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          JBOSS Performance Tuning Guid

          Rebuild JBoss

          The binary package of JBoss is built with debug on. Download the source package and rebuild JBoss with optimize set to on and debug set to off.

          Code:
          $ tar -xvpjf jboss-3.2.3-src.tar.bz2

          $ cd jboss-3.2.3-src/build

          $ cp etc/local.properties-production local.properties

          Eidt local.properties to add the following:

          # define todays' date

          build.number = 24042004

          # use the statndare javac

          build.compiler = modern

          To avoid headaches, use the Sun's javac. If you are adventurous, you can also define build.compiler=jikes, although I doubt you will get any significant performance improvement since the current version of jikes (1.20) doesn't actually support optimizing the bytecode (according to the jikes man page).

          Build everything and move the resulting distribution to another directory:

          $ sh ./build.sh

          $ su

          # mv output/jboss-3.2.3 /opt

          # exit

          $ export JBOSS_HOME=/opt/jboss-3.2.3

          Remove Unused Web Applications

          By default, JBoss includes a lot of web applications that I personally don't use. It is a good idea to remove them because every time starting JBoss will load these applications up by default, along with your own applications. I use the default configuration so I will modify the contents in that directory.

          Code:

          # cd $JBOSS_HOME/server/default/deploy

          # rm -rf jmx-console.war snmp-adaptor.sar management

          Remove JMS

          Note that if you use any message driven beans or any JMS resources in your applications, you can't remove JMS. For me, I don't use JMS so taking it out works for me.

          Code:

          # cd $JBOSS_HOME/server/default/deploy

          # rm -rf jms

          Configure the Tomcat Coyote Settings

          Since JBoss version 3.2.3, Tomcat is the default web container. By default, the Coyote connector listens on ports 8080 for HTTP requests and 8009 for AJP requests. This means if you plan to run the web listener with JBoss, you need to start the Coyote connector on 8080. If you have a frontend web listener (for example, Apache) which forwards HTTP requests to your JBoss instance, you need to have the Coyote connector listening on 8009 so that mod_jk/mod_jk2 in your Apache instance can talk to the Coyote connector on your JBoss. For most practical purposes, you need the Coyote listener to listen on either one of these ports.

          Modify jboss-service.xml to achieve this:

          # cd $JBOSS_HOME/server/default/deploy/jbossweb-tomcat41.sar/META-INF

          # vi jboss-service.xml

          Comment out the port you don't want the Coyote connector to listen to. In my case I use Apache as the frontend web listener and therefore I don't need the HTTP/1.1 connector on port 8080.

          Code:

          address="${jboss.bind.address}" port="8009"

          minProcessors="5"

          maxProcessors="75"

          enableLookups="true" redirectPort="8443"

          acceptCount="10" debug="0" connectionTimeout="20000"

          useURIValidationHack="false"

          protocolHandlerClassName="org.apache.jk.server.JkCoyoteHandler"/>

          Turn Off HTTP Access Logging

          If you run a frontend Apache web listener, it already puts the web access logs in its designated log directories. Therefore there is no need for JBoss to log the web accesses again.

          Code:

          # cd $JBOSS_HOME/server/default/deploy/jbossweb-tomcat41.sar/META-INF

          # vi jboss-service.xml

          false

          Lower Your JSP Log Verbosity

          If you use JSP's, by default the log verbosity is set to WARNING. In production systems, you can adjust the verbosity to only fatal errors so that Tomcat will not log excessive error messages.

          Code:

          # cd $JBOSS_HOME/server/default/deploy/jbossweb-tomcat41.sar

          # vi web.xml

          jsp

          org.apache.jasper.servlet.JspServlet

          logVerbosityLevel

          FATAL

          3

          Turn off Debug Information in JSP Classes

          By default the Jasper JSP compiler compiles the JSP classes in debug mode. Turn it off in production systems.

          Code:

          # cd $JBOSS_HOME/server/default/deploy/jbossweb-tomcat41.sar

          # vi web.xml

          jsp

          org.apache.jasper.servlet.JspServlet

          logVerbosityLevel

          FATAL

          classdebuginfo

          false

          3

          Turn off Development Mode in the Jasper Compiler

          By default the Jasper JSP compiler has development and reloading set to on. Turn it off in production systems.

          Code:

          # cd $JBOSS_HOME/server/default/deploy/jbossweb-tomcat41.sar

          # vi web.xml

          jsp

          org.apache.jasper.servlet.JspServlet

          logVerbosityLevel

          FATAL

          classdebuginfo

          false

          development

          false

          reloading

          false

          3

          Precompile JSP's

          You can also precompile JSP's so that when your applications start, all the JSP classes are available and JBoss won't invoke the Jasper compiler to automatically compile the JSP's. Depending on how complex your applications are, this is generally a good practice although the packaging of your war files will need more work. There are a number of steps involved to have all the JSP's precompiled:

          1. Invoke the Jasper JSP compiler to generate *.java for all the JSP's
          2. Compile the *.java files (with optimize=on and debug=off)
          3. Add the JSP servlets in web.xml
          4. Package the resulting JSP classes with other classes in *.war archives

          To accomplish these steps, I use ant. The jspc ant task will generate a portion (or fragment) of web.xml that needs to be added to the /WEB-INF/web.xml in the war archive. The trick to use is to have a comment in the /WEB-INF/web.xml and use the replace ant task to replace that comment with the web.xml fragment generated by jspc. Here is the excerpt of build.xml to precompile JSP's.

          Code:

          destdir="${gen-src}/jsp-temp"

          classpathref="project.class.path"

          webinc="${gen-src}/web.war/WEB-INF/web-fragment.xml">

          debug="off" optimize="on"

          classpathref="project.class.path">

          srcfile="${gen-src}/web.war/WEB-INF/web-fragment.xml"/>

          value="${jspc.web.fragment}"/>

          destfile="${build}/myapp.war"

          excludes="**/*.java"/>

          Increase the JDBC Prepared Statements Cache

          In your datasource configuration, you can increase the number of prepared statements per JDBC connection in the cache. To do that, add the following element in your ?-ds.xml in $JBOSS_HOME/server/conf/deploy.

          Code:

          # vi $JBOSS_HOME/server/default/deploy/postgres-ds.xml

          PostgresDS

          jdbc:postgresql://localhost:5432/myapp

          org.postgresql.Driver

          firedragon

          welcome1

          50

          Increase the Maximum Size of the Memory Allocation Pool

          If you use the Sun JVM, the default memory allocation pool size is 64Mb. Usually this is not enough for reasonably-sized enterprise web applications. To keep those dreaded OutOfMemoryError exceptions out, start the JVM with a higher value than 64Mb. The limit for the Sun JVM on the x86 platform is 2000Mb. In JBoss, you can modify $JBOSS_HOME/bin/run.conf.

          Code:

          # vi $JBOSS_HOME/bin/run.conf

          JAVA_OPTS="-Xmx1024m"

          Adjust the CMP Entity Beans Commit Options

          I use both CMP and BMP entity beans. In JBoss, there are 4 commit options available for CMP entity beans:

          1. Commit-option A, this bean is cached and is available between transactions. Normally this assumes that any database access is done through the container.
          2. Commit-option B, this is JBoss' default and is also known as pessimistic locking. The bean is locked in a transaction until the transaction commits or rolls back. This is true for read-only transactions as well.
          3. Commit-option C, the bean passivates at the end of a transaction and is locked during a transaction.
          4. Commit-option D, a background thread periodically executes ejbLoad() on beans in the cache and this option is the same as commit-option A otherwise.

          In my case, database access is done through the container only. Therefore I am going to choose commit-option A. This can be done either by modifying $JBOSS_HOME/server/conf/conf/standardjboss.xml or jboss.xml in your ejb jar. The difference is by changing standardjboss.xml, the configuration will apply to all CMP entity beans whereas in jboss.xml, you can apply this new configuration on a per entity bean basis.

          Code:

          # vi $JBOSS_HOME/server/default/conf/standardjboss.xml

          ...

          A

          Declare Read-Only in EJB's

          JBoss will not enroll EJB's in transactions if they are declared as read-only. If there are read-only EJB's in your applications, it is a good idea to declare them in jboss.xml as read-only. Read-only methods can be declared as well.

          Code:

          $ vi jboss.xml

          ...

          CargoEJB

          true

          ...

          Specify the Read Ahead Strategy

          If you have lots of complex M:N relationships between different beans, sometimes it may be beneficial to do some prefetching of the bean fields. If you have finder methods defined for your CMP entity beans, try using on-find as your read-ahead strategy. Experiment this option with your applications.

          Code:

          $ vi jbosscmp-jdbc.xml

          on-find

          255

          *

          Choose a Decent JVM

          I have found that the BEA JRockit performs the best out of other major JVM's on the Linux platform when using it in combination with JBoss. You should also experiment with different JVM's in your environment and see which one performs the best.

          Final Thoughts

          I wish there is more decent documentation on JBoss in the market and I am willing to pay for it. On occassions, it is fun to poke around the JBoss source code. However under tight development schedules, being able to pick up the documentation and read about the facts, tricks and solutions on JBoss is a life saver. I hope this will change in the future when JBoss decides to allocate some of its new US$10M venture capital funding for documentation.

          References

          1. Bill Burke's weblog
          2. JBoss Optimizations 101
          3. JBoss Administration and Development, 2nd Edition, Scott Stark et al

          posted on 2008-11-17 02:38 picture talk 閱讀(329) 評論(0)  編輯  收藏


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