Very nice!
On Thu, Sep 25, 2008 at 3:26 PM, Jay Balunas <tech4j(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Good news and excellent turn around from Ryan on the UIComponent
issue in
the JSF RI.
Ryan was able to provide a set of test jars with his fix and I reran the
tests. I found ZERO UIComponent related blocking threads!!
I ran it through my performance benchmarks that I described in my original
email with the following results:
For the 25 user tests I saw a 12-17% improvement in both average and mean
response time.
Sample:
25 user avg before : 3088ms
25 user avg after : 2545ms
For the 50 user tests I saw a 4.5 - 5.3% improvement in both average and
mean response time.
Sample:
50 user avg before : 10283ms
50 user avg after : 9815ms
While these are not scientifically exhaustive statistics it does show a
valid increase in performance from the change.
Ryan created a bug to cover his change
https://javaserverfaces.dev.java.net/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=806 and plans on
including in the next release of JSF RI 1.2_10
Regards,
Jay
On Thu, Sep 25, 2008 at 12:21 PM, Pete Muir <pmuir(a)redhat.com> wrote:
>
> Thanks Ryan :-)
>
> On 25 Sep 2008, at 16:27, Ryan Lubke wrote:
>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Jim and I will look into it.
>>
>> Pete Muir wrote:
>>>
>>> Ryan, Ed,
>>>
>>> Jay has been working on performance analysis for Seam.
>>>
>>>> UIComponent$AttributesMap
>>>> -----------------------------------------------------
>>>> - Issues related to this were responsible for about 20% of the blocked
>>>> threads
>>>> - Reported time spent blocked ranged from 30 ms - 848 ms with an
>>>> average estimated to be 400ms
>>>> - I need to rerun the tests to be more specific.
>>>> - One of the items that was strange with this block was that it
>>>> sometimes included completely unrelated actions or classes.
>>>> - after adjusting the filters, and rerunning the tests several times I
>>>> was able to narrow it down.
>>>>
>>>> * Investigation:
>>>> Unfortunately this issue is in the RI JSF implementation itself. The
>>>> UIComponentBase implements its own Map (AttributeMap) ( see
>>>>
http://fisheye5.cenqua.com/browse/javaserverfaces-sources/jsf-api/src/jav...
<
http://fisheye5cenqua.com/browse/javaserverfaces-sources/jsf-api/src/java...>).
>>>> This is not an issue directly, but you will see calls to the
>>>> "getAttributesThatAreSet" method in the get, put, and remove
methods of the
>>>> map. This is implemented in the UIComponent class ( see:
>>>>
http://fisheye5.cenqua.com/browse/javaserverfaces-sources/jsf-api/src/jav...).
>>>> The real issue is the call to "this.getClass().getPackage();".
This call
>>>> will eventually synchronize in the "ClassLoader.getPackage"
method on the
>>>> "packages" object for the whole classloader. This is why other
threads were
>>>> also blocked on this - like
>>>> org.jboss.seam.contexts.Contexts.isApplicationContextActive() which is
>>>> accessing a ThreadLocal object.
>>>>
>>>> We really have 3 options for this issue. - We can work with the RI to
>>>> get the handling of the package check changed so that the values are
some
>>>> how cached in the component - how often do packages change while running
;-)
>>>> - We can take a look and try to find excessive use of the components
>>>> interactions with the AttributeMap.
>>>> - We do nothing - but keep an eye on JSF 2 to make sure items like this
>>>> are handled better.
>>>
>>> Naively, I would assume it should be possible to cache the value of
>>> this.getClass().getPackage().
>>>
>>> HTH,
>>>
>>> Pete
>>>
>>> Begin forwarded message:
>>>
>>>> *From: *"Jay Balunas" <tech4j(a)gmail.com
<mailto:tech4j@gmail.com>>
>>>> *Date: *24 September 2008 22:05:51 BST
>>>> *To: *"seam-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
<mailto:seam-dev@lists.jboss.org>"
>>>> <seam-dev(a)lists.jboss.org <mailto:seam-dev@lists.jboss.org>>
>>>> *Subject: **[seam-dev] Some profiling of blocking threads*
>>>>
>>>> I have been executing the 25 user performance tests through the
>>>> profiler to identify hot spots and areas of concern. I am initially
looking
>>>> at our blocking threads, and behavior around them that is causing the
>>>> problems.
>>>>
>>>> Test Description
>>>> --------------------
>>>> - Use the 25 user wiki forum front page jmeter tests discussed in the
>>>> previous email.
>>>> - Uses same environment and procedures as defined in the previous
>>>> email.
>>>> - Tests are executed through the profiler with CPU recording turned on.
>>>> - I have modified the default filters to allow the following packages
>>>> - org.jboss.seam
>>>> - javax.faces
>>>> - most of the java.util collections and map classes
>>>>
>>>> Profile Results
>>>> -------------------
>>>> This is not a complete analysis of the entire application or even all
>>>> of the blocking threads - I will continue to work on them and feed more
>>>> information back to list.
>>>>
>>>> These items were detected via the thread usage history page, that shows
>>>> all blocked and waiting threads and their stack traces.
>>>>
>>>> javax.naming.InitialContext.lookup
>>>> -----------------------------------
>>>> - as expected a large number of blocked threads were waiting or
>>>> blocked while attempting to lookup the initial context.
>>>> - One interesting thing is that not all of these were blocked on a
>>>> Hashtable - others were blocked on, or were related to calls to
Properties
>>>> and WeakHashMap objects. This is likely caused by further method
>>>> invocations that have been filtered out.
>>>> - I will look further, but wanted to look at some of the other areas
>>>> that were blocked.
>>>>
>>>> UIComponent$AttributesMap
>>>> -----------------------------------------------------
>>>> - Issues related to this were responsible for about 20% of the blocked
>>>> threads
>>>> - Reported time spent blocked ranged from 30 ms - 848 ms with an
>>>> average estimated to be 400ms
>>>> - I need to rerun the tests to be more specific.
>>>> - One of the items that was strange with this block was that it
>>>> sometimes included completely unrelated actions or classes.
>>>> - after adjusting the filters, and rerunning the tests several times I
>>>> was able to narrow it down.
>>>>
>>>> * Investigation:
>>>> Unfortunately this issue is in the RI JSF implementation itself. The
>>>> UIComponentBase implements its own Map (AttributeMap) ( see
>>>>
http://fisheye5.cenqua.com/browse/javaserverfaces-sources/jsf-api/src/jav...
<
http://fisheye5cenqua.com/browse/javaserverfaces-sources/jsf-api/src/java...>).
>>>> This is not an issue directly, but you will see calls to the
>>>> "getAttributesThatAreSet" method in the get, put, and remove
methods of the
>>>> map. This is implemented in the UIComponent class ( see:
>>>>
http://fisheye5.cenqua.com/browse/javaserverfaces-sources/jsf-api/src/jav...).
>>>> The real issue is the call to "this.getClass().getPackage();".
This call
>>>> will eventually synchronize in the "ClassLoader.getPackage"
method on the
>>>> "packages" object for the whole classloader. This is why other
threads were
>>>> also blocked on this - like
>>>> org.jboss.seam.contexts.Contexts.isApplicationContextActive() which is
>>>> accessing a ThreadLocal object.
>>>>
>>>> We really have 3 options for this issue. - We can work with the RI to
>>>> get the handling of the package check changed so that the values are
some
>>>> how cached in the component - how often do packages change while running
;-)
>>>> - We can take a look and try to find excessive use of the components
>>>> interactions with the AttributeMap.
>>>> - We do nothing - but keep an eye on JSF 2 to make sure items like this
>>>> are handled better.
>>>>
>>>> org.ajax4jsf.application.AjaxViewHandler
>>>> --------------------------------------------
>>>> - This was not a large % of the blocked threads but caught my eye as a
>>>> potential trouble spot because it seemed directly related to ajax calls.
>>>> - This was easier to track down and the root cause is in the
>>>> org.ajax4jsf.application.ViewHandlerWrapper class.
>>>> - see
>>>>
http://anonsvn.jboss.org/repos/richfaces/trunk/framework/api/src/main/jav...
>>>> - The problem is all the calls to "fillChain" which is a
synchronized
>>>> method in the class.
>>>> - We need to find out how often the "_initialized" field is
false - is
>>>> this once a request, once for each component, etc...
>>>> - it appears to be called many times - I will look further into this.
>>>>
>>>> -------------------------------------
>>>> This is all I have had time for so far, but will continue to
>>>> investigate some of the other aspects of the application. After
completing
>>>> the analysis of the primary blocking thread issues I will move on to
other
>>>> areas to profile. These will focus on specific issues raised by the
team
>>>> and the forums. I will also add performance tests and analysis for the
dvd
>>>> store example.
>>>>
>>>> Regards,
>>>> Jay
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> blog:
http://in.relation.to/Bloggers/Jay
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> seam-dev mailing list
>>>> seam-dev(a)lists.jboss.org <mailto:seam-dev@lists.jboss.org>
>>>>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/seam-dev
>>>
>>
>
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>
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