.hazelcast.3.8.7.source-code.hazelcast-config-3.6.xsd Maven / Gradle / Ivy
To use Hazelcast Enterprise, you need to set the license key here or programmatically.
Data type used to store entries.
Possible values:
BINARY (default): keys and values are stored as binary data.
OBJECT: values are stored in their object forms.
NATIVE: keys and values are stored in native memory. Only available on Hazelcast Enterprise.
True (default) if statistics gathering is enabled on the map, false otherwise.
This parameter is deprecated as of Hazelcast 3.6
Use cache-deserialized-values attribute instead.
When both optimize-query and cache-deserialized-values are used at the same time
Hazelcast will do its best to detect possible conflicts. Conflict detection
is done on best-effort basis and you should not rely on it.
If true, increases the speed of query processes in the map. It only works when in-memory-format
is set as BINARY and performs a pre-caching on the entries queried. Default value is false.
Control caching of de-serialized values. Caching makes query evaluation faster, but it cost memory.
Possible Values:
NEVER: Never cache de-serialized object
INDEX-ONLY: Cache values only when they are inserted into an index.
ALWAYS: Always cache de-serialized values.
Number of synchronous backups. For example, if 1 is set as the backup-count,
then all entries of the map will be copied to one other JVM for
fail-safety. Valid numbers are 0 (no backup), 1, 2 ... 6.
Number of asynchronous backups. For example, if 1 is set as the backup-count,
then all entries of the map will be copied to one other JVM for
fail-safety. Valid numbers are 0 (no backup), 1, 2 ... 6.
Maximum number of seconds for each entry to stay in the map. Entries that are
older than <time-to-live-seconds> and are not updated for <time-to-live-seconds>
are automatically evicted from the map.
Any integer between 0 and Integer.MAX_VALUE. 0 means infinite. Default is 0.
Maximum number of seconds for each entry to stay idle in the map. Entries that are
idle(not touched) for more than <max-idle-seconds> are
automatically evicted from the map. The entry is touched if get, put or containsKey is called.
Any integer between 0 and Integer.MAX_VALUE. 0 means infinite. Default is 0.
Valid values are:
NONE (no eviction).
LRU (Least Recently Used).
LFU (Least Frequently Used).
NONE is the default.
Maximum size of the map.
Any integer between 0 and Integer.MAX_VALUE. 0 means Integer.MAX_VALUE. Default is 0.
For max-size to work, set the eviction-policy property to a value other than NONE.
Valid values are:
PER_NODE: Maximum number of map entries in each Hazelcast instance.
This is the default policy.
PER_PARTITION: Maximum number of map entries within each partition. Storage size
depends on the partition count in a Hazelcast instance.
This attribute should not be used often.
Avoid using this attribute with a small cluster: if the cluster is small it will
be hosting more partitions, and therefore map entries, than that of a larger
cluster. Thus, for a small cluster, eviction of the entries will decrease
performance (the number of entries is large).
USED_HEAP_SIZE: Maximum used heap size in megabytes per map for each Hazelcast instance.
USED_HEAP_PERCENTAGE: Maximum used heap size percentage per map for each Hazelcast instance.
If, for example, JVM is configured to have 1000 MB and this value is 10, then the map
entries will be evicted when used heap size exceeds 100 MB.
FREE_HEAP_SIZE: Minimum free heap size in megabytes for each JVM.
FREE_HEAP_PERCENTAGE: Minimum free heap size percentage for each JVM.
For example, if JVM is configured to have 1000 MB and this value is 10,
then the map entries will be evicted when free heap size is below 100 MB.
USED_NATIVE_MEMORY_SIZE: Maximum used native memory size in megabytes per map
for each Hazelcast instance.
USED_NATIVE_MEMORY_PERCENTAGE: Maximum used native memory size percentage per map
for each Hazelcast instance.
FREE_NATIVE_MEMORY_SIZE: Minimum free native memory size in megabytes
for each Hazelcast instance.
FREE_NATIVE_MEMORY_PERCENTAGE: Minimum free native memory size percentage
for each Hazelcast instance.
When the map reaches maximum size, this specified percentage of the map will be evicted. Set to any
integer between 0 and 100.
For example, if 25 is set, 25% of the entries are evicted.
Beware that eviction mechanism is different for NATIVE in-memory format.
(It uses a probabilistic algorithm based on sampling. Please see documentation for further details.)
For this in-memory format, `minEvictionCheckMillis` has no effect
Minimum time in milliseconds which should pass before checking
if a partition of this map is evictable or not.
Default value is 100 millis.
Beware that eviction mechanism is different for NATIVE in-memory format.
(It uses a probabilistic algorithm based on sampling. Please see documentation for further details.)
For this in-memory format, `minEvictionCheckMillis` has no effect
While recovering from split-brain (network partitioning), map entries in the small cluster
merge into the bigger cluster
based on the policy set here. When an entry merges into the cluster, an
entry with the same key might already exist in the cluster.
The values of these entries might be different for that same key. Which value should be set for the
key?
The conflict is resolved by the policy set here.
There are built-in merge policies, such as:
com.hazelcast.map.merge.PassThroughMergePolicy: the entry will be added if there is no
existing entry for the key.
com.hazelcast.map.merge.PutIfAbsentMapMergePolicy: the entry will be added if the merging
entry doesn't exist in the cluster.
com.hazelcast.map.merge.HigherHitsMapMergePolicy: the entry with the higher number of hits wins.
com.hazelcast.map.merge.LatestUpdateMapMergePolicy: the entry with the latest update wins.
Default policy is 'com.hazelcast.map.merge.PutIfAbsentMapMergePolicy'
True if reading local backup entries is enabled, false otherwise.
Name of the map.
If true, previously assigned values for the affected keys will be sent to this
cache-entry-listener implementation. Setting this attribute to true
creates additional traffic. Default value is false.
If true, this cache-entry-listener implementation will be called
in a synchronous manner. Default value is false.
The fully qualified class name of the cache key type.
The fully qualified class name of the cache value type.
True if statistics gathering is enabled on the cache, false (default) otherwise.
True if management is enabled on the cache, false (default) otherwise.
True if read-through caching is used, false (default) otherwise.
True if write-through caching is used, false (default) otherwise.
The cache loader factory class name.
The cache writer factory class name.
Defines the expiry policy factory class name or
defines the expiry policy factory from predefined ones with duration configuration.
List of cache entry listeners.
Data type used to store entries.
Possible values:
BINARY (default): keys and values are stored as binary data.
OBJECT: values are stored in their object forms.
NATIVE: keys and values are stored in native memory. Only available on Hazelcast Enterprise.
Number of synchronous backups. For example, if `1` is set as the `backup-count`,
then all entries of the cache are copied to one other instance as synchronous for fail-safety.
`backup-count` + `async-backup-count` cannot be bigger than maximum backup count which is `6`.
Valid numbers are 0 (no backup), 1, 2 ... 6.
Number of asynchronous backups. For example, if `1` is set as the `async-backup-count`,
then all entries of the cache are copied to one other instance as asynchronous for fail-safety.
`backup-count` + `async-backup-count` cannot be bigger than maximum backup count which is `6`.
Valid numbers are 0 (no backup), 1, 2 ... 6.
When maximum size is reached, cache is evicted based on the eviction policy.
size:
maximum size can be any integer between 0 and Integer.MAX_VALUE.
Default value is 0.
max-size-policy:
max-size-policy has these valid values:
ENTRY_COUNT (Maximum number of cache entries in the cache),
USED_NATIVE_MEMORY_SIZE (Maximum used native memory size in megabytes per cache for each Hazelcast instance),
USED_NATIVE_MEMORY_PERCENTAGE (Maximum used native memory size percentage per cache for each Hazelcast instance),
FREE_NATIVE_MEMORY_SIZE (Maximum free native memory size in megabytes for each Hazelcast instance),
FREE_NATIVE_MEMORY_PERCENTAGE (Maximum free native memory size percentage for each Hazelcast instance).
Default value is "ENTRY_COUNT".
eviction-policy:
Eviction policy has these valid values:
LRU (Least Recently Used),
LFU (Least Frequently Used).
Default value is "LRU".
Wan replication configuration for cache.
While recovering from split-brain (network partitioning), cache entries in the small cluster
merge into the bigger cluster based on the policy set here.
When an entry merges into the cluster, an entry with the same key might already exist in the cluster.
The values of these entries might be different for that same key. Which value should be set for the
key? The conflict is resolved by the policy set here.
There are built-in merge policies, such as:
`com.hazelcast.cache.merge.PassThroughCacheMergePolicy` or `PASS_THROUGH`:
The entry will be added directly even though there is an existing entry for the key.
`com.hazelcast.cache.merge.PutIfAbsentCacheMergePolicy` or `PUT_IF_ABSENT`:
The entry will be added if there is no existing entry for the key.
`com.hazelcast.cache.merge.HigherHitsCacheMergePolicy` or `HIGHER_HITS`:
The entry with the higher number of hits wins.
`com.hazelcast.cache.merge.LatestAccessCacheMergePolicy` or `LATEST_ACCESS`:
The entry which has been accessed more recently wins.
Default policy is 'com.hazelcast.cache.merge.PassThroughCacheMergePolicy'
Name of the cache.
True (default) if statistics gathering is enabled on the queue, false otherwise.
Maximum number of items in the queue.
Any integer between 0 and Integer.MAX_VALUE. 0 means Integer.MAX_VALUE. Default is 0.
Number of synchronous backups. For example, if 1 is set as the backup-count,
then all entries of the queue are copied to one other JVM for
fail-safety. Valid numbers are 0 (no backup), 1, 2 ... 6.
Number of asynchronous backups. For example, if 1 is set as the backup-count,
then all entries of the queue are copied to one other JVM for
fail-safety. Valid numbers are 0 (no backup), 1, 2 ... 6.
Used to purge unused or empty queues. If you define a value (time in seconds) for this element,
then your queue will be destroyed if it stays empty or unused for that time.
Lets you add listeners (listener classes) for the queue items. You can also set the attribute
include-value to true if you want the item event to contain the item values, and you can set
local to true if you want to listen to the items on the local node.
Includes the queue store factory class name and the following properties.
Binary: By default, Hazelcast stores the queue items in serialized form in memory.
Before it inserts the queue items into datastore, it deserializes them. But if you
will not reach the queue store from an external application, you might prefer that the
items be inserted in binary form. You can get rid of the de-serialization step; this
would be a performance optimization. The binary feature is disabled by default.
Memory Limit: This is the number of items after which Hazelcast will store items only to
datastore. For example, if the memory limit is 1000, then the 1001st item will be put
only to datastore. This feature is useful when you want to avoid out-of-memory conditions.
The default number for memory-limit is 1000. If you want to always use memory, you can set
it to Integer.MAX_VALUE.
Bulk Load: When the queue is initialized, items are loaded from QueueStore in bulks. Bulk
load is the size of these bulks. By default, bulk-load is 250.
Name of the queue.
True (default) if statistics gathering is enabled on the list, false otherwise.
Maximum size of the list.
Any integer between 0 and Integer.MAX_VALUE. 0 means Integer.MAX_VALUE. Default is 0.
Number of synchronous backups. For example, if 1 is set as the backup-count,
then all entries of the list are copied to one other JVM for
fail-safety. Valid numbers are 0 (no backup), 1, 2 ... 6.
Number of asynchronous backups. For example, if 1 is set as the backup-count,
then all entries of the list will be copied to one other JVM for
fail-safety. Valid numbers are 0 (no backup), 1, 2 ... 6.
Lets you add listeners (listener classes) for the list items. You can also set the attribute
include-value to true if you want the item event to contain the item values, and you can set
local to true if you want to listen to the items on the local node.
Name of the list.
True (default) if statistics gathering is enabled on the set, false otherwise.
Maximum size of the set.
Any integer between 0 and Integer.MAX_VALUE. 0 means Integer.MAX_VALUE. Default is 0.
Number of synchronous backups. For example, if 1 is set as the backup-count,
then all entries of the set are copied to one other JVM for
fail-safety. Valid numbers are 0 (no backup), 1, 2 ... 6.
Number of asynchronous backups. For example, if 1 is set as the backup-count,
then all entries of the set will be copied to one other JVM for
fail-safety. Valid numbers are 0 (no backup), 1, 2 ... 6.
Lets you add listeners (listener classes) for the set items. You can also set the attribute
include-value to true if you want the item event to contain the item values, and you can set
local to true if you want to listen to the items on the local node.
Name of the set.
Hazelcast MultiMap is a specialized map where you can store multiple values under a single key.
Just like any other distributed data structure implementation in Hazelcast, MultiMap is distributed
and thread-safe. Hazelcast MultiMap is not an implementation of java.util.Map due to the difference
in method signatures. It supports most features of Hazelcast Map except for indexing, predicates and
MapLoader/MapStore.
Number of synchronous backups. For example, if 1 is set as the backup-count,
then all entries of the multimap are copied to one other JVM for
fail-safety. Valid numbers are 0 (no backup), 1, 2 ... 6.
Number of asynchronous backups. For example, if 1 is set as the backup-count,
then all entries of the multimap are copied to one other JVM for
fail-safety. Valid numbers are 0 (no backup), 1, 2 ... 6.
True (default) if statistics gathering is enabled on the multimap, false otherwise.
Type of the value collection : SET or LIST.
Lets you add listeners (listener classes) for the multimap entries. You can also set the attribute
include-value to true if you want the item event to contain the entry values, and you can set
local to true if you want to listen to the entries on the local node.
Name of the multimap.
A ReplicatedMap is a map-like data structure with weak consistency
and values locally stored on every node of the cluster.
Whenever a value is written asynchronously, the new value will be internally
distributed to all existing cluster members, and eventually every node will have
the new value.
When a new node joins the cluster, the new node initially will request existing
values from older nodes and replicate them locally.
Data type used to store entries.
Possible values:
BINARY: keys and values are stored as binary data.
OBJECT (default): values are stored in their object forms.
NATIVE: keys and values are stored in native memory. Only available on Hazelcast Enterprise.
Number of parallel mutexes to minimize contention on keys. The default value is 32 which
is a good number for lots of applications. If higher contention is seen on writes to values
inside of the replicated map this value can be adjusted to the needs.
Defines the number of milliseconds after a put is executed before the value is replicated
to other nodes. During this time, multiple puts can be operated and cached up to be sent
out all at once after the delay.
Default value is 100ms before a replication is operated. If set to 0, no delay is used and
all values are replicated one by one.
True if the replicated map is available for reads before the initial
replication is completed, false otherwise. Default is true. If false, no Exception will be
thrown when the replicated map is not yet ready, but call is blocked until
the initial replication is completed.
True (default) if statistics gathering is enabled on the replicated map, false otherwise.
Lets you add listeners (listener classes) for the replicated map entries. You can also set the attribute
include-value to true if you want the item event to contain the entry values, and you can set
local to true if you want to listen to the entries on the local node.
Name of the replicated map.
True (default) if statistics gathering is enabled on the topic, false otherwise.
Default is `false`, meaning there is no global order guarantee.
Lets you add listeners (listener classes) for the topic messages.
The name of the topic.
True (default) if statistics gathering is enabled on the reliable topic, false otherwise.
Lets you add listeners (listener classes) for the topic messages.
The maximum number of items to read in a batch.
Policy to handle an overloaded topic. Available values are `DISCARD_OLDEST`, `DISCARD_NEWEST`,
`BLOCK` and `ERROR`. The default value is `BLOCK.
The name of the reliable topic.
The JobTracker configuration is used to setup behavior of the Hazelcast MapReduce framework.
Every JobTracker is capable of running multiple map reduce jobs at once and so once configuration
is meant as a shared resource for all jobs created by the same JobTracker.
The configuration gives full control over the expected load behavior and thread counts to be used.
The maximum thread pool size of the JobTracker.
The maximum size of the queue; the maximum number of tasks that can wait to be processed. A
value of 0 means an unbounded queue.
retry-count is currently not used but reserved for later use where the framework will
automatically try to restart / retry operations from an available savepoint.
The number of emitted values before a chunk is sent to the reducers.
If your emitted values are big, you might want to change this to a lower value. If you want
to better balance your work, you might want to change this to a higher value.
A value of 0 means immediate transmission, but remember that low values mean higher traffic
costs.
A very high value might cause an OutOfMemoryError to occur if emitted values do not fit into
heap memory before being sent to reducers. To prevent this, you might want to use a combiner
to pre-reduce values on mapping nodes.
True if statistics (for example, about processed entries)
are transmitted to the job emitter, false otherwise. This might be used to show any kind of progress to
users inside of UI systems, but this produces additional traffic. If statistics are not needed, you might
want to deactivate this.
Defines how the map reduce framework will react on topology
changes while executing a job.
Currently only CANCEL_RUNNING_OPERATION is fully supported; it throws an exception to
the job emitter (throws com.hazelcast.mapreduce.TopologyChangedException).
The name of the JobTracker. Required.
The thread count to which the concurrent access is limited. For example, if you set
it to "3", concurrent access to the object is limited to 3 threads.
Number of synchronous backups. For example, if 1 is set as the backup-count,
then all permits of the semaphore are copied to one other JVM for
fail-safety. Valid numbers are 0 (no backup), 1, 2 ... 6.
Number of asynchronous backups. For example, if 1 is set as the backup-count,
then all permits of the semaphore are copied to one other JVM for
fail-safety. Valid numbers are 0 (no backup), 1, 2 ... 6.
The name of the semaphore. Required.
Number of items in the ringbuffer. If no time-to-live-seconds is set, the size will always
be equal to capacity after the head completed the first loop around the ring. This is
because no items are getting retired.
Maximum number of seconds for each entry to stay in the ringbuffer. Entries that are
older than <time-to-live-seconds> and are not updated for <time-to-live-seconds>
are automatically evicted from the map.
Any integer between 0 and Integer.MAX_VALUE. 0 means infinite. Default is 0.
Number of synchronous backups. For example, if 1 is set as the backup-count,
then the items in the ringbuffer are copied to one other JVM for
fail-safety. Valid numbers are 0 (no backup), 1, 2 ... 6.
Number of asynchronous backups. For example, if 1 is set as the backup-count,
then the items in the ringbuffer are copied to one other JVM for
fail-safety. Valid numbers are 0 (no backup), 1, 2 ... 6.
Data type used to store entries.
Possible values:
BINARY (default): keys and values are stored as binary data.
OBJECT: values are stored in their object forms.
NATIVE: keys and values are stored in native memory. Only available on Hazelcast Enterprise.
The name of the ringbuffer. Required.
Overrides the public address of a node. By default, a node selects its socket address
as its public address. But behind a network address translation (NAT), two endpoints (nodes)
may not be able to see/access each other. If both nodes set their public addresses to their
defined addresses on NAT, then they can communicate with each other. In this case, their
public addresses are not an address of a local network interface but a virtual address defined by NAT.
This is optional to set and useful when you have a private cloud.
The ports which Hazelcast will use to communicate between cluster members. Its default value is 5701.
It has the following attributes.
port-count: The default value is 100, meaning that Hazelcast will try to bind 100 ports.
If you set the value of port as 5701, as members join the cluster, Hazelcast tries to find
ports between 5701 and 5801. You can change the port count in cases like having large
instances on a single machine or you are willing to have only a few ports assigned.
auto-increment: Default value is true. If port is set to 5701, Hazelcast will try to find free
ports between 5701 and 5801. Normally, you will not need to change this value, but it comes
in handy when needed. You may also want to choose to use only one port. In that case, you can
disable the auto-increment feature of port by setting its value as false.
When you shutdown a cluster member, the server socket port will be in the TIME_WAIT
state for the next couple of minutes. If you start the member right after shutting it down,
you may not be able to bind it to the same port because it is in the TIME_WAIT state. If you
set reuse-address to true, the TIME_WAIT state is ignored and you can bind the member to the
same port again. Default value is false.
By default, Hazelcast lets the system pick up an ephemeral port during socket bind operation.
But security policies/firewalls may require to restrict outbound ports to be used by
Hazelcast-enabled applications. To fulfill this requirement, you can configure Hazelcast to use
only defined outbound ports.
outbound-ports has the ports attribute to allow you to define outbound ports.
encryption algorithm such as
DES/ECB/PKCS5Padding,
PBEWithMD5AndDES,
AES/CBC/PKCS5Padding,
Blowfish,
DESede
IP address of the required member. Cluster will form only if the member with this IP
address is found.
IP address(es) of one or more well known members. Once members are connected to these
well known ones, all member addresses will be communicated with each other.
Comma separated IP addresses of one or more well known members.
Specifies whether the TCP/IP discovery is enabled or not. Default value is false.
The maximum amount of time Hazelcast is going to try to connect to a well known member
before giving up. Setting it to a too low value could mean that a member is not able
to connect to a cluster. Setting it to a too high value means that member startup could
slow down because of longer timeouts (e.g. when a well known member is not up). Increasing
this value is recommended if you have many IPs listed and the members cannot properly
build up the cluster. Its default value is 5.
The multicast group IP address. Specify it when you want to create clusters within the
same network. Values can be between 224.0.0.0 and 239.255.255.255. Default value is 224.2.2.3.
The multicast socket port through which the Hazelcast member listens and sends discovery messages.
Default value is 54327.
Only when the nodes are starting up, this timeout (in seconds) specifies the period during
which a node waits for a multicast response from another node. For example, if you set it
to 60 seconds, each node will wait for 60 seconds until a leader node is selected.
Its default value is 2 seconds.
Time-to-live value for multicast packets sent out to control the scope of multicasts.
Includes IP addresses of trusted members. When a node wants to join to the cluster,
its join request will be rejected if it is not a trusted member. You can give an IP
addresses range using the wildcard (*) on the last digit of the IP address
(e.g. 192.168.1.* or 192.168.1.100-110).
Specifies whether the multicast discovery is enabled or not. Values can be true or false.
Access key of your account on EC2.
Secret key of your account on EC2.
IAM role that binds with your instance.
The region where your nodes are running. Default value is us-east-1.
Needs to be specified if the region is other than the default one.
The URL that is the entry point for a web service. It is optional.
Name of the security group you specified at the EC2 management console.
It is used to narrow the Hazelcast nodes to be within this group.
It is optional.
To narrow the members in the cloud down to only Hazelcast nodes, you can set
this to the one you specified in the EC2 console. It is optional.
To narrow the members in the cloud down to only Hazelcast nodes, you can set
this to the one you specified in the EC2 console. It is optional.
Specifies whether the EC2 discovery is enabled or not. Value can be true or false.
The maximum amount of time Hazelcast is going to try to connect to a well known member
before giving up. Setting its value too low value could mean that a member is not able
to connect to a cluster. Setting it too high value means that member startup could slow
down because of longer timeouts (e.g. when a well known member is not up). Increasing
this value is recommended if you have many IPs listed and the members cannot properly
build up the cluster. Its default value is 5.
The `join` configuration element is used to enable the Hazelcast instances to form a cluster,
i.e. to join the members. Three ways can be used to join the members: discovery by TCP/IP, by
multicast, and by discovery on AWS (EC2 auto-discovery).
You can specify which network interfaces that Hazelcast should use. Servers mostly have more
than one network interface, so you may want to list the valid IPs. Range characters
('\*' and '-') can be used for simplicity. For instance, 10.3.10.\* refers to IPs between
10.3.10.0 and 10.3.10.255. Interface 10.3.10.4-18 refers to IPs between 10.3.10.4 and
10.3.10.18 (4 and 18 included). If network interface configuration is enabled (it is disabled
by default) and if Hazelcast cannot find an matching interface, then it will print a message
on the console and will not start on that node.
True to enable these interfaces, false to disable.
True (default) if statistics gathering is enabled on the executor task, false otherwise.
The number of executor threads per member for the executor.
Queue capacity of the executor task. 0 means Integer.MAX_VALUE.
Name of the executor task.
Enterprise only. Hazelcast allows you to encrypt the entire socket level communication among
all Hazelcast members. Encryption is based on Java Cryptography Architecture. In symmetric
encryption, each node uses the same key, so the key is shared.
Encryption algorithm such as DES/ECB/PKCS5Padding, PBEWithMD5AndDES, Blowfish,
or DESede.
Salt value to use when generating the secret key.
Pass phrase to use when generating the secret key.
Iteration count to use when generating the secret key.
True to enable symmetric encryption, false to disable.
The name of the class implementing MapLoader and/or MapStore.
The number of seconds to delay the store writes. Default value is 0.
The number of operations to be included in each batch processing round. Default value is 1.
Setting this is meaningful if you are using write behind in MapStore. When write-coalescing is true,
only the latest store operation on a key in the write-delay-seconds time-window will be
reflected to MapStore. Default value is true.
True to enable this map-store, false to disable.
Sets the initial load mode.
LAZY: default load mode, where load is asynchronous.
EAGER: load is blocked till all partitions are loaded.
True to enable value caching, false to disable.
The predicate to filter events which will be applied to the QueryCache.
Lets you add listeners (listener classes) for the query cache entries.
Data type used to store entries.
Possible values:
BINARY (default): keys and values are stored as binary data.
OBJECT: values are stored in their object forms.
NATIVE: keys and values are stored in native memory. Only available on Hazelcast Enterprise.
True to enable initial population of the query cache, false otherwise.
True to enable coalescing of the query cache, false otherwise.
The minimum number of seconds that an event waits in the node buffer.
The batch size used to determine the number of events sent
in a batch to the query cache.
The maximum number of events which can be stored in a partition buffer.
Name for your WAN replication configuration.
Only valid when used with WanBatchReplication (enterprise only: target-cluster
replication-impl). When set to true, only the latest events (based on key) are
selected and sent in a batch.
Name of the class implementation for the WAN replication.
The group name for the WAN replication.
The group password for the WAN replication.
IP address of a cluster member for which the WAN replication is implemented.
The name of the com.hazelcast.nio.ssl.SSLContextFactory implementation class.
True to enable this ssl configuration, false to disable.
When you enable partition grouping, Hazelcast presents three choices for you to configure
partition groups.
HOST_AWARE: You can group nodes automatically using the IP addresses of nodes, so nodes
sharing the same network interface will be grouped together. All members on the same host
(IP address or domain name) will be a single partition group.
CUSTOM: You can do custom grouping using Hazelcast's interface matching configuration.
This way, you can add different and multiple interfaces to a group.
PER_MEMBER: You can give every member its own group. Each member is a group of its own
and primary and backup partitions are distributed randomly (not on the same physical member).
True to enable management center, false to disable.
The time frequency (in seconds) for which Management Center will take
information from the Hazelcast cluster.
The Hazelcast cluster from which Management Center will take
information.
Name of the service to be registered.
Name of the class that you develop for your service.
The custom properties that you can add to your service. You enable/disable
these properties and set their values using this element.
You can include configuration items which you develop using the Config object
in your code.
Endpoint address of the principal. Wildcards(*) can be used.
Name of the principal. Wildcards(*) can be used.
Name of the permission. Wildcards(*) can be used.
Permission actions that are permitted on Hazelcast instance objects.
Name of the group to be created.
Password of the group to be created.
One of the following: membership-listener, instance-listener, migration-listener or
partition-lost-listener.
Maximum size of the Near Cache. When max size is reached,
cache is evicted based on the policy defined.
Any integer between 0 and Integer.MAX_VALUE. 0 means
Integer.MAX_VALUE. Default is 0.
Maximum number of seconds for each entry to stay in the Near Cache. Entries that are
older than time-to-live-seconds will get automatically evicted from the Near Cache.
Any integer between 0 and Integer.MAX_VALUE. 0 means infinite. Default is 0.
Maximum number of seconds each entry can stay in the Near Cache as untouched (not-read).
Entries that are not read (touched) more than max-idle-seconds value will get removed
from the Near Cache.
Any integer between 0 and Integer.MAX_VALUE. 0 means Integer.MAX_VALUE. Default is 0.
Valid values are:
NONE (no extra eviction, time-to-live-seconds may still apply),
LRU (Least Recently Used),
LFU (Least Frequently Used).
NONE is the default.
Regardless of the eviction policy used, time-to-live-seconds will still apply.
True to evict the cached entries if the entries are changed (updated or removed).
Default value is true.
Data type used to store entries.
Possible values:
BINARY (default): keys and values are stored as binary data.
OBJECT: values are stored in their object forms.
NATIVE: keys and values are stored in native memory. Only available on Hazelcast Enterprise.
True to cache local entries also.
This is useful when in-memory-format for Near Cache is different than the map's one.
Default value is false.
The version of the portable serialization. Portable version is used to differentiate two
same classes that have changes on it like adding/removing field or changing a type of a field.
True to use native byte order of the underlying platform, false otherwise. Default value is false.
Defines the byte order that the serialization will use.
True to enable compression if default Java serialization is used, false otherwise.
Default value is false.
True to enable shared object if default Java serialization is used, false otherwise.
Default value is false.
True to allow the usage of unsafe, false otherwise.
Default value is false.
PortableFactory class to be registered.
PortableFactory class to be registered.
Global serializer class to be registered if no other serializer is applicable.
Defines the class name and the type class of the serializer implementation.
If true (default), serialization system will check class definitions error at start and throw a
Serialization Exception with error definition.
The name of the class that will be serialized.
The type of the class that will be serialized.
Java Serializable and Externalizable is prior to global serializer by default. If set true
the Java serialization step assumed to be handled by the global serializer.
Resolve conflicts that occurred when target cluster already has the replicated
entry key.
4 merge policy implementations for IMap and 2 merge policy implementations for
ICache are provided out of the box.
IMap has the following merge policies:
com.hazelcast.map.merge.PutIfAbsentMapMergePolicy: Incoming entry merges from the
source map to the target map if it does not exist in the target map.
com.hazelcast.map.merge.HigherHitsMapMergePolicy: Incoming entry merges from the
source map to the target map if the source entry has more hits than the target one.
com.hazelcast.map.merge.PassThroughMergePolicy: Incoming entry merges from the
source map to the target map unless the incoming entry is not null.
com.hazelcast.map.merge.LatestUpdateMapMergePolicy: Incoming entry merges from the
source map to the target map if the source entry has been updated more recently
than the target entry. Please note that this merge policy can only be used when the
clusters' clocks are in sync.
ICache has the following merge policies:
com.hazelcast.cache.merge.HigherHitsCacheMergePolicy: Incoming entry merges from
the source cache to the target cache if the source entry has more hits than the
target one.
com.hazelcast.cache.merge.PassThroughCacheMergePolicy: Incoming entry merges from
the source cache to the target cache unless the incoming entry is not null.
When enabled, an incoming event to a member is forwarded to the target cluster of that member.
Name of the wan-replication configuration. IMap or ICache instance uses this wan-replication config.
The minimum number of members required in a cluster for the cluster to remain in an
operational state. If the number of members is below the defined minimum at any time,
the operations are rejected and the rejected operations return a QuorumException to
their callers.
You can register quorum listeners to be notified about quorum results. Quorum listeners
are local to the member that they are registered, so they receive only events occurred on
that local member.
True to set the node as a lite member, false otherwise.
Base directory for all hot-restart data
Validation timeout for hot-restart process, includes validating
cluster members expected to join and partition table on all cluster.
Data load timeout for hot-restart process,
all members in the cluster should complete restoring their local data
before this timeout.
True to enable hot-restart, false otherwise.
True if disk write should be followed by an fsync() system call,
false otherwise.
True if hot-restart is enabled, false otherwise
Only available on Hazelcast Enterprise.