SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Writing and Testing
Higher Frequency Trading Engine
Peter Lawrey
Higher Frequency Trading Ltd
Who am I?
Australian living in UK. Father of three 15, 9 and 6
“Vanilla Java” blog gets 120K page views per month.
3rd
for Java on StackOverflow.
Six years designing, developing and supporting HFT
systems in Java for hedge funds, trading houses and
investment banks.
Principal Consultant for Higher Frequency Trading Ltd.
Event driven determinism
Critical operations are modelled as a series of
asynchronous events
Producer is not slowed by the consumer
Can be recorded for deterministic testing and monitoring
Can known the state for the cirtical system without having to
ask it.
Transparency and Understanding
Horizontal scalability is valueable for high
throughput.
For low latency, you need simplicity. The less the
system has to do the less time it takes.
Productivity
For many systems, a key driver is; how easy is it to add new
features.
For low latency, a key driver is; how easy is it to take out
redundant operations from the critical path.
Layering
Traditional design encourages layering to deal with one
concept at a time. A driver is to hide from the developer
what the lower layers are really doing.
In low latency, you need to understand what critical code is
doing, and often combine layers to minimise the work done.
This is more challenging for developers to deal with.
Taming your system
Ultra low GC, ideally not while trading.
Busy waiting isolated critical threads. Giving up the CPU
slows your program by 2-5x.
Lock free coding. While locks are typically cheap, they
make very bad outliers.
Direct access to memory for critical structures. You can
control the layout and minimise garbage.
Latency profile
In a complex system, the latency increases sharply as you
approach the worst latencies.
Latency
In a typical system, the worst 0.1% latency can be ten times
the typical latency, but is often much more. This means
your application needs to be able to track these outliers and
profile them.
This is something most existing tools won't do for you. You
need to build these into your system so you can monitor
production.
What does a low GC system look like?
Typical tick to trade latency of 60 micros external to the box
Logged Eden space usage every 5 minutes.
Full GC every morning at 5 AM.
Low level Java
Java the language is suitable for low latency
You can use natural Java for non critical code. This should be
the majrity of your code
For critical sections you need a subset of Java and the
libraires which are suitable for low latency.
Low level Java and natural Java integrate very easily, unlike
other low level languages.
Latency reporting
●
Look at the percentiles, typical, 90%, 99%, 99.9% and
worse in sample.
●
You should try to minimise the 99% or 99.9%. You should
look at the worst latencies for acceptability.
Latency and throughput
●
There are periodic disturbances in your system. This
means low throughput sees all of these.
●
In high throughput systems, the delays not only impact one
event, but many events, possibly thousands.
●
Test realistic throughputs for your systems, as well as
stress tests.
Why ultra low garbage
●
When a program accesses L1 cache is about 3x faster than
using L2. L2 is 4 to 7 times faster than accessing L3. L3 is
shared between cores. One thread running in L1 cache
can be faster than using all your CPUs at once using L3
cache.
●
You L1 cache is 32 KB, so if you are creating 32 MB/s of
garbage you are filling your L1 cache with garbage every
milli-second.
Recycling is good
Recycling mutable objects works best if;
They replace short or medium lived immutable objects.
The lifecycle is easy to reason about.
Data structure is simple and doesn't change significantly.
These can help eliminate, not just reduce GCs.
Avoid the kernel
The kernel can be the biggest source of delays in your
system. It can be avoided by
●
Kernel bypass network adapters
●
Isolating busy waiting CPUs
●
Memory mapped files for storage.
Avoid the kernel
Binding critical, busy waiting threads to isolated
CPUs can make a big difference to jitter.
Count of interrupts
per hour by length.
Lock free coding
Minimising the use of lock allows thread to perform more
consistently.

More complex to test.

Useful in ultra low latency context

Will scale better.
Faster math

Use double with rounding or long instead of BigDecimal
~100x faster and no garbage

Use long instead of Date or Calendar

Use sentinal values such as 0, NaN, MIN_VALUE or
MAX_VALUE instead of nullable references.

Use Trove for collections with primitives.
Low latency libraries
Light weight as possible
The essence of what you need and no more
Designed to make full use of your hardware
Performance characteristics is a key requirement.
OpenHFT project
●
Thread Affinity binding
OpenHFT/Java-Thread-Affinity
●
Low latency persistence and IPC
OpenHFT/Java-Chronicle
●
Data structures in off heap memory
OpenHFT/Java-Lang
●
Runtime Compiler and loader
OpenHFT/Java-Runtime-Compiler
Apache 2.0 open source.
Java Chronicle
●
Designed to allow you to log everything. Esp tracing
timestamps for profiling.
●
Typical IPC latency is less than one micro-second for small
messages. And less than 10 micro-seconds for large
messages.
●
Support reading/writing text and binary.
Java Chronicle performance
●
Sustained throughput limited by bandwidth of disk
subsystem.
●
Burst throughput can be 1 to 3 GB per second depending
on your hardware
●
Latencies for loads up to 100K events per second stable for
good hardware (ok on a laptop)
●
Latencies for loads over one million per second, magnify
any jitter in your system or application.
Java Chronicle Example
Writing text
int count = 10 * 1000 * 1000;
for (ExcerptAppender e = chronicle.createAppender();
e.index() < count; ) {
e.startExcerpt(100);
e.appendDateTimeMillis(System.currentTimeMillis());
e.append(", id=").append(e.index());
e.append(", name=lyj").append(e.index());
e.finish();
}
Writes 10 million messages in 1.7 seconds on this laptop
Java Chronicle Example
Writing binary
ExcerptAppender excerpt = ic.createAppender();
long next = System.nanoTime();
for (int i = 1; i <= runs; i++) {
double v = random.nextDouble();
excerpt.startExcerpt(25);
excerpt.writeUnsignedByte('M'); // message type
excerpt.writeLong(next); // write time stamp
excerpt.writeLong(0L); // read time stamp
excerpt.writeDouble(v);
excerpt.finish();
next += 1e9 / rate;
while (System.nanoTime() < next) ;
}
Java Chronicle Example
Reading binary
ExcerptTailer excerpt = ic.createTailer();
for (int i = 1; i <= runs; i++) {
while (!excerpt.nextIndex()) {
// busy wait
}
char ch = (char) excerpt.readUnsignedByte();
long writeTS = excerpt.readLong();
excerpt.writeLong(System.nanoTime());
double d = excerpt.readDouble();
}
Java Chronicle Latencies
500K/second
Took 10.11 seconds to write and read 5,000,000 entries
Time 1us: 1.541% 3us: 0.378% 10us: 0.218% 30us: 0.008% 100us: 0.002%
1 million/second
Took 5.01 seconds to write and read 5,000,000 entries
Time 1us: 3.064% 3us: 0.996% 10us: 0.625% 30us: 0.147% 100us: 0.105%
2 million/second
Took 2.51 seconds to write and read 5,000,000 entries
Time 1us: 7.769% 3us: 3.836% 10us: 2.943% 30us: 1.865% 100us: 1.798%
5 million/second
Took 1.01 seconds to write and read 5,000,000 entries
Time 1us: 37.039% 3us: 27.926% 10us: 23.635% 30us: 21% 100us: 21%
How does it perform
With one thread writing and another reading
Chronicle 2.0.1
-Xmx32m
Tiny
4 B
Small
16 B
Medium
64 B
Large
256 B
tmpfs 77 M/s 57 M/s 23 M/s 6.6 M/s
ext4 65 M/s 35 M/s 12 M/s 3.2 M/s
Java Affinity
●
Designed to help reduce jitter in your system.
●
Can reduce the amount of jitter if ~50 micro-seconds is
important to you.
●
Only really useful for isolated cpus
●
Understands the CPU layout so you can be declaritive
about your requirement.
Java Lang
●
Suports allocation and deallocation of 64-bit sized off heap
memory regions
●
Thread safe data structures.
●
Fast low level serialization and deserialization
●
Wraps Unsafe to make it safer to use, without losing to
much performance.
Java Runtime Compiler
●
Wraps the Compiler API so you can compile in memory
from a String and have the class loaded
●
Supports writing the text to a directory which in debug
mode allowing you to step into generated code.
●
Generate Java code is slower but easier to read/debug
than generated byte code
●
Dependency injection from Java is easier to debug and
profile than XML
Higher level interface
Instead of serializing raw messages, you can abstract this
functionality with asynchonous interfaces.
You have one or more interfaces which describe all the messages
into the system and all the messages out of the system.
You can test the processing engine without any queuing/transport
layers.
An example
An interface for messages
inbound.
An interface for messages
outbound.
All messages via persisted
IPC.
Is there a higher level API?
The interfaces look like this
public interface Gw2PeEvents {
public void small(MetaData metaData, SmallCommand command);
}
public interface Pe2GwEvents {
public void report(MetaData metaData, SmallReport smallReport);
}
Is there a higher level API?
The processing engine
class PEEvents implements Gw2PeEvents {
private final Pe2GwWriter pe2GwWriter;
private final SmallReport smallReport = new SmallReport();
public PEEvents(Pe2GwWriter pe2GwWriter) {
this.pe2GwWriter = pe2GwWriter;
}
@Override
public void small(MetaData metaData, SmallCommand command) {
smallReport.orderOkay(command.clientOrderId);
pe2GwWriter.report(metaData, smallReport);
}
}
Demo
An interface for messages
inbound.
An interface for messages
outbound.
All messages via persisted
IPC.
How does it perform?
On this laptop
[GC 15925K->5838K(120320K), 0.0132370 secs]
[Full GC 5838K->5755K(120320K), 0.0521970 secs]
Started
processed 0
processed 1000000
Processed 2000000
… deleted …
processed 9000000
processed 10000000
Received 10000000
Processed 10,000,000 events in and out in 20.2 seconds
The latency distribution was 0.6, 0.7/2.7, 5/26 (611) us for the
50, 90/99, 99.9/99.99 %tile, (worst)
On an i7 desktop
Processed 10,000,000 events in and out in 20.0 seconds
The latency distribution was 0.3, 0.3/1.6, 2/12 (77) us for the
50, 90/99, 99.9/99.99 %tile, (worst)
Q & A
Blog: Vanilla Java
Libraries: OpenHFT
peter.lawrey@higherfrequencytrading.com

More Related Content

PPTX
Low latency microservices in java QCon New York 2016
ODP
Low level java programming
PPT
GC free coding in @Java presented @Geecon
PDF
[OpenStack Days Korea 2016] Track1 - All flash CEPH 구성 및 최적화
PPT
High Frequency Trading and NoSQL database
PPT
Open HFT libraries in @Java
PPTX
Low latency in java 8 v5
PPTX
Modeling Data and Queries for Wide Column NoSQL
Low latency microservices in java QCon New York 2016
Low level java programming
GC free coding in @Java presented @Geecon
[OpenStack Days Korea 2016] Track1 - All flash CEPH 구성 및 최적화
High Frequency Trading and NoSQL database
Open HFT libraries in @Java
Low latency in java 8 v5
Modeling Data and Queries for Wide Column NoSQL

What's hot (20)

PDF
Shell scripting
PPT
system calls, single user, multiuser os ...
PDF
C* Summit 2013: How Not to Use Cassandra by Axel Liljencrantz
KEY
Redis overview for Software Architecture Forum
PDF
AWS Serverless Introduction (Lambda)
PPTX
Introduction to Apache Spark
PPTX
Consistent hashing
PDF
Chapter 1 - introduction - parallel computing
ODP
MySQL HA with PaceMaker
PPTX
RocksDB detail
PDF
Under the Hood of a Shard-per-Core Database Architecture
PPTX
A topology of memory leaks on the JVM
PPTX
Developing Scylla Applications: Practical Tips
PDF
RocksDB Performance and Reliability Practices
PPTX
Introduction to Redis
PPTX
Introduction to NoSQL Databases
PDF
PPTX
Cassandra vs. ScyllaDB: Evolutionary Differences
PPT
Teradata vs-exadata
PPTX
An Overview of Apache Cassandra
Shell scripting
system calls, single user, multiuser os ...
C* Summit 2013: How Not to Use Cassandra by Axel Liljencrantz
Redis overview for Software Architecture Forum
AWS Serverless Introduction (Lambda)
Introduction to Apache Spark
Consistent hashing
Chapter 1 - introduction - parallel computing
MySQL HA with PaceMaker
RocksDB detail
Under the Hood of a Shard-per-Core Database Architecture
A topology of memory leaks on the JVM
Developing Scylla Applications: Practical Tips
RocksDB Performance and Reliability Practices
Introduction to Redis
Introduction to NoSQL Databases
Cassandra vs. ScyllaDB: Evolutionary Differences
Teradata vs-exadata
An Overview of Apache Cassandra
Ad

Similar to Writing and testing high frequency trading engines in java (20)

PPTX
Low latency in java 8 by Peter Lawrey
PPTX
Microservices for performance - GOTO Chicago 2016
PDF
Building a Database for the End of the World
ODP
MySQL 5.7 clustering: The developer perspective
PPTX
Cassandra in Operation
PPTX
Determinism in finance
PDF
Beyond the RTOS: A Better Way to Design Real-Time Embedded Software
ODP
Realtime
PPTX
Deterministic behaviour and performance in trading systems
PDF
Beyond the RTOS: A Better Way to Design Real-Time Embedded Software
ODP
Blades for HPTC
PPTX
Transactional Memory
PDF
C* Summit 2013: Time is Money Jake Luciani and Carl Yeksigian
PPT
Clustering van IT-componenten
PPTX
Redis Clustering Advanced___31Mar2025.pptx
PPTX
Graylog Engineering - Design Your Architecture
PPTX
Natural Laws of Software Performance
PPT
Scalable Apache for Beginners
PPT
Optimizing your java applications for multi core hardware
PPTX
Building Cloud Ready Apps
Low latency in java 8 by Peter Lawrey
Microservices for performance - GOTO Chicago 2016
Building a Database for the End of the World
MySQL 5.7 clustering: The developer perspective
Cassandra in Operation
Determinism in finance
Beyond the RTOS: A Better Way to Design Real-Time Embedded Software
Realtime
Deterministic behaviour and performance in trading systems
Beyond the RTOS: A Better Way to Design Real-Time Embedded Software
Blades for HPTC
Transactional Memory
C* Summit 2013: Time is Money Jake Luciani and Carl Yeksigian
Clustering van IT-componenten
Redis Clustering Advanced___31Mar2025.pptx
Graylog Engineering - Design Your Architecture
Natural Laws of Software Performance
Scalable Apache for Beginners
Optimizing your java applications for multi core hardware
Building Cloud Ready Apps
Ad

More from Peter Lawrey (12)

PPTX
Chronicle accelerate building a digital currency
PPTX
Chronicle Accelerate Crypto Investor conference
PPTX
Low latency for high throughput
PPTX
Legacy lambda code
PPTX
Responding rapidly when you have 100+ GB data sets in Java
PPT
Reactive programming with examples
PPT
Streams and lambdas the good, the bad and the ugly
PPT
Advanced off heap ipc
PPT
Introduction to OpenHFT for Melbourne Java Users Group
PPT
Thread Safe Interprocess Shared Memory in Java (in 7 mins)
PPT
Using BigDecimal and double
PPT
Introduction to chronicle (low latency persistence)
Chronicle accelerate building a digital currency
Chronicle Accelerate Crypto Investor conference
Low latency for high throughput
Legacy lambda code
Responding rapidly when you have 100+ GB data sets in Java
Reactive programming with examples
Streams and lambdas the good, the bad and the ugly
Advanced off heap ipc
Introduction to OpenHFT for Melbourne Java Users Group
Thread Safe Interprocess Shared Memory in Java (in 7 mins)
Using BigDecimal and double
Introduction to chronicle (low latency persistence)

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
How UI/UX Design Impacts User Retention in Mobile Apps.pdf
PDF
Architecting across the Boundaries of two Complex Domains - Healthcare & Tech...
PPT
“AI and Expert System Decision Support & Business Intelligence Systems”
PDF
Per capita expenditure prediction using model stacking based on satellite ima...
PDF
Unlocking AI with Model Context Protocol (MCP)
PDF
The Rise and Fall of 3GPP – Time for a Sabbatical?
PPTX
Cloud computing and distributed systems.
PDF
Empathic Computing: Creating Shared Understanding
PDF
Chapter 3 Spatial Domain Image Processing.pdf
PDF
Electronic commerce courselecture one. Pdf
PPTX
ACSFv1EN-58255 AWS Academy Cloud Security Foundations.pptx
PDF
Building Integrated photovoltaic BIPV_UPV.pdf
PDF
KodekX | Application Modernization Development
PDF
MIND Revenue Release Quarter 2 2025 Press Release
PPTX
KOM of Painting work and Equipment Insulation REV00 update 25-dec.pptx
PDF
Spectral efficient network and resource selection model in 5G networks
PDF
cuic standard and advanced reporting.pdf
PDF
Mobile App Security Testing_ A Comprehensive Guide.pdf
PDF
Dropbox Q2 2025 Financial Results & Investor Presentation
PDF
Network Security Unit 5.pdf for BCA BBA.
How UI/UX Design Impacts User Retention in Mobile Apps.pdf
Architecting across the Boundaries of two Complex Domains - Healthcare & Tech...
“AI and Expert System Decision Support & Business Intelligence Systems”
Per capita expenditure prediction using model stacking based on satellite ima...
Unlocking AI with Model Context Protocol (MCP)
The Rise and Fall of 3GPP – Time for a Sabbatical?
Cloud computing and distributed systems.
Empathic Computing: Creating Shared Understanding
Chapter 3 Spatial Domain Image Processing.pdf
Electronic commerce courselecture one. Pdf
ACSFv1EN-58255 AWS Academy Cloud Security Foundations.pptx
Building Integrated photovoltaic BIPV_UPV.pdf
KodekX | Application Modernization Development
MIND Revenue Release Quarter 2 2025 Press Release
KOM of Painting work and Equipment Insulation REV00 update 25-dec.pptx
Spectral efficient network and resource selection model in 5G networks
cuic standard and advanced reporting.pdf
Mobile App Security Testing_ A Comprehensive Guide.pdf
Dropbox Q2 2025 Financial Results & Investor Presentation
Network Security Unit 5.pdf for BCA BBA.

Writing and testing high frequency trading engines in java

  • 1. Writing and Testing Higher Frequency Trading Engine Peter Lawrey Higher Frequency Trading Ltd
  • 2. Who am I? Australian living in UK. Father of three 15, 9 and 6 “Vanilla Java” blog gets 120K page views per month. 3rd for Java on StackOverflow. Six years designing, developing and supporting HFT systems in Java for hedge funds, trading houses and investment banks. Principal Consultant for Higher Frequency Trading Ltd.
  • 3. Event driven determinism Critical operations are modelled as a series of asynchronous events Producer is not slowed by the consumer Can be recorded for deterministic testing and monitoring Can known the state for the cirtical system without having to ask it.
  • 4. Transparency and Understanding Horizontal scalability is valueable for high throughput. For low latency, you need simplicity. The less the system has to do the less time it takes.
  • 5. Productivity For many systems, a key driver is; how easy is it to add new features. For low latency, a key driver is; how easy is it to take out redundant operations from the critical path.
  • 6. Layering Traditional design encourages layering to deal with one concept at a time. A driver is to hide from the developer what the lower layers are really doing. In low latency, you need to understand what critical code is doing, and often combine layers to minimise the work done. This is more challenging for developers to deal with.
  • 7. Taming your system Ultra low GC, ideally not while trading. Busy waiting isolated critical threads. Giving up the CPU slows your program by 2-5x. Lock free coding. While locks are typically cheap, they make very bad outliers. Direct access to memory for critical structures. You can control the layout and minimise garbage.
  • 8. Latency profile In a complex system, the latency increases sharply as you approach the worst latencies.
  • 9. Latency In a typical system, the worst 0.1% latency can be ten times the typical latency, but is often much more. This means your application needs to be able to track these outliers and profile them. This is something most existing tools won't do for you. You need to build these into your system so you can monitor production.
  • 10. What does a low GC system look like? Typical tick to trade latency of 60 micros external to the box Logged Eden space usage every 5 minutes. Full GC every morning at 5 AM.
  • 11. Low level Java Java the language is suitable for low latency You can use natural Java for non critical code. This should be the majrity of your code For critical sections you need a subset of Java and the libraires which are suitable for low latency. Low level Java and natural Java integrate very easily, unlike other low level languages.
  • 12. Latency reporting ● Look at the percentiles, typical, 90%, 99%, 99.9% and worse in sample. ● You should try to minimise the 99% or 99.9%. You should look at the worst latencies for acceptability.
  • 13. Latency and throughput ● There are periodic disturbances in your system. This means low throughput sees all of these. ● In high throughput systems, the delays not only impact one event, but many events, possibly thousands. ● Test realistic throughputs for your systems, as well as stress tests.
  • 14. Why ultra low garbage ● When a program accesses L1 cache is about 3x faster than using L2. L2 is 4 to 7 times faster than accessing L3. L3 is shared between cores. One thread running in L1 cache can be faster than using all your CPUs at once using L3 cache. ● You L1 cache is 32 KB, so if you are creating 32 MB/s of garbage you are filling your L1 cache with garbage every milli-second.
  • 15. Recycling is good Recycling mutable objects works best if; They replace short or medium lived immutable objects. The lifecycle is easy to reason about. Data structure is simple and doesn't change significantly. These can help eliminate, not just reduce GCs.
  • 16. Avoid the kernel The kernel can be the biggest source of delays in your system. It can be avoided by ● Kernel bypass network adapters ● Isolating busy waiting CPUs ● Memory mapped files for storage.
  • 17. Avoid the kernel Binding critical, busy waiting threads to isolated CPUs can make a big difference to jitter. Count of interrupts per hour by length.
  • 18. Lock free coding Minimising the use of lock allows thread to perform more consistently.  More complex to test.  Useful in ultra low latency context  Will scale better.
  • 19. Faster math  Use double with rounding or long instead of BigDecimal ~100x faster and no garbage  Use long instead of Date or Calendar  Use sentinal values such as 0, NaN, MIN_VALUE or MAX_VALUE instead of nullable references.  Use Trove for collections with primitives.
  • 20. Low latency libraries Light weight as possible The essence of what you need and no more Designed to make full use of your hardware Performance characteristics is a key requirement.
  • 21. OpenHFT project ● Thread Affinity binding OpenHFT/Java-Thread-Affinity ● Low latency persistence and IPC OpenHFT/Java-Chronicle ● Data structures in off heap memory OpenHFT/Java-Lang ● Runtime Compiler and loader OpenHFT/Java-Runtime-Compiler Apache 2.0 open source.
  • 22. Java Chronicle ● Designed to allow you to log everything. Esp tracing timestamps for profiling. ● Typical IPC latency is less than one micro-second for small messages. And less than 10 micro-seconds for large messages. ● Support reading/writing text and binary.
  • 23. Java Chronicle performance ● Sustained throughput limited by bandwidth of disk subsystem. ● Burst throughput can be 1 to 3 GB per second depending on your hardware ● Latencies for loads up to 100K events per second stable for good hardware (ok on a laptop) ● Latencies for loads over one million per second, magnify any jitter in your system or application.
  • 24. Java Chronicle Example Writing text int count = 10 * 1000 * 1000; for (ExcerptAppender e = chronicle.createAppender(); e.index() < count; ) { e.startExcerpt(100); e.appendDateTimeMillis(System.currentTimeMillis()); e.append(", id=").append(e.index()); e.append(", name=lyj").append(e.index()); e.finish(); } Writes 10 million messages in 1.7 seconds on this laptop
  • 25. Java Chronicle Example Writing binary ExcerptAppender excerpt = ic.createAppender(); long next = System.nanoTime(); for (int i = 1; i <= runs; i++) { double v = random.nextDouble(); excerpt.startExcerpt(25); excerpt.writeUnsignedByte('M'); // message type excerpt.writeLong(next); // write time stamp excerpt.writeLong(0L); // read time stamp excerpt.writeDouble(v); excerpt.finish(); next += 1e9 / rate; while (System.nanoTime() < next) ; }
  • 26. Java Chronicle Example Reading binary ExcerptTailer excerpt = ic.createTailer(); for (int i = 1; i <= runs; i++) { while (!excerpt.nextIndex()) { // busy wait } char ch = (char) excerpt.readUnsignedByte(); long writeTS = excerpt.readLong(); excerpt.writeLong(System.nanoTime()); double d = excerpt.readDouble(); }
  • 27. Java Chronicle Latencies 500K/second Took 10.11 seconds to write and read 5,000,000 entries Time 1us: 1.541% 3us: 0.378% 10us: 0.218% 30us: 0.008% 100us: 0.002% 1 million/second Took 5.01 seconds to write and read 5,000,000 entries Time 1us: 3.064% 3us: 0.996% 10us: 0.625% 30us: 0.147% 100us: 0.105% 2 million/second Took 2.51 seconds to write and read 5,000,000 entries Time 1us: 7.769% 3us: 3.836% 10us: 2.943% 30us: 1.865% 100us: 1.798% 5 million/second Took 1.01 seconds to write and read 5,000,000 entries Time 1us: 37.039% 3us: 27.926% 10us: 23.635% 30us: 21% 100us: 21%
  • 28. How does it perform With one thread writing and another reading Chronicle 2.0.1 -Xmx32m Tiny 4 B Small 16 B Medium 64 B Large 256 B tmpfs 77 M/s 57 M/s 23 M/s 6.6 M/s ext4 65 M/s 35 M/s 12 M/s 3.2 M/s
  • 29. Java Affinity ● Designed to help reduce jitter in your system. ● Can reduce the amount of jitter if ~50 micro-seconds is important to you. ● Only really useful for isolated cpus ● Understands the CPU layout so you can be declaritive about your requirement.
  • 30. Java Lang ● Suports allocation and deallocation of 64-bit sized off heap memory regions ● Thread safe data structures. ● Fast low level serialization and deserialization ● Wraps Unsafe to make it safer to use, without losing to much performance.
  • 31. Java Runtime Compiler ● Wraps the Compiler API so you can compile in memory from a String and have the class loaded ● Supports writing the text to a directory which in debug mode allowing you to step into generated code. ● Generate Java code is slower but easier to read/debug than generated byte code ● Dependency injection from Java is easier to debug and profile than XML
  • 32. Higher level interface Instead of serializing raw messages, you can abstract this functionality with asynchonous interfaces. You have one or more interfaces which describe all the messages into the system and all the messages out of the system. You can test the processing engine without any queuing/transport layers.
  • 33. An example An interface for messages inbound. An interface for messages outbound. All messages via persisted IPC.
  • 34. Is there a higher level API? The interfaces look like this public interface Gw2PeEvents { public void small(MetaData metaData, SmallCommand command); } public interface Pe2GwEvents { public void report(MetaData metaData, SmallReport smallReport); }
  • 35. Is there a higher level API? The processing engine class PEEvents implements Gw2PeEvents { private final Pe2GwWriter pe2GwWriter; private final SmallReport smallReport = new SmallReport(); public PEEvents(Pe2GwWriter pe2GwWriter) { this.pe2GwWriter = pe2GwWriter; } @Override public void small(MetaData metaData, SmallCommand command) { smallReport.orderOkay(command.clientOrderId); pe2GwWriter.report(metaData, smallReport); } }
  • 36. Demo An interface for messages inbound. An interface for messages outbound. All messages via persisted IPC.
  • 37. How does it perform? On this laptop [GC 15925K->5838K(120320K), 0.0132370 secs] [Full GC 5838K->5755K(120320K), 0.0521970 secs] Started processed 0 processed 1000000 Processed 2000000 … deleted … processed 9000000 processed 10000000 Received 10000000 Processed 10,000,000 events in and out in 20.2 seconds The latency distribution was 0.6, 0.7/2.7, 5/26 (611) us for the 50, 90/99, 99.9/99.99 %tile, (worst) On an i7 desktop Processed 10,000,000 events in and out in 20.0 seconds The latency distribution was 0.3, 0.3/1.6, 2/12 (77) us for the 50, 90/99, 99.9/99.99 %tile, (worst)
  • 38. Q & A Blog: Vanilla Java Libraries: OpenHFT peter.lawrey@higherfrequencytrading.com