JAXB works fine for marshalling and unmarshalling. Because it can be slow to create marshallers and unmarshallers, using pools for them (based on contextPath) seems a reasonable approach. However, it appears that Unmarshaller holds onto objects after it is done. If it was passed a very large document, then it may hold onto a lot of memory if that particular Unmarshaller isn't reused for a while. Is there a way to cause JAXB to release the objects it processed?
JAXBContext jaxBContext = JAXBContext.newInstance(contextPath, loader);
Unmarshaller unMarshaller = jaxBContext.createUnmarshaller();
...
responseObject = unmarshaller.unmarshal( new StreamSource( new StringReader( xml ) ) );
There are examples online of pooling approaches like this (e.g. one at apache: JAXBUtils.java). Most don't seem to do anything special when they put an Unmarshaller back in the pool.
Update: This appears to be a bug in JAXB: Post-Unmarshall Object Retention. The similar bug in Marshall was fixed earlier so it's in recent versions of JAXB. So now I'm wondering (a) if there's a workaround for this issue with Unmarshaller (b) which version of Java6 this fix is/will be included in.