On 10 Jun 2015, at 04:08, William Burns <mudokonman(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 2:12 AM Galder Zamarreño <galder(a)redhat.com> wrote:
> On 8 Jun 2015, at 10:57, Radim Vansa <rvansa(a)redhat.com> wrote:
>
> On 06/08/2015 10:41 AM, Dan Berindei wrote:
>> On Mon, Jun 8, 2015 at 10:37 AM, Galder Zamarreño <galder(a)redhat.com>
wrote:
>>>> On 5 Jun 2015, at 14:15, Radim Vansa <rvansa(a)redhat.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Is the marshalling comparison really fair? The lambda-table-based
>>>> approach removes the need for serializing the class definition, but in
>>>> practice - is the class definition always send around with each RPC?
>>> ^ We've extensively added Infinispan Externalizers (which use the Object
Table approach shown in MarshallingTests) to reduce the size of our payloads, and indeed
for all those, no class definitions are sent around. So, as long as the types of those are
known to us, we can use such approach and avoid expensive serialization.
>>>
>>> NOTE: JBoss Marshalling's Externalizers are more expensive than
ObjectTable based approach but I can't remember why, it might be cos when you use
those, it might send the externalizer class' class definition around, but not sure.
Yeah I believe that is correct. If we used the Infinispan Externalizers in conjunction
with the ObjectTable it should only pass around an Integer instead I thought, so it should
be much more favorable.
>>
>> I think the Simple/DynamicClassTable classes in WildFly take care of
>> writing only a class id in the stream, instead of the class name, same
>> as our ExternalizerTable but using JBoss Marshalling's Externalizers.
>> I don't know if there's any performance difference between the two
>> approaches, but I assume they must be pretty similar.
>>
>>>> If
>>>> it is so, it seems like a serious flaw of the current codebase, and not
>>>> something occurring only for the functional interface. In case that we
>>>> keep the marshallers around, we should marshall second RPC (with the
>>>> same lambda and another instance of the same captured class), and look
>>>> on the diff rather than on the first serialized instance.
>>> ^ Hmmm, not sure what you mean there exactly.
>
>
> I meant that in case that the class definition is not sent with each RPC
> but only once/few times, we should not pay attention to the cost of
> sending the definition. As the test marshalls single RPC, the definition
> is always marshalled and accounted.
^ There are multiple tests in MarshallingTests, some of which marshall the definition and
others not, and I printed payload sizes:
-> testObjectTableCapturingLambda payload is 43 bytes
testSerializableApplyLambda payload is 587 bytes
testExternalizerNonCapturingLambda payload is 160 bytes
testExternalizerCapturingLambda payload is 192 bytes
testNonCapturingLambdaAndSerializable payload is 501 bytes
testSerializableNonCapturingLambda payload is 597 byt
-> testObjectTableNonCapturingLambda payload is 3 bytes
We're not going to go with any of the approaches that are over 100 bytes.
I thought you could only have 1 ObjectTable defined per Marshalling Configuration? Also
it seems we would need to introduce a new facility for users to register their own lambdas
then, since they wouldn't be able to use our Externalizers?
Yeah, there can only be 1 ObjectTable. I haven't looked at in great detail the
integration part, but the examples show you can produce JBoss Marshalling Externalizers
for lambdas, so I don't see why we would not able to provide Infinispan Externalizers
for those and integrate into the current architecture.
The only requirement would be that we'd need a fully defined class for the lambda (as
done in the example) we want to register, as oppose to be able to support on the fly
defined lambdas.
The most efficient one, as you'd expect, is the Object Table approach with a
Non-Capturing lambda where the size of the payload is 3 bytes. Clearly here no definition
is marshalled at all. Second one is the one where the lambda captures an external element
and hence that needs to be shipped every time.
> So, if I understand that correctly, for user classes that do not
> register externalizers (I guess the registration is not automatic), the
> definition is sent around with each RPC, right?
In that case yeah, to get that to work, you'd have to extend Serializable and then
you pay the penalty.
This is the whole point why we came up with Externalizers and the framework around it. If
you want get running as quickly as possible, make whatever you want to ship around extend
Serializable but for ultimate performance, pre-registration of externalizers is the way to
go, and the same approach works just as well with function/predicates...etc.
Cheers,
>
> Radim
>
>>>
>>>> Radim
>>>>
>>>> On 06/05/2015 11:44 AM, Galder Zamarreño wrote:
>>>>> Hi all,
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks to all who contributed to the 1st draft revision. We've
taken all that input and created a separate Github project where we have prototytped the
2nd draft of the advanced Java 8 based Infinispan API. The starting point for you should
be FunctionalMap [1].
>>>>>
>>>>> Here's a brief summary the major changes since the 1st draft:
>>>>>
>>>>> 1. FunctionalMap has been separated into 3 sub-interfaces, one for
read only operations, one for write only operations, and a final one for read-write
operations. This separation makes it clear the purpouse of each operation and adds a nice
layer of type safety, e.g. you can't write with a read-only map, or you can't read
with a write-only map.
>>>>>
>>>>> 2. Param has been added, which is equivalent to Infinispan Flag with
the added benefit that it can carry values. There's no such example right now but we
could have in the future.
>>>>>
>>>>> 3. MetaParam has been added. This is a much more flexible and
extensible option compared to the current Infinispan's Metadata.
>>>>>
>>>>> 4. For operations returning mutiple returns, or working on multiple
elements, we've exposed something called Traversable, which is a subset of Java's
Stream. See its javadoc to find out more. Kudos to Will for his work on distributed
streams which has helped hugely with the design of Traversable.
>>>>>
>>>>> 5. Listeners have been added, again separating between read-write
and write-only listeners (JCache does not offer read-only listeners, e.g. cache entry
visited, and hence I think we'll drop our cache entry visited listener at some
point).
>>>>>
>>>>> 6. Will and I have explored marshalling aspects of lambdas, and
there are some interesting ways to reduce their costs by +90%! See MarshallingTest for
different options to marshall both capturing and non-capturing lambdas and their cost in
terms of payload sizes.
>>>>>
>>>>> Some final notes:
>>>>>
>>>>> * Please do read the javadocs, they contain a lot of information on
the reasons behind the design.
>>>>>
>>>>> * To find out how the different functional map variants are used,
look at ConcurrentMapDecorator and JCacheDecorator who use them to implement the
ConcurrentMap and javax.cache.Cache APIs respectively.
>>>>>
>>>>> * FunctionalMapTest contains examples on how to use functional map
variants for other operations which we deeply care about, e.g. Hot Rod atomic
version-based replace function.
>>>>>
>>>>> Special thanks to Mario Fusco (Java 8 In Action book co-author) for
his feedback throughout this 2nd draft design process.
>>>>>
>>>>> Cheers,
>>>>>
>>>>> [1]
https://github.com/infinispan/proto8/blob/master/src/main/java/org/infini...
>>>>> --
>>>>> Galder Zamarreño
>>>>> galder(a)redhat.com
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> infinispan-dev mailing list
>>>>> infinispan-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>>>>>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/infinispan-dev
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Radim Vansa <rvansa(a)redhat.com>
>>>> JBoss Performance Team
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
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>>>>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/infinispan-dev
>>>
>>> --
>>> Galder Zamarreño
>>> galder(a)redhat.com
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
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>>>
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>
>
> --
> Radim Vansa <rvansa(a)redhat.com>
> JBoss Performance Team
>
> _______________________________________________
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>
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