My concern about caching the PersistenceProvider classes is that
leaks
in persistence providers versions that are already released (or not
released but will not be fixed), will be more harmful.
If the WildFly PersistenceProviderResolver implementation was the only
implementor doing this, it would be safer to start caching by default
(Hibernate + EclipseLink PersistenceProviderResolver impls do the same).
We should default to not cache the PersistenceProvider instances for
stability but allow for caching to be enabled, so that we *could* share
the same PersistenceProvider instance across deployments as Andrew is
asking for.
Question is how to determine which PersistenceProvider class instances
can be shared by multiple deployments without leaking memory. Do we
need a system property setting or something in our configuration? If we
use a boolean, it doesn't matter but if we have a list of
PersistenceProvider class names, that can't be stored in the WildFly
standalone.xml. One reason to make this a system property controlled
setting is that we could later remove it if we determine that its
hopeless (just don't ever cache) or there are no leaks (we could always
cache).
We also need more than to have no leaks in future persistence provider
releases, we also need there to be no leaks in earlier releases that can
also be used with WildFly.
If anyone wants to contribute a classloader leak detector test to the
WildFly testsuite (perhaps using the Eclipse MAT API), that would be
helpful in ensuring that we don't cause a leak and can detect them in
the future.
Thoughts?
Scott
[1]
https://eclipse.googlesource.com/eclipselink/javax.persistence/+/2.0.5.v2...
On 09/12/2014 02:19 PM, Jason Greene wrote:
>
> On Sep 12, 2014, at 1:15 PM, Scott Marlow <smarlow(a)redhat.com> wrote:
>
>> Have you looked on the JPA spec mailing lists for clarification about
>> whether the getPersistenceProviders result can be cached or not? I'll
>> take a look to see if I can find anything.
>>
>> On 09/12/2014 11:59 AM, Andrew Schmidt wrote:
>>> I've been investigating performance issues with wildfly and hibernate
validator.
>>> The changes made for this
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/AS7-1306 imply
the
>>> follow from the jpa spec:
>>>
>>> The results of calling the
PersistenceProviderResolverHolder.getPersistenceProviderResolver
>>> and the PersistenceProviderResolver.getPersistenceProviders methods must
not be cached.
>>>
>>> however, the spec says later on:
>>>
>>> Note that the PersistenceProviderResolver.getPersistenceProviders()
method
>>> can potentially be called many times. It is therefore recommended that
the
>>> implementation of this method make use of caching.
>>>
>>> My interpretation is that wildfly should be caching the providers and
it's the
>>> responsibility of the callers to not cache the results. So the issue
AS7-1306 shouldn't
>>> have been implemented.
>>
>> Good point that the JPA.next specification should pick one (allow
>> caching or not).
>
> I think the spec is consistent, but could be improved to avoid confusion. It says
that callers of PersistenceProviderResolver should not cache the result, but
PersistenceProviderResolver can internally cache itself. This makes sense because the
container should be able to decide when to change the provider, and if the caller caches
this wouldn’t take effect.
>
>
>>
>>>
>>> The performance penalty of wildfly not caching the implementation of that
method in regards to
>>> hibernate is that HibernatePersistenceProvider uses a cache for
classes/methods/fields
>>> and that cache is blown away on every call to getPersistenceProviders and
that
>>> happens on every validation of every member of every class.
>>
>> The Hibernate implementation of these classes also do the same thing:
>>
>>
https://github.com/hibernate/hibernate-jpa-api/blob/master/src/main/java/...
>>
>> The Hibernate PersistenceProviderResolverHolder does have a comment that
>> caching should be introduced, whatever that means.
>>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> wildfly-dev mailing list
>>> wildfly-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>>>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/wildfly-dev
>>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
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>>
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>
> --
> Jason T. Greene
> WildFly Lead / JBoss EAP Platform Architect
> JBoss, a division of Red Hat
>
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