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Java 9 High Performance

You're reading from   Java 9 High Performance Practical techniques and best practices for optimizing Java applications through concurrency, reactive programming, and more

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787120785
Length 398 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Nick Samoylov Nick Samoylov
Author Profile Icon Nick Samoylov
Nick Samoylov
Mayur Ramgir Mayur Ramgir
Author Profile Icon Mayur Ramgir
Mayur Ramgir
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Toc

Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

1. Learning Java 9 Underlying Performance Improvements FREE CHAPTER 2. Identifying Performance Bottlenecks 3. Learning How to Troubleshoot Code 4. Learning How to Use Profiling Tools 5. Understanding Garbage Collection and Making Use of It 6. Optimizing Code with Microbenchmarking 7. Speeding Up JSON Generation 8. Tools for Higher Productivity and Faster Application 9. Multithreading and Reactive Programming 10. Microservices 11. Making Use of New APIs to Improve Your Code

In-container deployment

Those who are familiar with Virtual Machine (VM) and not familiar with modern containers (such as Docker, Rocket by CoreOS, VMware Photon, or similar) could get the impression that we were talking about VM while saying that a container could not only contain and execute the contained code, but also to move it to a different location without any change to the contained code. If so, that would be quite an apt assumption. VM does allow all of that, and a modern container can be considered a lightweight VM as it also allows the allocation of resources and provides the feeling of a separate machine. Yet, a container is not a full-blown isolated virtual computer.

The key difference is that the bundle that can be passed around as a VM includes an entire operating system (with the application deployed). So, it is quite possible that a physical server running two...

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