Book Image

Java 9 High Performance

By : Mayur Ramgir, Nick Samoylov
Book Image

Java 9 High Performance

By: Mayur Ramgir, Nick Samoylov

Overview of this book

Finally, a book that focuses on the practicalities rather than theory of Java application performance tuning. This book will be your one-stop guide to optimize the performance of your Java applications. We will begin by understanding the new features and APIs of Java 9. You will then be taught the practicalities of Java application performance tuning, how to make the best use of garbage collector, and find out how to optimize code with microbenchmarking. Moving ahead, you will be introduced to multithreading and learning about concurrent programming with Java 9 to build highly concurrent and efficient applications. You will learn how to fine tune your Java code for best results. You will discover techniques on how to benchmark performance and reduce various bottlenecks in your applications. We'll also cover best practices of Java programming that will help you improve the quality of your codebase. By the end of the book, you will be armed with the knowledge to build and deploy efficient, scalable, and concurrent applications in Java.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)

Sizing thread pool executors

In our examples, we have used a cached thread pool that creates a new thread as needed or, if available, reuses the thread already used, but which completed its job and returned to the pool for a new assignment. We did not worry about too many threads created because our demo application had two worker threads at the most and they were quite short lived.

But in the case where an application does not have a fixed limit of the worker threads it might need or there is no good way to predict how much memory a thread may take or how long it can execute, setting a ceiling on the worker thread count prevents an unexpected degradation of the application performance, running out of memory or depletion of any other resources the worker threads use. If the thread behavior is extremely unpredictable, a single thread pool might be the only solution, with an option...