Book Image

Supercharge Your Applications with GraalVM

By : A B Vijay Kumar
Book Image

Supercharge Your Applications with GraalVM

By: A B Vijay Kumar

Overview of this book

GraalVM is a universal virtual machine that allows programmers to compile and run applications written in both JVM and non-JVM languages. It improves the performance and efficiency of applications, making it an ideal companion for cloud-native or microservices-based applications. This book is a hands-on guide, with step-by-step instructions on how to work with GraalVM. Starting with a quick introduction to the GraalVM architecture and how things work under the hood, you'll discover the performance benefits of running your Java applications on GraalVM. You'll then learn how to create native images and understand how AOT (ahead-of-time) can improve application performance significantly. The book covers examples of building polyglot applications that will help you explore the interoperability between languages running on the same VM. You'll also see how you can use the Truffle framework to implement any language of your choice to run optimally on GraalVM. By the end of this book, you'll not only have learned how GraalVM is beneficial in cloud-native and microservices development but also how to leverage its capabilities to create high-performing polyglot applications.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
1
Section 1: The Evolution of JVM
4
Section 2: Getting Up and Running with GraalVM – Architecture and Implementation
8
Section 3: Polyglot with Graal
13
Section 4: Microservices with Graal

Reviewing modern architectural requirements

Before we dig deeper into the GraalVM architecture, let's first understand the shortcomings of JVM and why we need a new architecture and approach. The older versions of JVM were optimized for traditional architectures, which were built for long-running applications that run in a data center, providing high throughput and stability (for example, monolith web application servers and large client-side applications). Some microservices are long-running, and Graal JIT will also provide the optimum solution. As we move to cloud-native, the whole architecture paradigm has shifted to componentized, modularized, distributed, and asynchronous architecture tuned to run efficiently with high scalability and availability requirements.

Let's break this down into more specific requirements for the modern cloud-native architectures.

Smaller footprint

The applications are composed of granular modular components (microservices) for high...