I found claude and GPT very helpful on this, because java have a very sofisticated monitoring harness. Just ask the agent to connect to the running application (on kubernetes or whatever) on prod and do a java flight recording then analyze allocations.
I managed to improve some applications of ours from several garbage collections per second to several minutes between collections. That _really_ improves p99.
How about not using Java? Then you can have low latency.
Average go, rust, c++ and c will outperform amazing java programs, and the former will also be way way more easy to run, troubleshoot, interpret logs from.
I need a UI which runs well on Windows, MacOS, and Linux, without having to build three different ones. Swing is still easily the best, most consistent, and most native-feeling cross-platform environment. It's much better than QT and GTK in most respects. And Java also runs elegantly on a little platform you may know as Android. I have high hopes for go and rust. But until they have mature UIs, they're out (for me).
C and C++ are dangerous languages filled with security failings and footguns, and no modern app should be written in them.
It's been my experience that well-written low-level Java code runs at about 75% the speed of good C code. (Of course lazy coders write in cushy Java which is much slower). When written efficiently, Java's biggest slowdown lies in array access (C and C++ array access is fast because it is very, very unsafe). But Java makes up for this in having a GC which will coalesce related objects into the same page and so take advantage of cache coherency effects in ways malloc and free cannot possibly do. I have some allocation-heavy algorithms in Java which are, as a result, significantly faster than well-written equivalents in C.
I found claude and GPT very helpful on this, because java have a very sofisticated monitoring harness. Just ask the agent to connect to the running application (on kubernetes or whatever) on prod and do a java flight recording then analyze allocations.
I managed to improve some applications of ours from several garbage collections per second to several minutes between collections. That _really_ improves p99.
That sounds like a great idea. What kind of prompt do you use?
I get that blog posts often advertise a company's products, but this one had absolutely zero content other than advertising.
Even C requires discipline to write low latency code, if you think otherwise, you never used a profiler.
page doesn't load "En attente de la réponse de chronicle.software."
+ low latency anything requires discipline. if you lose 5ms you can't get it back.
How about not using Java? Then you can have low latency.
Average go, rust, c++ and c will outperform amazing java programs, and the former will also be way way more easy to run, troubleshoot, interpret logs from.
Java is usch garbage in every stack.
I need a UI which runs well on Windows, MacOS, and Linux, without having to build three different ones. Swing is still easily the best, most consistent, and most native-feeling cross-platform environment. It's much better than QT and GTK in most respects. And Java also runs elegantly on a little platform you may know as Android. I have high hopes for go and rust. But until they have mature UIs, they're out (for me).
C and C++ are dangerous languages filled with security failings and footguns, and no modern app should be written in them.
It's been my experience that well-written low-level Java code runs at about 75% the speed of good C code. (Of course lazy coders write in cushy Java which is much slower). When written efficiently, Java's biggest slowdown lies in array access (C and C++ array access is fast because it is very, very unsafe). But Java makes up for this in having a GC which will coalesce related objects into the same page and so take advantage of cache coherency effects in ways malloc and free cannot possibly do. I have some allocation-heavy algorithms in Java which are, as a result, significantly faster than well-written equivalents in C.
It is a matter of skill.
Rust? OK.
C++ or go? Then you'll have to take a very closer look, because the java JIT is wonderful. A masterpiece of several hands, actually.
yes, until you need debugging.