Performance tuning in Liferay – Part 1

Credits: www.Pixabay.com

Expanding on my post here on performance tuning: Post | Feed | LinkedIn

Below are the main points to work on for a performance tuning engagement in Liferay – Part 1.

  • Firstly, we need to find out what is slow: Database, service calls, elastic search, memory is an issue, threads are blocked / waiting, how much memory is a module taking, logs are printing what, etc.
  • Check your configurations as per this post: How to debug Liferay? – Some pointers – Part 1 | LinkedIn
  • Install Glowroot if possible, in central pattern and check following sections in it: slow traces, errors, service calls, threads, heap, instrumentation, configurations and so on for the problem timeframe.
  • You can enable tracing in logs & Glowroot instrumentation on targets. You can also use plugins by Fabian Bouché like for fragment analysis or follow his blogs on www.liferay.dev/blogs for using Glowroot in upgrades.
  • The above will give you hints on what is slow. Especially open the FLAME graphs and threads along with heap dumps to analyze which threads are blocked or waiting, how much memory is allocated to what in slow traces of modules and so on.
  • Then run a load test in simulated environment after checking compatibility matrix to get latest statistics for various scenarios like web content on portlet or in fragment, API calls, integrations, heavy load on Elasticsearch and so on with experimentation on themes.
  • After getting the slow threads and details in flame graphs plus slow traces, if it’s custom code or configuration or DB call or ES which is slow, optimize it like Hikari pool connections or if it’s source code of Liferay, open the GITHUB repo for Liferay portal, check the source code and reach out of Customer Success / Global Services / Support with inferences depending on your engagement in account. Your Customer Success Manager or Sales can guide you on this.
  • GS / CS will work internally in Liferay to get you the best options and / or patches in case they already exist. Many a times this could also have been fixed in a Hot fix or Fix Pack already. Alternatively, configurations could also solve such problems many a times. To check these go to Liferay customer portal and check the changelog for fix packs. You can also refer to Liferay Learn and Help Center for help articles and tutorials.
  • Various areas of performance tuning: Database, HTTP calls, App server, ElasticSearch, Threads, Heap optimization, Caching and more. We will follow up this post with more pointers on performance tuning in Part – 2. A good list of areas is to check in the deployment guide for your version.
  • Thanks to Fabian Bouché David Nebinger and many more at Liferay Global Services / Support / Customer Success and Customer Support / Engineering due to which I am able to compile the above. Above is a compilation of work from many sources internally in Liferay via work with customers & externally which hopefully should help many of Liferay customers and partners. This also serves as a case study on performance tuning.
  • Email me: Neil@HarwaniSystems.in

By Neil Harwani

Interested in movies, music, history, computer science, software, engineering and technology

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