a > lot of big binary properties the contents on disk can indeed grow very > fast. I know of two workarounds: (i) point the java.io.tmpdir to an fs > with a lot of space, and (ii) configure smaller cache sizes in > org.apache.jackrabbit.core.state.CacheManager (available through a > org.apache.jackrabbit.core.RepositoryImpl instance). > > Btw, have you tried to use the import/export API for migrating your > content? > > Best regards, > Martijn > > On Mon, Nov 23, 2009 at 4:17 PM, Julien Poffet <[email protected]> > wrote: > > Here is my situation, > > > > I was using jackrabbit with a non-datastore config. So all the content of > > jackrabbit were stored in my database. Now I just migrated to a > > cluster/datastore config with a brand new database prefix. > > > > At this point I'm trying to import the content of the old repository to > the > > new one. I have setup the SimpleWebDavServlet to expose the content of > the > > old repository through WebDav. By doing this I can parse the WebDav and > get > > the files to import them in the new repository. So far it's a little bit > > slow but it works fine. My problem is that when the source WebDav is > parsed, > > a lot of binary files (which I assume are a kind of BLOB cache) are > created > > in my tomcat temp dir. This temporary files are never deleted and my > server > > runs out of space very quickly. > > > > Is there a way to avoid theses temporary files? > > > > Cheers, > > Julien > > >
