Monday, 20 May 2013
Storing arrays in Infinispan 5.3 without wrapper objects!
As we head towards the latter part of Infinispan 5.3 series, we’re doing a series of blog posts where we provide more detailed information of some of the key features in this release.
As part of Infinispan 5.3.0.Beta1, we added the ability to store data directly in Infinispan which previously would have required using a custom wrapper object, e.g. arrays. The way Infinispan supports storing these type of objects is by allowing a custom Equivalence function to be configured for keys and/or values.
This is a less cumbersome method that enables object requiring custom equals/hashCode implementations to be stored without incurring on a extra cost per cache entry. We’ve already been using this internally to store Hot Rod, REST and Memcached data where keys and/or values can be byte arrays, and we’ve seen some nice improvements in terms of memory consumption.
A nice side effect of being able to store byte arrays natively is that it makes sharing data between multiple endpoints less cumbersome since you’re now dealing with byte arrays directly instead of having to wrap/unwrap the byte arrays. More on this topic very shortly.
Full details on how to implement and configure these new Equivalence functions can be found in the Infinispan community documentation. To give this a go, make sure you download the latest Infinispan 5.3 release.
Cheers, Galder
Tags: equivalence memory