I am working on a Seam project that was originally written by another developer. The
project uses a Configuration class which essentially contains static data available to any
caller, in any scope.
Originally this class was written as a Singleton and accessed by a static call. After
understanding the Seam framework I decided that it would be better implemented as an
APPLICATION scoped bean.
After modifying, however, I found that performance dropped considerably! So I ran through
a profiler, I found that the repetitive and numerous calls to the
org.jboss.seam.intercept.JavaBeanInterceptor were causing it.
The Configuration class I wrote contains essentially static data, so after reading the
Seam documentation, I tried using the @ReadOnly annotation. This had no effect.
QUESTION: Is there a way to stop Seam being called on each method call? It seems that if
there isn't, this is a major performance trap that is very easy to fall into. What is
a recommended approach?
I would welcome some helpful advice on this, especially from Gavin...
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