Blogs Infinispan 7.1.0.Beta1

Infinispan 7.1.0.Beta1

Dear Infinispan community,

We’re proud to announce the first Beta release of Infinispan 7.1.0.

Infinispan brings the following major improvements:

  • Near-Cache support for Remote HotRod caches

  • Annotation-based generation of ProtoBuf serializers which removes the need to write the schema files by hand and greatly improves usability of Remote Queries

  • Cluster Listener Event Batching, which coalesces events for better performance

  • Cluster- and node-wide aggregated statistics

  • Vast improvements to the indexing performance

  • Support for domain mode and the security vault in the server

  • Further improvements to the Partition Handling with many stability fixes and the removal of the Unavailable mode: a cluster can now be either Available or Degraded.

Of course there’s also the usual slew of bug fixes, performance and memory usage improvements and documentation cleanups.

Feel free to join us and shape the future releases on our forums, our mailing lists or our #infinispan IRC channel.

For a complete list of features and bug fixes included in this release please refer to the release notes. Visit our downloads section to find the latest release.

Thanks to everyone for their involvement and contribution!

Get it, Use it, Ask us!

We’re hard at work on new features, improvements and fixes, so watch this space for more announcements!

Please, download and test the latest release.

The source code is hosted on GitHub. If you need to report a bug or request a new feature, look for a similar one on our JIRA issues tracker. If you don’t find any, create a new issue.

If you have questions, are experiencing a bug or want advice on using Infinispan, you can use GitHub discussions. We will do our best to answer you as soon as we can.

The Infinispan community uses Zulip for real-time communications. Join us using either a web-browser or a dedicated application on the Infinispan chat.

Tristan Tarrant

Tristan has been leading the Infinispan Engineering Team at Red Hat for quite a while now, as well as being Principal Architect for Red Hat Data Grid. He's been a passionate open-source advocate and contributor for over three decades.