Thomas, this test is run with whatever local database Keycloak defaults to.
We're using Postgres generally, and we will have more information
pertaining to tests against Postgres soon.
Stian, thanks for the tips. I am currently running a test to ingest about
50m users into the default database with the user cache disabled, 8gb mem
(Xmx and Xms), and parallel GC threads == processor count.
Though my test is young (430k users ingested), I'm noticing memory
allocation increasing in lockstep with the number of ingested users. Is it
expected to continue in this fashion, or is Keycloak designed to level off
in its memory usage?
[image: increasing-heap.png]
On Tue, Jun 21, 2016 at 4:29 PM Stian Thorgersen <sthorger(a)redhat.com>
wrote:
Keycloak by default caches users in-memory, by default it will keep
up to
10000 entries cached. You can verify that there's no leak by disabling the
user cache provider. See
http://keycloak.github.io/docs/userguide/keycloak-server/html/server_cach...
If you're planning on having millions of users I suggest you increase the
allocated memory for the JVM (512MB which it seems you have is not
sufficient).
On 22 June 2016 at 00:29, Chris Hairfield <chairfield(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> When testing Keycloak 1.9.8 by ingesting a few million users, we find
> that Keycloak leaks memory until it is rendered unresponsive (see graph).
> Increasing JVM memory only increases the time it takes to encounter this
> issue.
>
> We have put together a test project here
> <
https://github.com/anaerobic/keycloak-leakage> and opened an issue here
> <
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/KEYCLOAK-3146> as we continue to
> investigate. As we are relying on Keycloak as a central infrastructural
> component, any help would be greatly appreciated.
>
> We'll update with more information as we find it.
>
> Thanks,
> Chris
>
> [image: mem-cpu.png]
>
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