There are numerous techniques you can use in order to ensure that OpenJPA operates in the fastest and most efficient manner. Following are some guidelines. Each describes what impact it will have on performance and scalability. Note that general guidelines regarding performance or scalability issues are just that - guidelines. Depending on the particular characteristics of your application, the optimal settings may be considerably different than what is outlined below.
In the following table, each row is labeled with a list of italicized keywords. These keywords identify what characteristics the row in question may improve upon. Many of the rows are marked with one or both of the performance and scalability labels. It is important to bear in mind the differences between performance and scalability (for the most part, we are referring to system-wide scalability, and not necessarily only scalability within a single JVM). The performance-related hints will probably improve the performance of your application for a given user load, whereas the scalability-related hints will probably increase the total number of users that your application can service. Sometimes, increasing performance will decrease scalability, and vice versa. Typically, options that reduce the amount of work done on the database server will improve scalability, whereas those that push more work onto the server will have a negative impact on scalability.
Table 14.1. Optimization Guidelines
Plugin in a Connection Pool
performance, scalability | OpenJPA's built-in datasource does not perform connection pooling or prepared statement caching. Plugging in a third-party pooling datasource may drastically improve performance. |
Optimize database indexes
performance, scalability |
The default set of indexes created by OpenJPA's mapping tool may not always be
the most appropriate for your application. Manually setting indexes in your
mapping metadata or manually manipulating database indexes to include
frequently-queried fields (as well as dropping indexes on rarely-queried
fields) can yield significant performance benefits.
A database must do extra work on insert, update, and delete to maintain an index. This extra work will benefit selects with WHERE clauses, which will execute much faster when the terms in the WHERE clause are appropriately indexed. So, for a read-mostly application, appropriate indexing will slow down updates (which are rare) but greatly accelerate reads. This means that the system as a whole will be faster, and also that the database will experience less load, meaning that the system will be more scalable. Bear in mind that over-indexing is a bad thing, both for scalability and performance, especially for applications that perform lots of inserts, updates, or deletes. |
JVM optimizations
performance, reliability | Manipulating various parameters of the Java Virtual Machine (such as hotspot compilation modes and the maximum memory) can result in performance improvements. For more details about optimizing the JVM execution environment, please see http://java.sun.com/docs/hotspot/PerformanceFAQ.html. |
Use the data cache
performance, scalability | Using OpenJPA's data and query caching features can often result in a dramatic improvement in performance. Additionally, these caches can significantly reduce the amount of load on the database, increasing the scalability characteristics of your application. |
Set LargeTransaction to true,
or set PopulateDataCache to
false
performance vs. scalability |
When using OpenJPA's data caching
features in a transaction that will delete, modify, or create a very large
number of objects you can set LargeTransaction to true and
perform periodic flushes during your transaction to reduce its memory
requirements. See the Javadoc:
OpenJPAEntityManager.setTrackChangesByType. Note that transactions in
large mode have to more aggressively flush items from the data cache.
If your transaction will visit objects that you know are very unlikely to be accessed by other transactions, for example an exhaustive report run only once a month, you can turn off population of the data cache so that the transaction doesn't fill the entire data cache with objects that won't be accessed again. Again, see the Javadoc: OpenJPAEntityManager.setPopulateDataCache |
Run the OpenJPA enhancer on your persistent classes,
either at build-time or deploy-time.
performance, scalability, memory footprint | OpenJPA performs best when your persistent classes have been run through the OpenJPA post-compilation bytecode enhancer. When dealing with enhanced classes, OpenJPA can make a number of assumptions that reduce memory footprint and accelerate persistent data access. When evaluating OpenJPA's performance, build-time or deploy-time enhancement should be enabled. See Section 2, “ Enhancement ” for details. |
Disable logging, performance tracking
performance | Developer options such as verbose logging and the JDBC performance tracker can result in serious performance hits for your application. Before evaluating OpenJPA's performance, these options should all be disabled. |
Set IgnoreChanges to true, or
set FlushBeforeQueries to true
performance vs. scalability |
When both the
openjpa.IgnoreChanges and
openjpa.FlushBeforeQueries
properties are set to false, OpenJPA needs to consider
in-memory dirty instances during queries. This can sometimes result in OpenJPA
needing to evaluate the entire extent objects in order to return the correct
query results, which can have drastic performance consequences. If it is
appropriate for your application, configuring FlushBeforeQueries
to automatically flush before queries involving dirty objects will
ensure that this never happens. Setting IgnoreChanges to
false will result in a small performance hit even if FlushBeforeQueries
is true, as incremental flushing is not as efficient overall as
delaying all flushing to a single operation during commit.
Setting |
Configure openjpa.ConnectionRetainMode
appropriately
performance vs. scalability |
The ConnectionRetainMode
configuration option controls when OpenJPA will obtain a
connection, and how long it will hold that connection. The optimal settings for
this option will vary considerably depending on the particular behavior of
your application. You may even benefit from using different retain modes for
different parts of your application.
The default setting of |
Use flat inheritance
performance, scalability vs. disk space |
Mapping inheritance hierarchies to a single database table is faster for most
operations than other strategies employing multiple tables. If it is
appropriate for your application, you should use this strategy whenever
possible.
However, this strategy will require more disk space on the database side. Disk space is relatively inexpensive, but if your object model is particularly large, it can become a factor. |
High sequence increment
performance, scalability | For applications that perform large bulk inserts, the retrieval of sequence numbers can be a bottleneck. Increasing sequence increments and using table-based rather than native database sequences can reduce or eliminate this bottleneck. In some cases, implementing your own sequence factory can further optimize sequence number retrieval. |
Use optimistic transactions
performance, scalability |
Using datastore transactions translates into pessimistic database row locking,
which can be a performance hit (depending on the database). If appropriate for
your application, optimistic transactions are typically faster than datastore
transactions.
Optimistic transactions provide the same transactional guarantees as datastore transactions, except that you must handle a potential optimistic verification exception at the end of a transaction instead of assuming that a transaction will successfully complete. In many applications, it is unlikely that different concurrent transactions will operate on the same set of data at the same time, so optimistic verification increases the concurrency, and therefore both the performance and scalability characteristics, of the application. A common approach to handling optimistic verification exceptions is to simply present the end user with the fact that concurrent modifications happened, and require that the user redo any work. |
Use query aggregates and projections
performance, scalability | Using aggregates to compute reporting data on the database server can drastically speed up queries. Similarly, using projections when you are interested in specific object fields or relations rather than the entire object state can reduce the amount of data OpenJPA must transfer from the database to your application. |
Always close resources
scalability |
Under certain settings,
For example, if you have configured OpenJPA to use scrollable cursors and lazy
object instantiation by default, each query result will hold open a |
Use detached state managers
performance |
Attaching and even persisting instances can be more efficient when your detached objects use detached state managers. By default, OpenJPA does not use detached state managers when serializing an instance across tiers. See Section 1.3, “ Defining the Detached Object Graph ” for how to force OpenJPA to use detached state managers across tiers, and for other options for more efficient attachment. The downside of using a detached state manager across tiers is that your enhanced persistent classes and the OpenJPA libraries must be available on the client tier. |
Utilize the EntityManager
cache
performance, scalability |
When possible and appropriate, re-using EntityManager s
and setting the RetainState
configuration option to true may result in
significant performance gains, since the EntityManager 's
built-in object cache will be used.
|
Enable multithreaded operation only when necessary
performance |
OpenJPA respects the
openjpa.Multithreaded option in that it does not impose as
much synchronization overhead for applications that do not set this value to
true . If your application is guaranteed to only use
single-threaded access to OpenJPA resources and persistent objects, leaving
this option as false will reduce synchronization overhead,
and may result in a modest performance increase.
|
Enable large data set handling
performance, scalability | If you execute queries that return large numbers of objects or have relations (collections or maps) that are large, and if you often only access parts of these data sets, enabling large result set handling where appropriate can dramatically speed up your application, since OpenJPA will bring the data sets into memory from the database only as necessary. |
Disable large data set handling
performance, scalability | If you have enabled scrollable result sets and on-demand loading but do you not require it, consider disabling it again. Some JDBC drivers and databases (SQLServer for example) are much slower when used with scrolling result sets. |
Use the DynamicSchemaFactory
performance, validation |
If you are using an
openjpa.jdbc.SchemaFactory setting of something other than
the default of dynamic , consider switching back. While other
factories can ensure that object-relational mapping information is valid when
a persistent class is first used, this can be a slow process. Though the
validation is only performed once for each class, switching back to the
DynamicSchemaFactory can reduce the warm-up time for
your application.
|
Do not use XA transactions
performance, scalability |
XA transactions can be orders of
magnitude slower than standard transactions. Unless distributed transaction
functionality is required by your application, use standard transactions.
Recall that XA transactions are distinct from managed transactions - managed transaction services such as that provided by EJB declarative transactions can be used both with XA and non-XA transactions. XA transactions should only be used when a given business transaction involves multiple different transactional resources (an Oracle database and an IBM transactional message queue, for example). |
Use Set s instead of
List/Collection s
performance, scalability |
There is a small amount of extra overhead for OpenJPA to maintain collections
where each element is not guaranteed to be unique. If your application does
not require duplicates for a collection, you should always declare your
fields to be of type Set, SortedSet, HashSet, or
TreeSet .
|
Use query parameters instead of encoding search
data in filter strings
performance | If your queries depend on parameter data only known at runtime, you should use query parameters rather than dynamically building different query strings. OpenJPA performs aggressive caching of query compilation data, and the effectiveness of this cache is diminished if multiple query filters are used where a single one could have sufficed. |
Tune your fetch groups appropriately
performance, scalability |
The fetch groups used when loading an
object control how much data is eagerly loaded, and by extension, which fields
must be lazily loaded at a future time. The ideal fetch group configuration
loads all the data that is needed in one fetch, and no extra fields - this
minimizes both the amount of data transferred from the database, and the
number of trips to the database.
If extra fields are specified in the fetch groups (in particular, large fields such as binary data, or relations to other persistence-capable objects), then network overhead (for the extra data) and database processing (for any necessary additional joins) will hurt your application's performance. If too few fields are specified in the fetch groups, then OpenJPA will have to make additional trips to the database to load additional fields as necessary. |
Use eager fetching
performance, scalability | Using eager fetching when loading subclass data or traversing relations for each instance in a large collection of results can speed up data loading by orders of magnitude. |
Disable BrokerImpl finalization
performance, scalability |
Outside of a Java EE 5 application server or other JPA persistence container,
OpenJPA's EntityManagers use finalizers to ensure that resources
get cleaned up. If you are properly managing your resources, this finalization
is not necessary, and will introduce unneeded synchronization, leading to
scalability problems. You can disable this protective behavior by setting the
openjpa.BrokerImpl property to
non-finalizing . See Section 1.1, “
Broker Finalization
” for details.
|
Preload MetaDataRepository
scalability | By default, the MetaDataRepository is lazily loaded which means that fair amounts of locking is used to ensure that metadata is processed properly. Enabling preloading allows OpenJPA to load metadata upfront and remove locking. See Section 2, “Metadata Repository” for details. |