]
Remy Maucherat resolved AS7-4302.
---------------------------------
Resolution: Won't Fix
Web is the component for the Servlet container implementation. So this is an AS 7 issue
... that, to the best of my knowledge, is not going to be fixed, Mojarra has been chosen
as the JSF implementation in AS 7. We do integrate new releases which may integrate
fixes.
JSF Mojarra has serious performance issues
------------------------------------------
Key: AS7-4302
URL:
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/AS7-4302
Project: Application Server 7
Issue Type: Enhancement
Components: JSF
Affects Versions: 7.1.1.Final
Environment: JBoss 7.1.1 AS, Windows 7 64 bit
Reporter: Adrian Everett
Assignee: Remy Maucherat
Attachments: AjaxTest.xhtml, PageAjaxTest.java
Please investigate adding support for other JSF stacks, such as Myfaces, to JBoss AS7 as
an alternative to JSF Mojarra.
For large data sets, a really bad JSF performance issue regarding AJAX requests has been
identified. An issue ticket was created for this on the Mojarra issues tracker, but it
might be quite a long time before they fix it, if it ever does get fixed.
Here is the link:
http://java.net/jira/browse/JAVASERVERFACES-2334
For every large data sets, the performance of a simple f:ajax calls slows down to the
point it becomes as slow as a full page post. An f:ajax call passing 300 bytes of data
could take 3+ seconds to perform a round trip, where the same exact f:ajax call might only
take a 200ms if the page is smaller. The only difference between the big page and the
small page might be several thousand h:outputText components that have no relation with
the component associated with the f:ajax call.
This is a serious problem for a site such as the one I'm working on, where we
sometimes have to load large amounts of data in an un-paginated manner, and also perform
AJAX requests on the same page.
I took the example code attached to the Mojarra ticket and will be attaching it to this
one. I have verified that it causes the problem by running the code on JBoss AS, the
latest Glassfish server and even Tomcat. The problem isn't with JBoss, it's with
the Mojarra implementation of JSF, so support for other JSF stacks, such as MyFaces, would
greatly benefit projects with large data sets.
Finally, as seen in the Mojarra ticket, the author of the PrimeFaces component library
has also performed some tests with the attached code and found that the MyFaces JSF stack
doesn't have the problem. His comments can be seen in the reference ticket.
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