Enterprise Java

Spring request-level memoization

Introduction

Memoization is a method-level caching technique for speeding-up consecutive invocations.

This post will demonstrate how you can achieve request-level repeatable reads for any data source, using Spring AOP only.
 
 
 
 

Spring Caching

Spring offers a very useful caching abstracting, allowing you do decouple the application logic from the caching implementation details.

Spring Caching uses an application-level scope, so for a request-only memoization we need to take a DIY approach.

Request-level Caching

A request-level cache entry life-cycle is always bound to the current request scope. Such cache is very similar to Hibernate Persistence Context that offers session-level repeatable reads.

Repeatable reads are mandatory for preventing lost updates, even for NoSQL solutions.

Step-by-step implementation

First we are going to define a Memoizing marker annotation:

@Target(ElementType.METHOD)
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
public @interface Memoize {
}

This annotation is going to explicitly mark all methods that need to be memoized.

To distinguish different method invocations we are going to encapsulate the method call info into the following object type:

public class InvocationContext {

    public static final String TEMPLATE = "%s.%s(%s)";

    private final Class targetClass;
    private final String targetMethod;
    private final Object[] args;

    public InvocationContext(Class targetClass, String targetMethod, Object[] args) {
        this.targetClass = targetClass;
        this.targetMethod = targetMethod;
        this.args = args;
    }

    public Class getTargetClass() {
        return targetClass;
    }

    public String getTargetMethod() {
        return targetMethod;
    }

    public Object[] getArgs() {
        return args;
    }

    @Override
    public boolean equals(Object that) {
        return EqualsBuilder.reflectionEquals(this, that);
    }

    @Override
    public int hashCode() {
        return HashCodeBuilder.reflectionHashCode(this);
    }

    @Override
    public String toString() {
        return String.format(TEMPLATE, targetClass.getName(), targetMethod, Arrays.toString(args));
    }
}

Few know about the awesomeness of Spring Request/Session bean scopes.

Because we require a request-level memoization scope, we can simplify our design with a Spring request scope that hides the actual HttpSession resolving logic:

@Component
@Scope(proxyMode = ScopedProxyMode.TARGET_CLASS, value = "request")
public class RequestScopeCache {

    public static final Object NONE = new Object();

    private final Map<InvocationContext, Object> cache = new HashMap<InvocationContext, Object>();

    public Object get(InvocationContext invocationContext) {
        return cache.containsKey(invocationContext) ? cache.get(invocationContext) : NONE;
    }

    public void put(InvocationContext methodInvocation, Object result) {
        cache.put(methodInvocation, result);
    }
}

Since a mere annotation means nothing without a runtime processing engine, we must therefore define a Spring Aspect implementing the actual memoization logic:

@Aspect
public class MemoizerAspect {

    @Autowired
    private RequestScopeCache requestScopeCache;

    @Around("@annotation(com.vladmihalcea.cache.Memoize)")
    public Object memoize(ProceedingJoinPoint pjp) throws Throwable {
        InvocationContext invocationContext = new InvocationContext(
                pjp.getSignature().getDeclaringType(),
                pjp.getSignature().getName(),
                pjp.getArgs()
        );
        Object result = requestScopeCache.get(invocationContext);
        if (RequestScopeCache.NONE == result) {
            result = pjp.proceed();
            LOGGER.info("Memoizing result {}, for method invocation: {}", result, invocationContext);
            requestScopeCache.put(invocationContext, result);
        } else {
            LOGGER.info("Using memoized result: {}, for method invocation: {}", result, invocationContext);
        }
        return result;
    }
}

Testing time

Let’s put all this to a test. For simplicity sake, we are going to emulate the request-level scope memoization requirements with a Fibonacci number calculator:

@Component
public class FibonacciServiceImpl implements FibonacciService {

    @Autowired
    private ApplicationContext applicationContext;

    private FibonacciService fibonacciService;

    @PostConstruct
    private void init() {
        fibonacciService = applicationContext.getBean(FibonacciService.class);
    }

    @Memoize
    public int compute(int i) {
        LOGGER.info("Calculate fibonacci for number {}", i);
        if (i == 0 || i == 1)
            return i;
        return fibonacciService.compute(i - 2) + fibonacciService.compute(i - 1);
    }
}

If we are to calculate the 10th Fibonnaci number, we’ll get the following result:

Calculate fibonacci for number 10
Calculate fibonacci for number 8
Calculate fibonacci for number 6
Calculate fibonacci for number 4
Calculate fibonacci for number 2
Calculate fibonacci for number 0
Memoizing result 0, for method invocation: com.vladmihalcea.cache.FibonacciService.compute([0])
Calculate fibonacci for number 1
Memoizing result 1, for method invocation: com.vladmihalcea.cache.FibonacciService.compute([1])
Memoizing result 1, for method invocation: com.vladmihalcea.cache.FibonacciService.compute([2])
Calculate fibonacci for number 3
Using memoized result: 1, for method invocation: com.vladmihalcea.cache.FibonacciService.compute([1])
Using memoized result: 1, for method invocation: com.vladmihalcea.cache.FibonacciService.compute([2])
Memoizing result 2, for method invocation: com.vladmihalcea.cache.FibonacciService.compute([3])
Memoizing result 3, for method invocation: com.vladmihalcea.cache.FibonacciService.compute([4])
Calculate fibonacci for number 5
Using memoized result: 2, for method invocation: com.vladmihalcea.cache.FibonacciService.compute([3])
Using memoized result: 3, for method invocation: com.vladmihalcea.cache.FibonacciService.compute([4])
Memoizing result 5, for method invocation: com.vladmihalcea.cache.FibonacciService.compute([5])
Memoizing result 8, for method invocation: com.vladmihalcea.cache.FibonacciService.compute([6])
Calculate fibonacci for number 7
Using memoized result: 5, for method invocation: com.vladmihalcea.cache.FibonacciService.compute([5])
Using memoized result: 8, for method invocation: com.vladmihalcea.cache.FibonacciService.compute([6])
Memoizing result 13, for method invocation: com.vladmihalcea.cache.FibonacciService.compute([7])
Memoizing result 21, for method invocation: com.vladmihalcea.cache.FibonacciService.compute([8])
Calculate fibonacci for number 9
Using memoized result: 13, for method invocation: com.vladmihalcea.cache.FibonacciService.compute([7])
Using memoized result: 21, for method invocation: com.vladmihalcea.cache.FibonacciService.compute([8])
Memoizing result 34, for method invocation: com.vladmihalcea.cache.FibonacciService.compute([9])
Memoizing result 55, for method invocation: com.vladmihalcea.cache.FibonacciService.compute([10])

Conclusion

Memoization is a cross-cutting concern and Spring AOP allows you to decouple the caching details from the actual application logic code.

Reference: Spring request-level memoization from our JCG partner Vlad Mihalcea at the Vlad Mihalcea’s Blog blog.

Vlad Mihalcea

Vlad Mihalcea is a software architect passionate about software integration, high scalability and concurrency challenges.
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

2 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Netanel
Netanel
10 years ago

This is nice example.
Just one correction: the cache shall be ConcurrentHashMap instead of regular HashMap for cases of multi threading.

Vlad Mihalcea
10 years ago

Thanks for your kind words. This is cache is similar to Hibernate 1st level cache and it’s bound to the life-cycle of a single request.

If it were an application-level cache then a LRU thread-safe cache would be more appropriate, as you suggested.

Back to top button