I may have found a work around but I don't know the full implications of it.
Spring allows one to initialize synchronization. Doing this along with reusing a ConnectionFactory will cache the session in which you don't take the hit of a connection attempt to the slave broker when each message is sent. If anyone knows any additional information about this Synchronization Manager please let me know. TransactionSynchronizationManager.InitSynchronization(); var connectionFactory = new ConnectionFactory(_uri); connectionFactory.UserName = "frontend"; connectionFactory.Password = "pizz@"; magellings wrote: > > I believe I figured out the performance problem. Currently we are using > JDBC master/slave. > > The major performance problem is the socket connection is timing out on > whichever tcp address in the failover address is slave. > > Example: > > private static Uri _uri = new > Uri("failover:(tcp://localhost:10083,tcp://WAMQDEV1.qg.com:10083)?Randomize=false"); > > If "localhost" is running the slave broker, then it takes roughly 20-25s > on each establishment of a session. This is because the first connection > attempt to "localhost" takes this long to timeout. It then connects to > "WAMQDEV1", the master, quickly. If "localhost" is the master (the other > way around) than performance is fine as "localhost" is tried first and a > connection to "WAMQDEV1" is never attempted. > > The problem is partially related to how the Spring NMS framework > NmsTemplate connects as it establishes a new session on each message sent. > So the performance hit is taken on each message sent. This isn't > necessarily wrong though as we need to ensure we are sending to the master > broker at the time of the message sending. > > A second performance problem is the sheer fact that it takes roughly "1" > second for each message sent now. This is without utilizing the failover > protocol functionality. This is a pretty large performance hit compared > to NMS version 1.0. For example, now if 100 messages are sent the elapsed > time is approximately 100 seconds. I have yet to profile attempting to > figure out why it is slower sending a message. > > In regards to the failover protocol performance hit, if it is okay I will > attempt to fix and will submit a patch. I believe it should be as simple > as tracking the successfully connected address and enhancing the logic to > always try the address that previously connected successfully first. If > it fails than the successfully connected address is updated to the address > of the new master broker and the process repeats. > > > magellings wrote: >> >> Hello. Has anyone used the 1.1 binaries for NMS and NMS.ActiveMQ from >> trunk and the failover: protocol? >> >> I'm experiencing a lot of slowness and I've found at least one comment >> (on item in issue tracker) stating the same. >> >> http://issues.apache.org/activemq/browse/AMQNET-26?focusedCommentId=47183&page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels%3Acomment-tabpanel#action_47183 >> >> >> "Second, the recent changes to Apache.NMS.ActiveMQ's file >> OpenWire/OpenWireFormat.cs create massive delays on my system. If I >> revert that file back to the version 693666 (09-Sep-2008) then all my >> code starts working without delays. It seems that the action of writing >> to the bus (using Topics in my case) is delayed 120 seconds or so. Each >> write seems to be delayed 15 seconds. Since startup involves several >> writes the initialize the wire format, I suspect that a timeout variable >> is set to 0 (zero) which does not allow a thread-swap to take place. So >> it hangs. I will create a new issue for this problem. >> >> Please test and give feedback. If it is positive, then Jim can commit the >> change to the repository." >> >> I've also noticed the Spring Messaging framework stalls when master and >> slave brokers switch using the failover protocol. >> > > -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/NMS-1.1-and-failover-protocol-slowness-tp23028265p23107014.html Sent from the ActiveMQ - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.