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# Persistence
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In this chapter we will describe how persistence works with Apache ActiveMQ Artemis and
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how to configure it.
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Apache ActiveMQ Artemis ships with a high performance journal. Since Apache ActiveMQ Artemis handles
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its own persistence, rather than relying on a database or other 3rd
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party persistence engine it is very highly optimised for the specific
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messaging use cases.
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An Apache ActiveMQ Artemis journal is an *append only* journal. It consists of a set of
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files on disk. Each file is pre-created to a fixed size and initially
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filled with padding. As operations are performed on the server, e.g. add
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message, update message, delete message, records are appended to the
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journal. When one journal file is full we move to the next one.
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Because records are only appended, i.e. added to the end of the journal
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we minimise disk head movement, i.e. we minimise random access
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operations which is typically the slowest operation on a disk.
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Making the file size configurable means that an optimal size can be
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chosen, i.e. making each file fit on a disk cylinder. Modern disk
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topologies are complex and we are not in control over which cylinder(s)
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the file is mapped onto so this is not an exact science. But by
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minimising the number of disk cylinders the file is using, we can
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minimise the amount of disk head movement, since an entire disk cylinder
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is accessible simply by the disk rotating - the head does not have to
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move.
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As delete records are added to the journal, Apache ActiveMQ Artemis has a sophisticated
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file garbage collection algorithm which can determine if a particular
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journal file is needed any more - i.e. has all its data been deleted in
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the same or other files. If so, the file can be reclaimed and re-used.
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Apache ActiveMQ Artemis also has a compaction algorithm which removes dead space from
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the journal and compresses up the data so it takes up less files on
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disk.
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The journal also fully supports transactional operation if required,
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supporting both local and XA transactions.
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The majority of the journal is written in Java, however we abstract out
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the interaction with the actual file system to allow different pluggable
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implementations. Apache ActiveMQ Artemis ships with two implementations:
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- Java [NIO](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_I/O).
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The first implementation uses standard Java NIO to interface with
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the file system. This provides extremely good performance and runs
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on any platform where there's a Java 6+ runtime.
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- Linux Asynchronous IO
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The second implementation uses a thin native code wrapper to talk to
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the Linux asynchronous IO library (AIO). With AIO, Apache ActiveMQ Artemis will be
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called back when the data has made it to disk, allowing us to avoid
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explicit syncs altogether and simply send back confirmation of
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completion when AIO informs us that the data has been persisted.
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Using AIO will typically provide even better performance than using
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Java NIO.
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The AIO journal is only available when running Linux kernel 2.6 or
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later and after having installed libaio (if it's not already
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installed). For instructions on how to install libaio please see Installing AIO section.
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Also, please note that AIO will only work with the following file
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systems: ext2, ext3, ext4, jfs, xfs. With other file systems, e.g.
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NFS it may appear to work, but it will fall back to a slower
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synchronous behaviour. Don't put the journal on a NFS share!
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For more information on libaio please see [lib AIO](libaio.md).
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libaio is part of the kernel project.
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The standard Apache ActiveMQ Artemis core server uses two instances of the journal:
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- Bindings journal.
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This journal is used to store bindings related data. That includes
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the set of queues that are deployed on the server and their
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attributes. It also stores data such as id sequence counters.
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The bindings journal is always a NIO journal as it is typically low
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throughput compared to the message journal.
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The files on this journal are prefixed as `activemq-bindings`. Each
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file has a `bindings` extension. File size is `1048576`, and it is
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located at the bindings folder.
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- JMS journal.
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This journal instance stores all JMS related data, This is basically
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any JMS Queues, Topics and Connection Factories and any JNDI
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bindings for these resources.
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Any JMS Resources created via the management API will be persisted
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to this journal. Any resources configured via configuration files
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will not. The JMS Journal will only be created if JMS is being used.
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The files on this journal are prefixed as `activemq-jms`. Each file
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has a `jms` extension. File size is `1048576`, and it is located at
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the bindings folder.
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- Message journal.
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This journal instance stores all message related data, including the
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message themselves and also duplicate-id caches.
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By default Apache ActiveMQ Artemis will try and use an AIO journal. If AIO is not
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available, e.g. the platform is not Linux with the correct kernel
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version or AIO has not been installed then it will automatically
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fall back to using Java NIO which is available on any Java platform.
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The files on this journal are prefixed as `activemq-data`. Each file
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has a `amq` extension. File size is by the default `10485760`
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(configurable), and it is located at the journal folder.
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For large messages, Apache ActiveMQ Artemis persists them outside the message journal.
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This is discussed in [Large Messages](large-messages.md).
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Apache ActiveMQ Artemis can also be configured to page messages to disk in low memory
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situations. This is discussed in [Paging](paging.md).
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If no persistence is required at all, Apache ActiveMQ Artemis can also be configured
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not to persist any data at all to storage as discussed in the Configuring
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the broker for Zero Persistence section.
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## Configuring the bindings journal
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The bindings journal is configured using the following attributes in
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`broker.xml`
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- `bindings-directory`
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This is the directory in which the bindings journal lives. The
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default value is `data/bindings`.
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- `create-bindings-dir`
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If this is set to `true` then the bindings directory will be
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automatically created at the location specified in
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`bindings-directory` if it does not already exist. The default value
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is `true`
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## Configuring the jms journal
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The jms config shares its configuration with the bindings journal.
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## Configuring the message journal
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The message journal is configured using the following attributes in
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`broker.xml`
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- `journal-directory`
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This is the directory in which the message journal lives. The
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default value is `data/journal`.
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For the best performance, we recommend the journal is located on its
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own physical volume in order to minimise disk head movement. If the
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journal is on a volume which is shared with other processes which
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might be writing other files (e.g. bindings journal, database, or
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transaction coordinator) then the disk head may well be moving
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rapidly between these files as it writes them, thus drastically
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reducing performance.
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When the message journal is stored on a SAN we recommend each
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journal instance that is stored on the SAN is given its own LUN
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(logical unit).
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- `create-journal-dir`
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If this is set to `true` then the journal directory will be
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automatically created at the location specified in
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`journal-directory` if it does not already exist. The default value
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is `true`
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- `journal-type`
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Valid values are `NIO` or `ASYNCIO`.
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Choosing `NIO` chooses the Java NIO journal. Choosing `AIO` chooses
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the Linux asynchronous IO journal. If you choose `AIO` but are not
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running Linux or you do not have libaio installed then Apache ActiveMQ Artemis will
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detect this and automatically fall back to using `NIO`.
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- `journal-sync-transactional`
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If this is set to true then Apache ActiveMQ Artemis will make sure all transaction
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data is flushed to disk on transaction boundaries (commit, prepare
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and rollback). The default value is `true`.
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- `journal-sync-non-transactional`
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If this is set to true then Apache ActiveMQ Artemis will make sure non
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transactional message data (sends and acknowledgements) are flushed
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to disk each time. The default value for this is `true`.
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- `journal-file-size`
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The size of each journal file in bytes. The default value for this
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is `10485760` bytes (10MiB).
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- `journal-min-files`
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The minimum number of files the journal will maintain. When Apache ActiveMQ Artemis
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starts and there is no initial message data, Apache ActiveMQ Artemis will
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pre-create `journal-min-files` number of files.
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Creating journal files and filling them with padding is a fairly
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expensive operation and we want to minimise doing this at run-time
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as files get filled. By pre-creating files, as one is filled the
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journal can immediately resume with the next one without pausing to
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create it.
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Depending on how much data you expect your queues to contain at
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steady state you should tune this number of files to match that
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total amount of data.
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- `journal-max-io`
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Write requests are queued up before being submitted to the system
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for execution. This parameter controls the maximum number of write
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requests that can be in the IO queue at any one time. If the queue
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becomes full then writes will block until space is freed up.
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When using NIO, this value should always be equal to `1`
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When using AIO, the default should be `500`.
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The system maintains different defaults for this parameter depending
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on whether it's NIO or AIO (default for NIO is 1, default for AIO is
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500)
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There is a limit and the total max AIO can't be higher than what is
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configured at the OS level (/proc/sys/fs/aio-max-nr) usually at
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65536.
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- `journal-buffer-timeout`
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Instead of flushing on every write that requires a flush, we
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maintain an internal buffer, and flush the entire buffer either when
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it is full, or when a timeout expires, whichever is sooner. This is
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used for both NIO and AIO and allows the system to scale better with
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many concurrent writes that require flushing.
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This parameter controls the timeout at which the buffer will be
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flushed if it hasn't filled already. AIO can typically cope with a
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higher flush rate than NIO, so the system maintains different
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defaults for both NIO and AIO (default for NIO is 3333333
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nanoseconds - 300 times per second, default for AIO is 500000
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nanoseconds - ie. 2000 times per second).
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> **Note**
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>
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> By increasing the timeout, you may be able to increase system
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> throughput at the expense of latency, the default parameters are
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> chosen to give a reasonable balance between throughput and
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> latency.
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- `journal-buffer-size`
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The size of the timed buffer on AIO. The default value is `490KiB`.
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- `journal-compact-min-files`
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The minimal number of files before we can consider compacting the
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journal. The compacting algorithm won't start until you have at
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least `journal-compact-min-files`
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Setting this to 0 will disable the feature to compact completely.
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This could be dangerous though as the journal could grow indefinitely.
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Use it wisely!
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The default for this parameter is `10`
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- `journal-compact-percentage`
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The threshold to start compacting. When less than this percentage is
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considered live data, we start compacting. Note also that compacting
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won't kick in until you have at least `journal-compact-min-files`
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data files on the journal
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The default for this parameter is `30`
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## An important note on disabling disk write cache.
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> **Warning**
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>
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> Most disks contain hardware write caches. A write cache can increase
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> the apparent performance of the disk because writes just go into the
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> cache and are then lazily written to the disk later.
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>
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> This happens irrespective of whether you have executed a fsync() from
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> the operating system or correctly synced data from inside a Java
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> program!
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>
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> By default many systems ship with disk write cache enabled. This means
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> that even after syncing from the operating system there is no
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> guarantee the data has actually made it to disk, so if a failure
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> occurs, critical data can be lost.
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>
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> Some more expensive disks have non volatile or battery backed write
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> caches which won't necessarily lose data on event of failure, but you
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> need to test them!
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>
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> If your disk does not have an expensive non volatile or battery backed
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> cache and it's not part of some kind of redundant array (e.g. RAID),
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> and you value your data integrity you need to make sure disk write
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> cache is disabled.
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>
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> Be aware that disabling disk write cache can give you a nasty shock
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> performance wise. If you've been used to using disks with write cache
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> enabled in their default setting, unaware that your data integrity
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> could be compromised, then disabling it will give you an idea of how
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> fast your disk can perform when acting really reliably.
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>
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> On Linux you can inspect and/or change your disk's write cache
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> settings using the tools `hdparm` (for IDE disks) or `sdparm` or
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> `sginfo` (for SDSI/SATA disks)
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>
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> On Windows you can check / change the setting by right clicking on the
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> disk and clicking properties.
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## Installing AIO
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The Java NIO journal gives great performance, but If you are running
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2015-04-27 17:32:30 -04:00
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Apache ActiveMQ Artemis using Linux Kernel 2.6 or later, we highly recommend you use
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2014-12-04 10:25:29 -05:00
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the `AIO` journal for the very best persistence performance.
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It's not possible to use the AIO journal under other operating systems
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or earlier versions of the Linux kernel.
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If you are running Linux kernel 2.6 or later and don't already have
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`libaio` installed, you can easily install it using the following steps:
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Using yum, (e.g. on Fedora or Red Hat Enterprise Linux):
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yum install libaio
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Using aptitude, (e.g. on Ubuntu or Debian system):
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apt-get install libaio
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2015-04-27 17:32:30 -04:00
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## Configuring Apache ActiveMQ Artemis for Zero Persistence
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In some situations, zero persistence is sometimes required for a
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messaging system. Configuring Apache ActiveMQ Artemis to perform zero persistence is
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straightforward. Simply set the parameter `persistence-enabled` in
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`broker.xml` to `false`.
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Please note that if you set this parameter to false, then *zero*
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persistence will occur. That means no bindings data, message data, large
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message data, duplicate id caches or paging data will be persisted.
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