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Oracle Coherence Community Edition
Copyright (c) 2000, 2022, Oracle and/or its affiliates.
Licensed under the Universal Permissive License v 1.0 as shown at
http://oss.oracle.com/licenses/upl.
Oracle Coherence Cache Config Base Schema definitions that is included
by the cache config schema definition files.
The pre-load element specifies whether a cache
will pre-load data from its CacheLoader (or CacheStore)
object.
Valid values are true and false.
Default value is false.
Used in: local-scheme
The serializer element contains the class configuration info for
a com.tangosol.io.Serializer implementation.
In addition to defining a serializer, it is also acceptable and in
fact preferred to provide the name of a serializer from the serializers
element of the operational configuration.
Note: The ability to directly define a custom serializer within this
element is deprecated as of Coherence 3.6. Starting with Coherence
3.6 either named serializers should be used, or the custom definition
should be moved into an inner instance element.
Used in: initiator-config,
acceptor-config, distributed-scheme,
transactional-scheme,
replicated-scheme, optimistic-scheme,
invocation-scheme,
defaults
The class-scheme element contains the class configuration info.
In most cases, the class-name element is used to specify
the name of the class to instantiate directly.
For example:
com.tangosol.util.SafeHashMap
Starting with Coherence 3.2, it is possible to specify a static
factory method to call instead. To specify the factory approach,
provide both the class-factory-name and method-name elements
corresponding to the static factory method that returns the
new object instance. For example, to provide a Map that contains
no data whatsoever (and discards any data that is passed to it):
com.tangosol.util.NullImplementation
getObservableMap
Used in: standalone-caching-scheme, cachestore-scheme
The listener element contains the cache listener
configuration info.
Implementation classes should implement
com.tangosol.util.MapListener interface.
Used in: distributed-scheme,
external-scheme, local-scheme,
near-scheme, optimistic-scheme,
overflow-scheme, paged-external-scheme,
read-write-backing-map-scheme,
remote-cache-scheme, replicated-scheme,
view-scheme
The cache-name element specifies the name of the
cache. The name is unique within a cache factory.
Used in: cache-mapping
The cluster-name element contains the name of the
cluster to connect to.
Note that when using the name service the cluster
name of the client is used as the default value
for this element.
Used in: remote-cache-scheme, remote-invocation-scheme
The mapping-name element specifies the name of the
topic being mapped. The name is unique within
a cache factory.
Used in: topic
The service-name element contains the service name
configuration info.
Used in: replicated-scheme, distributed-scheme,
transactional-scheme,
optimistic-scheme, local-scheme,
invocation-scheme
The proxy-service-name element contains the service name of the
remote proxy service to which this remote service will connect.
This name must match the <service name> element value of
the remote proxy service.
Used in: remote-cache-scheme, remote-invocation-scheme
The service-priority element specifies the priority for the
service thread.
Valid range: 1-10, default is Thread.MAX_PRIORITY
Used in: distributed-scheme, transactional-scheme,
invocation-scheme and proxy-scheme
The scheme-name element contains the scheme name.
The name is unique within a configuration file.
Used in:
cache-mapping, local-scheme, replicated-scheme,
distributed-scheme, caffeine-scheme,
transactional-scheme, optimistic-scheme, invocation-scheme,
overflow-scheme, near-scheme,
read-write-backing-map-scheme,external-scheme,
paged-external-scheme,
remote-cache-scheme, remote-invocation-scheme,
proxy-scheme, view-scheme
The key-type element defines the fully-qualified
name of the Java class for NamedCache.Entry keys.
Used in:
cache-mapping
The value-type element defines the fully-qualified
name of the Java class for NamedCache.Entry and NamedTopic
values.
Used in:
cache-mapping, topic-mapping
The scheme-ref element contains the scheme name of
the scheme whose configuration should be used as
an overridable base.
Used in: local-scheme, replicated-scheme, distributed-scheme,
optimistic-scheme, invocation-scheme, overflow-scheme, near-scheme,
read-write-backing-map-scheme,external-scheme,
paged-external-scheme, remote-cache-scheme,
remote-invocation-scheme,
proxy-scheme, transactional-scheme, view-scheme
The eviction-policy element contains the eviction
policy configuration
info.
Valid values are "lru", "lfu" and "hybrid".
The hybrid eviction policy is a combination of lru (Least Recently
Used) and lfu (Least Frequently Used). It's a strategy based on
entries "priority". The higher the priority, the higher is the
probability of the entry being pruned out of the cache. The
priority is calculated as a sum of weighted logarithmic measures
of two different factors: the "recentness" and the "frequency". The
algorithm is structured in such a way that if cache entries are used
very rarely, the eviction strategy becomes equivalent to that of LRU
and if all entries are used quite often then the eviction strategy
becomes equivalent to that of LFU.
Alternatively, this element may contain a class-scheme element
that specifies a custom eviction policy class. The specified
class must implement the LocalCache.EvictionPolicy interface.
Used in: local-scheme
The high-units element contains the maximum amount
of cache data that a cache will hold before
pruning occurs.
The unit of measurement is determined by the
unit-calculator.
Valid values are positive integers and zero (for unlimited).
Values may include a standard byte oriented magnitude suffix such as
(B, KB, MB, GB, TB) in which case the BINARY unit-calculator is
implied.
Used in: local-scheme, external-scheme, paged-topic-scheme
The low-units element contains the amount of cache
data to which the cache will be pruned when
cache pruning occurs.
The unit of measurement is determined by the
unit-calculator.
Valid values are positive integers and zero. Values may include a
standard byte oriented magnitude suffix such as (B, KB, MB, GB, TB).
Used in: local-scheme
The unit-calculator element contains the unit
calculator configuration
info.
Valid type values are "FIXED" and "BINARY".
A unit calculator is used to determine the cost (in
"units") of a given
object. The FIXED unit calculator assigns an equal
weight of 1 to all cached objects. The BINARY unit
calculator assigns an object a weight equal to the
number of bytes of memory required to cache the object.
See the JavaDoc for the BinaryMemoryCalculator class
for additional details.
Alternatively, this element may contain a class-scheme
element that specifies a custom unit calculator class.
The specified class must implement the
LocalCache.UnitCalculator interface.
Default value is FIXED, unless the the high-units is expressed
with a magnitude suffix in which case BINARY is used.
Used in: local-scheme, external-scheme
Note: as of 12.2.1 the unit-factor is calculated automatically
and isn't required to be explicitly specified. When the value
is automatically calculated the high-units and low-units will
also be adjusted accordingly.
The unit-factor element specifies the factor by
which the units, low-units and
high-units properties are adjusted.
Using a BINARY unit calculator, for
example, the factor of 1048576 could be used
to count megabytes instead of
bytes.
Note: This element
was introduced only to avoid changing the type of the
units, low units and high units properties from 32-bit
values to 64-bit values.
Valid values are positive integer numbers.
Default value is automatically calculated.
Used in:
local-scheme, external-scheme
The expiry-delay element specifies the amount of
time from last update
that
entries/values will be kept by the cache/topic before
being discarded.
The value of this element must be in the following
format:
(\d)+((.)(\d)+)?(MS|ms|S|s|M|m|H|h|D|d)?
where the first
non-digits (from left to right) indicate the unit of time
duration:
-MS or ms (milliseconds)
-S or s (seconds)
-M or m (minutes)
-H or h
(hours)
-D or d (days)
If the value does not contain a unit, a unit of
seconds is assumed.
Used in: local-scheme, external-scheme,
overflow-scheme, paged-topic-scheme
The invalidation-strategy element specifies the
strategy used for a front map invalidation.
Please see the JavaDoc for
com.tangosol.net.cache.NearCache class.
Valid values are
- "none",
- "present",
- "all",
- "auto",
- "logical".
Default value is "auto".
Used in: near-scheme
The connect-timeout specifies the maximum amount
of time to wait while establishing a connection
with a connection acceptor.
The value of this element must be in the following format:
(\d)+((.)(\d)+)?[MS|ms|S|s|M|m|H|h|D|d]?
where the first non-digits
(from left to right) indicate the unit of time
duration:
-MS or ms
(milliseconds)
-S or s (seconds)
-M or m (minutes)
-H or h
(hours)
-D or
d (days)
If the value does not contain a unit, a unit of milliseconds
is assumed.
Default value is the request-timeout value.
Used in: initiator-config
The linger-timeout element enables SO_LINGER on a
TCP/IP socket with the specified linger time.
The value of this element
must be in the following format:
(\d)+((.)(\d)+)?[MS|ms|S|s|M|m|H|h|D|d]?
where the first non-digits
(from left to right) indicate the unit of time
duration:
-MS or ms
(milliseconds)
-S or s (seconds)
-M or m (minutes)
-H or h
(hours)
-D or
d (days)
If the value does not contain a unit, a unit of milliseconds
is assumed.
Linger is disabled by default.
Used in: tcp-initiator, tcp-acceptor
The request-timeout specifies the maximum amount
of time a client will
wait for
a response before abandoning the
original request.
The value of this element must be in the following
format:
(\d)+((.)(\d)+)?[MS|ms|S|s|M|m|H|h|D|d]?
where the first
non-digits (from left to right) indicate the unit of time
duration:
-MS or ms (milliseconds)
-S or s (seconds)
-M or m (minutes)
-H or h
(hours)
-D or d (days)
If the value does not contain a unit, a unit of
milliseconds is assumed.
Default value is an infinite timeout (0s) for
clustered client requests and 30 seconds (30s)
for extend client requests.
Used in: outgoing-message-handler, replicated-scheme,
distributed-scheme,
transactional-scheme, optimistic-scheme,
invocation-scheme, proxy-scheme
The incoming-message-handler specifies the
configuration info used to regulate
client-to-cluster connection resource usage.
Connection initiators and acceptors
use this information proactively detect and
release connections that use excessive
resources.
Used in: initiator-config, acceptor-config
The value of the max-message-size element is used to
limit the size of messages being sent over Coherence*Extend
connections.
The value
of this element must be in the following format:
(\d)+((.)(\d)+)?[K|k|M|m|G|g|T|t]?[B|b]?
where the first non-digit
(from left to right) indicates the factor with
which the preceding
decimal value should be multiplied:
-K or k (kilo, 2^10)
-M or m
(mega, 2^20)
-G or g (giga, 2^30)
-T or t
(tera, 2^40)
If the value does not contain a factor, a factor of
one is assumed.
Default value of 0 means no limit.
Used in: incoming-message-handler, outgoing-message-handler
The outgoing-message-handler specifies the
configuration info used to detect
dropped client-to-cluster connections. For
connection initiators and acceptors
that use connectionless protocols,
this information is necessary to proactively
detect and release resources allocated to dropped
connections. Connection-oriented initiators and
acceptors can also use this information as
an additional mechanism to detect dropped
connections.
Used in: initiator-config, acceptor-config
The heartbeat-interval specifies the interval
between ping requests. A ping request is used
to ensure the integrity of a connection.
The value of this element must be in the following
format:
(\d)+((.)(\d)+)?[MS|ms|S|s|M|m|H|h|D|d]?
where the first
non-digits (from left to right) indicate the unit of time
duration:
-MS or ms (milliseconds)
-S or s (seconds)
-M or m (minutes)
-H or h
(hours)
-D or d (days)
If the value does not contain a unit, a unit of
milliseconds is assumed.
Ping requests are disabled by default.
Used in: outgoing-message-handle
The heartbeat-timeout specifies the maximum amount
of time to wait for a response to a ping request
before declaring the underlying connection
unusable.
The value of this element must be in
the following format:
(\d)+((.)(\d)+)?[MS|ms|S|s|M|m|H|h|D|d]?
where the first non-digits (from left to right)
indicate the unit of time duration:
-MS or ms (milliseconds)
-S or s (seconds)
-M or m (minutes)
-H or h
(hours)
-D or d (days)
If the value does not contain a unit, a
unit of milliseconds is assumed.
Ping requests are disabled by
default.
Used in: outgoing-message-handler
The use-filters element contains the list of
filter names to be used by a connection
initiator or acceptor.
Used in: initiator-config, acceptor-config
The filter-name element contains the canonical
name of the filter as specified
in the operational configuration file.
This name is unique within the cluster.
Used in: use-filters
The expiry-enabled setting turns on support for
automatically-expiring data, as provided by the
CacheMap API.
Used in: overflow-scheme
The value of the keep-alive-enabled element
indicates whether or not keep
alive (SO_KEEPALIVE) is enabled on a
TCP/IP socket.
Valid values are true and false.
Keep alive is enabled by default.
Used in: tcp-initiator and tcp-acceptor
The value of the tcp-delay-enabled element
indicates whether or not TCP delay
(Nagle's algorithm) is enabled on a TCP/IP
socket.
Valid values are true and false.
TCP delay is disabled by default.
Used in: tcp-initiator and tcp-acceptor
The value of the receive-buffer-size element is
used to configure the size of the underlying
TCP/IP socket network receive buffer.
Increasing the receive buffer size can increase the
performance of network I/O for high-volume connections,
while decreasing it can help reduce the backlog of
incoming data.
The value
of this element must be in the following format:
(\d)+((.)(\d)+)?[K|k|M|m|G|g|T|t]?[B|b]?
where the first non-digit
(from left to right) indicates the factor with
which the preceding
decimal value should be multiplied:
-K or k (kilo, 2^10)
-M or m
(mega, 2^20)
-G or g (giga, 2^30)
-T or t
(tera, 2^40)
If the value does not contain a factor, a factor of
one is assumed.
Default value is O/S dependent.
Used in: tcp-initiator
The value of the send-buffer-size element is used
to configure the size of the underlying TCP/IP
socket network send buffer.
The value of this element must be in the following format:
(\d)+((.)(\d)+)?[K|k|M|m|G|g|T|t]?[B|b]?
where the first non-digit (from left to right)
indicates the factor with which the preceding
decimal value should be multiplied:
-K or k (kilo, 2^10)
-M or m
(mega, 2^20)
-G or g (giga, 2^30)
-T or t
(tera, 2^40)
If the value does not contain a factor, a factor
of one is assumed.
Default value is O/S dependent.
Used in: tcp-initiator, tcp-acceptor
The view-filter element specifies an implementation of a com.tangosol.util.Filter
which will be used by the associated view-scheme.
Used in: view-scheme
The reconnect-interval indicates the period in which
re-synchronization with the underlying cache will be
delayed in the case the connection is severed. During
this time period, local content can be accessed without
triggering re-synchronization of the local content.
The value of this element must be in the following
format:
(\d)+((.)(\d)+)?[MS|ms|S|s|M|m|H|h|D|d]?
where the first
non-digits (from left to right) indicate the unit of time
duration:
-MS or ms (milliseconds)
-S or s (seconds)
-M or m (minutes)
-H or h
(hours)
-D or d (days)
If the value does not contain a unit, a unit of
milliseconds is assumed.
A value of zero means that the view cannot be used
when not connected.
If not configured, a value of zero is assumed.
Used in: view-scheme
The transformer element specifies an implementation of a com.tangosol.util.ValueExtractor
which will be used by the associated view-scheme to transform values retrieved
from the underlying cache before storing them locally; if specified, this view will
become read-only.
Used in: view-scheme
The read-locator specifies which member should service read requests.
Valid values are
- "primary",
- "closest",
- "random",
- "random-backup"
- implementation of BiFunction<Ownership,PartitionedService,Member>
Default is "primary".
Used in: backing-map-scheme