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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/AMQ-4495?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=13647471#comment-13647471
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Gary Tully commented on AMQ-4495:
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allowing a batch load from the store to exceed the memory limit may be the
simplest approach. The batch size is already configurable so the excess is
controllable. In essence, once we go to the store we always load a full batch
if we can so we don't check the usage on each message recovery.
> Imporve cursor memory management
> --------------------------------
>
> Key: AMQ-4495
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/AMQ-4495
> Project: ActiveMQ
> Issue Type: Bug
> Reporter: Dejan Bosanac
>
> As currently stands, the store queue cursor will cache producer messages
> until it gets to the 70% (high watermark) of its usage. After that caching
> stops and messages goes only in store. When consumers comes, messages get
> dispatched to it, but memory isn't released until they are acked. The problem
> is with the use case where producer flow control is off and we have a
> prefetch large enough to get all our messages from the cache. Then, basically
> the cursor gets empty and as message acks release memory one by one, we go to
> the store and try to batch one message at the time. You can guess that things
> start to be really slow at that point.
> The solution for this scenario is to wait with batching until we have more
> space so that store access is optimized. We can do this by adding a new limit
> (smaller then the high watermark) which will be used as the limit after which
> we start filling cursor from the store again.
> All this led us to the following questions:
> 1. Why do we use 70% as the limit (instead of 100%) when we stop caching
> producer messages?
> 2. Would a solution that stop caching producer messages at 100% of usage and
> then start batching messages from the store when usage drops below high
> watermark value be enough. Of course, high watermark would be configurable,
> but 100% by default so we don't alter any behavior for regular use cases.
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