EJB containers
An EJB container provides a run-time environment for enterprise beans within the application server. The container handles all aspects of an enterprise bean's operation within the application server and acts as an intermediary between the user-written business logic within the bean and the rest of the application server environment.
One or more EJB modules, each containing one or more enterprise beans, can be installed in a single container.
The EJB container provides many services to the enterprise bean, including the following:
- Beginning, committing, and rolling back transactions as necessary.
- Maintaining pools of enterprise bean instances ready for incoming requests and moving these instances between the inactive pools and an active state, ensuring that threading conditions within the bean are satisfied.
- Most importantly, automatically synchronizing data in an entity bean's instance variables with corresponding data items stored in persistent storage.
By dynamically maintaining a set of active bean instances and synchronizing bean state with persistent storage when beans are moved into and out of active state, the container makes it possible for an application to manage many more bean instances than could otherwise simultaneously be held in the application server's memory. In this respect, an EJB container provides services similar to virtual memory within an operating system.
WebSphere Application Server provides significant flexibility in the management of database data with entity beans. The Entity EJBs Activate at and Load at configuration settings specify how and when to load and cache data from the corresponding database row data of an enterprise bean. These configuration settings provide the capability to specify enterprise bean caching Options A, B or C, as specified in the EJB 1.1 specifications. We can configure these settings with assembly tools. To read more about how to use the assembly tools see the assembly tool information center.
Between transactions, the state of an entity bean can be cached. The EJB container supports option A, B, and C caching.
- With option A caching, the application server assumes that the entity bean is used within a single container. Clients of that bean must direct their requests to the bean instance within that container. The entity bean has exclusive access to the underlying database, which means that the bean cannot be cloned or participate in workload management if option A caching is used.
If we intend to use read-only scenarios, WAS v9 provides an alternate, higher-performance variation of option A entity beans. This caching option is called Multithreaded Read-Only. Similar to standard option A behavior, the EJB container continues to activate the bean just once and leave it active until the EJB container needs space in its active instance cache. However, the EJB container differs from standard option A in the following behaviors:
- It reloads the state of the bean from persistent storage periodically in response to the user invoking a method on it to pick up any changes that may have been made to the persistent store since the last time the bean was loaded. We can configure this function through a Reload Interval setting in the bean's deployment descriptor. See topic Developing read-only entity beans.
- The state of the bean is not written to persistent store by the EJB container at the end of the transaction, nor is the bean's ejbStore() method be invoked.
- The EJB container permits method invocations from more than one client (thread) on the same bean instance. This differs from the standard EJB component for the internals of a bean. We must keep this aspect in mind when developing your bean, and ensure any logic in the bean's business methods is overall thread-safe.
- With option B caching, the entity bean remains active in the cache throughout the transaction but is reloaded at the start of each method call.
- With option C caching (the default), the entity bean is always reloaded from the database at the beginning of each transaction. A client can attempt to access the bean and start a new transaction on any container configured to host that bean. This is similar to the session clustering facility described for HTTP sessions in that the entity bean's state is maintained in a shared database that can be accessed from any server when required.
Option A provides maximum enterprise bean performance by caching database data outside of the transaction scope. Generally, Option A is only applicable where the EJB container has exclusive access to the given database. Otherwise, data integrity is compromised. Option B provides more aggressive caching of Entity EJB object instances, which can result in improved performance over Option C, but also results in greater memory usage. Option C is the most common real-world configuration for Entity EJBs and is the default setting.
The Activate at setting specifies the point at which an enterprise bean is activated and placed in the cache. Removal from the cache and passivation are also governed by this setting. Valid values are Once and Transaction. The Once setting indicates that the bean is activated when it is first accessed in the server process, and passivated (and removed from the cache) at the discretion of the container, for example when the cache becomes full. The Transaction setting indicates that the bean is activated at the start of a transaction and passivated (and removed from the cache) at the end of the transaction. The default is Transaction.
The Load at setting specifies when the bean loads its state from the database. The value of this property implies whether the container has exclusive or shared access to the database. Valid values are Activation and Transaction. Activation indicates the bean is loaded when it is activated and implies that the container has exclusive access to the database. Transaction indicates that the bean is loaded at the start of a transaction and implies that the container has shared access to the database. The default is Transaction. The settings of the Activate at and Load at properties govern which commit options are used. For Option A (exclusive database access), use Activate at = Once and Load at = Activation. This option reduces database input/output by avoiding calls to the ejbLoad function, but serializes all transactions accessing the bean instance. Option A can increase memory usage by maintaining more objects in the cache, but can provide better response time if bean instances are not generally accessed concurrently by multiple transactions.
Important: When using WebSphere WAS ND and workload management is enabled, Option A cannot be used.
We must use settings that result in the use of Options B or C. For Option B (shared database access), use Activate at = Once and Load at = Transaction. Option B can increase memory usage by maintaining more objects in the cache. However, because each transaction creates its own copy of an object, there can be multiple copies of an instance in memory at any given time (one per transaction), requiring the database be accessed at each transaction. If an enterprise bean contains a significant number of calls to the ejbActivate function, using Option B can be beneficial because the required object is already in the cache. Otherwise, this option does not provide significant benefit over Option A. For Option C (shared database access), use Activate at = Transaction and Load at = Transaction. This option can reduce memory usage by maintaining fewer objects in the cache. However, there can be multiple copies of an instance in memory at any given time (one per transaction). This option can reduce transaction contention for enterprise bean instances accessed concurrently but not updated.
This product supports the cloning of stateful session bean home objects among multiple application servers. However, it does not support the cloning of a specific instance of a stateful session bean. Each instance of a particular stateful session bean can exist in just one application server and can be accessed only by directing requests to that particular application server. State information for a stateful session bean cannot be maintained across multiple members of a server cluster. However, enabling stateful session bean failover and configuring the EJB container to use memory-to-memory replication does enable stateful session bean failover to be replicated to other servers in the cluster so that failover can occur to the backup server if the primary server for a stateful session bean stops for some reason. For more information about stateful session bean failover, see Stateful session bean failover for the EJB container.
By default, an EJB container runs in the quick start mode. The EJB container startup logic delays the loading and processing of all EJB types except Message Driven Beans, because message driven beans must exist before messages are posted for them; Startup Beans, which must be processed when the server starts; and EJB types specified to initialize when the server starts. .
All other EJB initialization is delayed until the first use of the EJB type. When using local interfaces, the first use is when we perform an InitialContext.lookup method for the type. For remote interfaces, it is when you call the first method on an EJB or its Home.
Related:
Enterprise beans Manage EJB containers Developing read-only entity beans