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Chapter 2. Using Remote Caches
Store and retrieve data from remote Data Grid clusters using Hot Rod, a custom TCP binary wire protocol.
2.1. Setting Up the RemoteCacheManager
Configure your application to use remote caches on Data Grid clusters.
-
Provide the addresses where Data Grid Server listens for client connections so the starter can create the
RemoteCacheManager
bean. Use the Spring
@Autowired
annotation to include your own custom Cache Manager class in your application:private final RemoteCacheManager cacheManager; @Autowired public YourClassName(RemoteCacheManager cacheManager) { this.cacheManager = cacheManager; }
2.2. Using the reactive mode with Reactor
Starting with Spring 6.1, reactive mode is supported to make use of caching within reactive applications. If you use spring-boot-starter-webflux
, your application may block.
To enable the Data Grid reactive driver, specify the following property in application.properties
:
infinispan.remote.reactive=true
2.2.1. Properties Files
You can specify properties in either hotrod-client.properties
or application.properties
.
Properties can be in both properties files but the starter applies the configuration in hotrod-client.properties
first, which means that file takes priority over application.properties
.
hotrod-client.properties
Properties in this file take the format of infinispan.client.hotrod.*
, for example:
# List Data Grid servers by IP address or hostname at port localhost:11222. infinispan.client.hotrod.server_list=127.0.0.1:11222
application.properties
Properties in this file take the format of infinispan.remote.*
, for example:
# List Data Grid servers by IP address or hostname at port localhost:11222. infinispan.remote.server-list=127.0.0.1:11222
Additional resources
2.3. Configuring Marshalling
Configure Data Grid to marshall Java objects into binary format so they can be transferred over the wire or stored to disk.
By default Data Grid uses a Java Serialization marshaller, which requires you to add your classes to an allow list. As an alternative you can use ProtoStream, which requires you to annotate your classes and generate a SerializationContextInitializer
for custom Java objects.
Procedure
-
Open
hotrod-client.properties
orapplication.properties
for editing. Do one of the following:
Use ProtoStream as the marshaller.
infinispan.client.hotrod.marshaller=org.infinispan.commons.marshall.ProtoStreamMarshaller
infinispan.remote.marshaller=org.infinispan.commons.marshall.ProtoStreamMarshaller
Add your classes to the serialization allow list if you use Java Serialization. You can specify a comma-separated list of fully qualified class names or a regular expression to match classes.
infinispan.client.hotrod.java_serial_allowlist=your_marshalled_beans_package.*
infinispan.remote.java-serial-allowlist=your_marshalled_beans_package.*
- Save and close your properties file.
Additional resources
2.4. Cache Manager Configuration Beans
Customize the Cache Manager with the following configuration beans:
-
InfinispanRemoteConfigurer
-
Configuration
-
InfinispanRemoteCacheCustomizer
You can create one InfinispanRemoteConfigurer
bean only. However you can create multiple configurations with the other beans.
InfinispanRemoteConfigurer Bean
@Bean public InfinispanRemoteConfigurer infinispanRemoteConfigurer() { return () -> new ConfigurationBuilder() .addServer() .host("127.0.0.1") .port(12345) .build(); }
Configuration Bean
@Bean public org.infinispan.client.hotrod.configuration.Configuration customConfiguration() { new ConfigurationBuilder() .addServer() .host("127.0.0.1") .port(12345) .build(); }
InfinispanRemoteCacheCustomizer Bean
@Bean public InfinispanRemoteCacheCustomizer customizer() { return b -> b.tcpKeepAlive(false); }
Use the @Ordered
annotation to apply customizers in a specific order.
2.5. Enabling Spring Cache Support
With both embedded and remote caches, Data Grid provides an implementation of Spring Cache that you can enable.
Procedure
-
Add the
@EnableCaching
annotation to your application.
If the Data Grid starter detects the:
-
EmbeddedCacheManager
bean, it instantiates a newSpringEmbeddedCacheManager
. -
RemoteCacheManager
bean, it instantiates a newSpringRemoteCacheManager
.
Reference
2.6. Exposing Data Grid Statistics
Data Grid supports the Spring Boot Actuator to expose cache statistics as metrics.
Procedure
Add the following to your
pom.xml
file:<dependency> <groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId> <artifactId>spring-boot-starter-actuator</artifactId> <version>${version.spring.boot}</version> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId> <artifactId>spring-boot-starter-web</artifactId> <version>${version.spring.boot}</version> </dependency>
Activate statistics for the appropriate cache instances, either programmatically or declaratively.
Programmatically
@Bean public InfinispanCacheConfigurer cacheConfigurer() { return cacheManager -> { final org.infinispan.configuration.cache.Configuration config = new ConfigurationBuilder() .jmxStatistics().enable() .build(); cacheManager.defineConfiguration("my-cache", config); }; }
Declaratively
<local-cache statistics="true"/>
The Spring Boot Actuator registry binds cache instances when your application starts.
If you create caches dynamically, you should use the CacheMetricsRegistrar
bean to bind caches to the Actuator registry, as follows:
@Autowire CacheMetricsRegistrar cacheMetricsRegistrar; @Autowire CacheManager cacheManager; ... cacheMetricsRegistrar.bindCacheToRegistry(cacheManager.getCache("my-cache"));