sorry, I did't get it
[] Leo On Sat, Nov 23, 2013 at 12:05 PM, Romain Manni-Bucau <[email protected]>wrote: > You said it, you dont handle correctly the lifecycle of your servers ;). > Httpd allows graceful shutdown, that s easier > Le 23 nov. 2013 14:41, "Leonardo K. Shikida" <[email protected]> a écrit : > > > The idea is to guarantee that the job is executed. Of course, it may be > > aborted if there´s a problem in the job itself, but if the server is shut > > down during the job execution, this job must be automatically retried on > > the next startup. > > > > > > > > [] > > > > Leo > > > > > > On Sat, Nov 23, 2013 at 11:33 AM, Romain Manni-Bucau > > <[email protected]>wrote: > > > > > Hi > > > > > > It is quite complicated, what's your real goal (not the technical > > > solution)? It looks like timers + @async would be enough > > > Le 23 nov. 2013 14:17, "Leonardo K. Shikida" <[email protected]> a > > écrit : > > > > > > > Hi > > > > > > > > First of all, I'd like to thank this community for all the help > during > > > > these months. > > > > > > > > I've noticed a significant performance/stability improvement from > 1.5.2 > > > to > > > > 1.6.0. Good job. > > > > > > > > I am experiencing some fine tuning issues, so I'd like to ask you for > > > some > > > > advice. > > > > > > > > My app is simple as that: it's a web app that allows the user to > manage > > > > several timers (quartz). Each time the quartz cron job is triggered, > > the > > > > @Timeout method just queues a job (activemq). Then some MDBs consume > > that > > > > job (it's a long running job). So producers can be much faster than > > > > consumers. Both JMS and Quartz are backed by an Oracle XE instance. > > > > > > > > JMS messages are very small and must never be ignored or discarded. > > > > > > > > One thing I've noticed is that I'll have to control the quartz jobs > > > myself, > > > > because even if I pause the timers, when the server is restarted, > > timers > > > > are restored and restarted automatically, probably because the JEE > spec > > > > says it must be this way. I am considering the idea of not persisting > > > > quartz, but only some job metadata, and in the next restart, some EJB > > > > annotated with @Start can restart or not each timer. > > > > > > > > Another thing I've noticed is that when I have 10 quartz jobs that > > > trigger > > > > a new job every minute (I was trying every second, but resources were > > > being > > > > quickly consumed, although I'd be happy to find some config that > could > > > > allow this in a 8GB RAM machine) would be enough to make my web app > not > > > > responsive, hanging forever. That's why I am asking in another email > > how > > > > can I specify different pools for different EJBs. Sounds to me that > > > > something is really not configured well, because 10 jobs submitting a > > JMS > > > > message each second should not be a very big deal I guess. > > > > > > > > Since the bottleneck seems to be in the producer side, I've tried to > > > change > > > > the producer EJB (that has the @Timeout method) from @Stateless to > > > > @Singleton+@Lock(LockType.WRITE) but it seems I've just moved one > > > problem > > > > from one side to another. > > > > > > > > Another thing I've noticed that adding a producerFlowControl="false" > to > > > > activemq.xml could help, but it was not enough. > > > > > > > > I've also noticed that consumers work better if I add a > > Thread.sleep(50) > > > > before consuming at onMessage(Message msg), maybe giving some time > for > > > JMS > > > > to release locks (I think). > > > > > > > > Last but not least, I've experiencing some strange problems probably > > > > related to the classloader, and I've removed xerces-impl-2.11.0.jar > > from > > > > eclipse factory path (java compiler -> annotation processing -> > factory > > > > path, to generate openJPA metamodel classes for Criteria using > > > > openjpa.metamodel=true). I am adding all tomee jars, but I would like > > to > > > > restrict to the barely necessary classes. I am using oracle JVM 7. > > > > > > > > I am not sure if this is also a bottleneck (it seems to be working > > > anyway) > > > > but I am keeping both the EntityManager, TimerService and JMS queue > > > > centralized in a @ApplicationScoped bean, so everytime a EJB needs > one > > of > > > > them, they just retrieve from this "global" bean. > > > > > > > > So the idea here is to receive criticisms and suggestions. They will > be > > > > very welcome. > > > > > > > > TIA > > > > > > > > Leo > > > > > > > > > >
