Stormpot is an object pooling library for Java. Use it to recycle objects that are expensive to create. The library will take care of creating and destroying your objects in the background.
Stormpot is very mature, is used in production, and has done hundreds of trillions [1] claim-release cycles in testing. It is faster and scales better than any competing pool.
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Home page: http://chrisvest.github.io/stormpot/
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Source code: https://github.com/chrisvest/stormpot/
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API docs: http://chrisvest.github.io/stormpot/site/apidocs/index.html
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Mailing list: http://groups.google.com/d/forum/stormpot
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License: The Apache Software License 2.0
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Simple versioning: X.Y where Y++ is backwards compatible, and X++ is backwards incompatible.
There are a number of options out there, when it comes to object pools on the JVM. Stormpot has been carefully designed for high performance, and robust operation. Some of the things that sets Stormpot apart include:
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Business friendly Apache 2 license.
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Very high test coverage.
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The highest throughput and lowest latency in its class. (since 2.1)
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Automatic recovery from sporadic backend (Allocator) failures. (since 2.2)
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Precise object leak detection with virtually no overhead. (since 2.3)
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Optional background object expiration checking. (since 2.3)
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Explicit object expiration. (since 2.4)
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Gradual back-off for prolonged allocation failures. (since 3.0)
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Support for Java Platform Module system. (since 3.0)
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Support for a directly-allocating thread-less mode, via
Pool.of(…)
. (since 3.0) -
Convenient lambda-based API. (since 3.0)
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Control over the thread-local caching mechanics, via
PoolTap
s. (since 3.0) -
Support for operating without a background thread, via
Pool.fromInline()
. (since 3.1) -
Support for configuring zero-sized (dormant) pools. (since 3.1)
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Support for virtual threads. (since 4.0)
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Support for more than 2 billion objects in a pool. (since 4.0)
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Support for changing the
Allocator
after the pool has been created. (since 4.0) -
And other features that makes for a smooth runtime behaviour.
Note
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Stormpot is an object pool; a homogeneous collection of objects, where it does not matter which particular instance is returned from |
Stormpot 4.0 only depends on Java 21 or newer. If you need to use Java 11 or newer, use Stormpot 3.2. Add it as a Maven dependency to your projects:
<dependency>
<groupId>com.github.chrisvest</groupId>
<artifactId>stormpot</artifactId>
<version>4.0</version>
</dependency>
You can also build the latest snapshot from source with mvn clean install
.
Note that Stormpot 4 require Java 21 or newer.
Stormpot needs 3 things before it can pool objects for you:
MyAllocator allocator = new MyAllocator();
Pool<MyPoolable> pool = Pool.from(allocator).build();
Timeout timeout = new Timeout(1, TimeUnit.SECONDS);
MyPoolable object = pool.claim(timeout);
try {
// Do stuff with 'object'.
// Note: 'claim' returns 'null' if it times out.
} finally {
if (object != null) {
object.release();
}
}
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Report bugs preferably with a failing test. You can submit a pull-request that adds a failing test that demonstrates the behaviour you think is wrong or missing. Travis-CI will build it, report the failure and shorten the feedback cycle. If you don’t know how to write a test for something, then that’s fine too. Just open an issue describing your configuration and environment, what you observe, and what you think should happen instead.
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Improve the documentation by all means! Just fork the project and start. If you have questions about implementation or behavioural details, then start a discussion about it by opening a pull-request or an issue. Documentation is formatted with AsciiDoctor. The website and javadocs can be generated with
./mvnw clean pre-site javadoc:javadoc
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Fix bugs or implement features by forking the project, but please start an issue about the bug or feature you want to work on (or find the existing issue) and describe the approach and design you have in mind. Keep in mind that Stormpot is implemented with a very strict adherence to TDD. Finally, make sure to respect the existing indentation and formatting. Use
./mvnw checkstyle:check
to check your formatting. If you are writing a test that takes more than a few hundred milliseconds to run, then put it in thestormpot.slow
test package; either in the existingPoolIT
suite, or in a new*IT
suite. Usemvn clean test
to run only the fast tests. Usemvn clean verify
to also run the slow tests. Javadoc comments are formatted with AsciiDoctor. Get test coverage with./mvnw clean test site
andopen target/site/jacoco/index.html
. Get mutation test coverage withmvn clean test-compile org.pitest:pitest-maven:mutationCoverage
andopen target/pit-reports/*/index.html
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Update Maven plugins with
./mvnw versions:display-plugin-updates
, or other dependencies withversions:display-dependency-updates
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Add to the ecosystem and make Stormpot more than just an object pool. This is a good thing to take on if you’d like to contribute code, but you find the Stormpot code base itself to be intimidating (which, by the way, I completely understand).
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There is a repository for object pool benchmarks that is being maintained along side Stormpot. Adding more benchmarks and cases; analysing results; trying out optimisations. These are all useful things to do.
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I started working on a JDBC connection pool based on Stormpot, but the project has stagnated. It is no doubt a useful thing to have, though. If you want to take on that problem, either with offset in the existing code or by starting over from scratch, then please go ahead.
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I’m sure there are other interesting related problems out there to take on. There are many database drivers for various NoSQL databases, that have object pooling needs.
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Build benchmarks with
./mvnw package -DskipTests -f modular-pom.xml
, and run them withjava -jar benchmarks/target/benchmarks.jar
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Whatever you decide to do, don’t hesitate to ask questions in the discussions on github if you have doubts or get stuck.