How to resolve poor nHibernate collection initiali

2019-02-15 15:14发布

nHibernate3; retrieving 4xxx records out of an EAV data schema. When nHibernate, or .NET, goes to initialize those collections for the first time, we're seeing a severe penalty. Subsequent calls appear to perform more efficiently. Running the same queries in SQL Server Management Studio result in expected quick return times.

Using Fluent and runtime mapping instead of .hbm.xml; curious if serialized mapping would help here?

nHibernate Profiler and log4net logging didn't seem to give me much to go on. A total of something like 140,000 entities are hydrated in this process.

Attached a screenshot of my dotTrace performance tracing that shows the collection initialization penalty: dotTrace of slow nHibernate collection initialization

Have tried join and eager fetchtypes, with no apparent results, but am not 100% certain I implemented those correctly -- does just the parent need to be so designated, or do the children tables also need to be flagged?

var products = ((HandleSession)_handleSession).Session.CreateCriteria(typeof(Product))
                    .SetFetchMode("Product", FetchMode.Eager)
                    .List<Product>()
                    .AsEnumerable();

With reflection optimizer enabled (I think) via web.config: With reflection optimizer enabled

This is where most time is spent:

return new ProductList(products.Select(p => p.ToProductContract()));

Which is simply an extension method doing this:

public static ProductContract ToProductContract(this Product product)
        {
            return new ProductContract
                       {
                           Name = product.ProductName,
                           ProductTypeName = product.ProductType.ProductTypeName,
                           UpdateTimeStamp = product.UpdateDateTime,
                           ProductNumber = product.ProductNumber,
                           Attributes = product.ProductAttributes.ToCommonAttribute().ToList(),
                           GroupCategories = product.ProductGroups.ToGroupCategory().ToList(),
                           PublicUniqueId = product.PublicUniqueId
                       };
        }

mappings:

internal class ProductMapping : ClassMap<Product>
    {
        private const string _iscurrentindicator = "IsCurrentIndicator=1";

        public ProductMapping()
        {
            Table("Product");
            Id(Reveal.Member<Product>("ProductId")).GeneratedBy.Identity().Column("ProductID");
            Map(x => x.ProductNumber).Column("ProductNumber").Not.Nullable();
            Map(x => x.ProductName).Column("ProductName").Not.Nullable();
            Map(x => x.InsertDateTime).Column("InsertedDateTime").Nullable().ReadOnly();
            Map(x => x.UpdateDateTime).Column("UpdatedDateTime").Nullable();
            Map(x => x.PublicUniqueId).Column("ProductGUID").Generated.Insert();

            References(x => x.ProductType).Column("ProductTypeId").Not.Nullable();
            HasMany(x => x.ProductAttributes)
                .KeyColumn("ProductId")
                .Inverse()
                .Fetch
                .Subselect()
                .Where(_iscurrentindicator)
                .Cascade
                .SaveUpdate();

            HasMany(x => x.ProductGroups).KeyColumn("ProductId").Fetch.Subselect().Where(_iscurrentindicator);
            DynamicUpdate();
            DynamicInsert();
            BatchSize(500);
        }
    }

internal class ProductGroupMapping : ClassMap<ProductGroup>
    {
        public ProductGroupMapping()
        {
            Table("ProductGroup");
            Id(x => x.ProductGroupId).Column("ProductGroupId").GeneratedBy.Identity();
            References(x => x.Product).Column("ProductId").Not.Nullable();
            References(x => x.Group).Column("GroupId").Not.Nullable();
            //Where("IsCurrentIndicator=1");
        }
    }

internal class ProductAttributeMapping : ClassMap<ProductAttribute>
    {
        public ProductAttributeMapping()
        {
            Table("ProductAttribute");
            LazyLoad();
            Id(x => x.ProductAttributeId).GeneratedBy.Identity().Column("ProductAttributeID");
            References(x => x.Product).Column("ProductID").Not.Nullable();
            References(x => x.Attribute).Column("AttributeID").Not.Nullable().Fetch.Join();
            Map(x => x.PositionNumber).Column("PositionNumber").Nullable();
            Map(x => x.ValueText).Column("ValueText").Nullable();
            Map(x => x.ValueBinary).Column("ValueBinary").Nullable();

            Component(x => x.OperationalAuditHistory, m =>
                        {
                            Table("ProductAttribute");
                            m.Map(x => x.ExpirationDateTime).Column("ExpirationDateTime").Nullable();
                            m.Map(x => x.IsCurrent).Column("IsCurrentIndicator").Not.Nullable();
                            m.Map(x => x.OperationCode).Column("OperationCode").Nullable();
                            m.Map(x => x.OperationDateTime).Column("OperationDateTime").Nullable();
                            m.Map(x => x.OperationSystemName).Column("OperationSystemName").Nullable();
                            m.Map(x => x.OperationUserName).Column("OperationUserName").Nullable();
                            m.Map(x => x.LastUserPriority).Column("LastUserPriority").Nullable();
                        });

            DynamicInsert();
            BatchSize(50);
        }
    }

Unfortunately with .Future I still appear to get similar results. Here's a new trace; I've switched to Release, and x64 for the key projects, for the moment, so the times are lower, but the proportions are still pretty much the same; as well as with .Eager:

var products = ((HandleSession) _handleSession).Session.CreateCriteria(typeof (Product))
                    .SetFetchMode("ProductAttribute", FetchMode.Join)
                    .SetFetchMode("ProductGroup", FetchMode.Join)
                    .SetFetchMode("ProductType", FetchMode.Join)
                    .Future<Product>()
                    .AsEnumerable();

dotTrace - Release mode, targeting x64, with .Future()

Generated SQL with .Eager and .Future in place:

SELECT this_.ProductID as ProductID0_1_, this_.ProductNumber as ProductN2_0_1_, this_.ProductName as ProductN3_0_1_, this_.InsertedDateTime as Inserted4_0_1_, this_.UpdatedDateTime as UpdatedD5_0_1_, this_.ProductGUID as ProductG6_0_1_, this_.ProductTypeId as ProductT7_0_1_, producttyp2_.ProductTypeID as ProductT1_6_0_, producttyp2_.ProductTypeName as ProductT2_6_0_ FROM Product this_ inner join ProductType producttyp2_ on this_.ProductTypeId=producttyp2_.ProductTypeID;

SELECT productatt0_.ProductId as ProductId2_, productatt0_.ProductAttributeID as ProductA1_2_, productatt0_.ProductAttributeID as ProductA1_2_1_, productatt0_.PositionNumber as Position2_2_1_, productatt0_.ValueText as ValueText2_1_, productatt0_.ValueBinary as ValueBin4_2_1_, productatt0_.ProductID as ProductID2_1_, productatt0_.AttributeID as Attribut6_2_1_, productatt0_.ExpirationDateTime as Expirati7_2_1_, productatt0_.IsCurrentIndicator as IsCurren8_2_1_, productatt0_.OperationCode as Operatio9_2_1_, productatt0_.OperationDateTime as Operati10_2_1_, productatt0_.OperationSystemName as Operati11_2_1_, productatt0_.OperationUserName as Operati12_2_1_, productatt0_.LastUserPriority as LastUse13_2_1_, attribute1_.AttributeId as Attribut1_1_0_, attribute1_.AttributeName as Attribut2_1_0_, attribute1_.DisplayName as DisplayN3_1_0_, attribute1_.DataTypeName as DataType4_1_0_, attribute1_.ConstraintText as Constrai5_1_0_, attribute1_.ConstraintMin as Constrai6_1_0_, attribute1_.ConstraintMax as Constrai7_1_0_, attribute1_.ValuesMin as ValuesMin1_0_, attribute1_.ValuesMax as ValuesMax1_0_, attribute1_.Precision as Precision1_0_ FROM ProductAttribute productatt0_ inner join Attribute attribute1_ on productatt0_.AttributeID=attribute1_.AttributeId WHERE (productatt0_.IsCurrentIndicator=1) and productatt0_.ProductId in (select this_.ProductID FROM Product this_ inner join ProductType producttyp2_ on this_.ProductTypeId=producttyp2_.ProductTypeID)

SELECT productgro0_.ProductId as ProductId1_, productgro0_.ProductGroupId as ProductG1_1_, productgro0_.ProductGroupId as ProductG1_3_0_, productgro0_.ProductId as ProductId3_0_, productgro0_.GroupId as GroupId3_0_ FROM ProductGroup productgro0_ WHERE (productgro0_.IsCurrentIndicator=1) and productgro0_.ProductId in (select this_.ProductID FROM Product this_ inner join ProductType producttyp2_ on this_.ProductTypeId=producttyp2_.ProductTypeID)

3条回答
时光不老,我们不散
2楼-- · 2019-02-15 15:38

One option is to enable batch-size on your collections. I assume those are lazy, and with batch size enabled, it would try to fetch collections for multiple entities in a single roundtrip.

It doesn't make a difference if you fetch 1 entity with one collection, but can make a huge difference if you select 1000 entities which all has one collection. Using a batch-size of 1000 would result in 2 queries instead of 1001.

Tried to find some documentation, but only found this example:

nhibernate alternates batch size

Using join strategies in your case would result in gigantic resultsets so that is not a good option. A better option would be to use FetchMode.Select which would explicitly force your collections to be loaded in a subsequent roundtrip.

Another thing that could improve performance is setting:

Session.FlushMode = FlushMode.Never;

Which disable automatic flushing of your scope. This is useful if all you actually do is reading data, not modifying it. However, you would see calls to IsDirty or any other check for dirty objects in your callstack.

查看更多
别忘想泡老子
3楼-- · 2019-02-15 15:41

If you are using this session only for reporting, you have to use Stateless Sessions: http://nhforge.org/blogs/nhibernate/archive/2008/10/30/bulk-data-operations-with-nhibernate-s-stateless-sessions.aspx

查看更多
小情绪 Triste *
4楼-- · 2019-02-15 15:46

1) A serialized mapping will only help to reduce the time required to build the SessionFactory. If the above query is not the first access to the database, it will not accomplish anything in that regard.

2) Set FetchMode needs to be applied to the children, like this:

var products = ((HandleSession)_handleSession).Session.CreateCriteria(typeof(Product))
                .SetFetchMode("ProductChildren", FetchMode.Eager)
                .List<Product>()
                .AsEnumerable();

3) This looks like a N+1 problem, if I interpret the methods in the Screenshots correctly. Are you transforming the Products in your query result to a list of ProductDTOs? If so, it seems as if the child collections are lazy loaded from the DB within a loop.

Edit:

In order to combat the N+1 Select, we will have to tell NHibernate to load everything beforehand, preferably with Futures. Here is a potential solution that basically fetches all your data from the db with a handful of Select-statements. I did not include any Where-conditions. Those you would have to add accordingly.

// any where-condition will have to be applied here and in the subsequent queries
var products = session.QueryOver<Product>()
    .Future();

var products2 = session.QueryOver<Product>()
    .Fetch(p => p.ProductType).Eager
    .Future();

var products3 = session.QueryOver<Product>()
    .Fetch(p => p.ProductAttributes).Eager
    .Future();

var products4 = session.QueryOver<Product>()
    .Fetch(p => p.ProductGroups).Eager
    .Future();

// Here we execute all of the above queries in one roundtrip.
// Since we already have all the data we could possibly want, there is no need
// for a N+1 Select.
return new ProductList(products.Select(p => p.ToProductContract()));
查看更多
登录 后发表回答