I'm using grails as a poor man's etl tool for migrating some relatively small db objects from 1 db to the next. I have a controller that reads data from one db (mysql) and writes it into another (pgsql). They use similar domain objects, but not exactly the same ones due to limitations in the multi-datasource support in grails 2.1.X.
Below you'll see my controller and service code:
class GeoETLController {
def zipcodeService
def migrateZipCode() {
def zc = zipcodeService.readMysql();
zipcodeService.writePgSql(zc);
render{["success":true] as JSON}
}
}
And the service:
class ZipcodeService {
def sessionFactory
def propertyInstanceMap = org.codehaus.groovy.grails.plugins.DomainClassGrailsPlugin.PROPERTY_INSTANCE_MAP
def readMysql() {
def zipcode_mysql = Zipcode.list();
println("read, " + zipcode_mysql.size());
return zipcode_mysql;
}
def writePgSql(zipcodes) {
List<PGZipcode> zips = new ArrayList<PGZipcode>();
println("attempting to save, " + zipcodes.size());
def cntr = 0;
zipcodes.each({ Zipcode zipcode ->
cntr++;
def props = zipcode.properties;
PGZipcode zipcode_pg = new PGZipcode(zipcode.properties);
if (!zipcode_pg.save(flush:false)) {
zipcode_pg.errors.each {
println it
}
}
zips.add(zipcode_pg)
if (zips.size() % 100 == 0) {
println("gorm begin" + new Date());
// clear session here.
this.cleanUpGorm();
println("gorm complete" + new Date());
}
});
//Save remaining
this.cleanUpGorm();
println("Final ." + new Date());
}
def cleanUpGorm() {
def session = sessionFactory.currentSession
session.flush()
session.clear()
propertyInstanceMap.get().clear()
}
}
Much of this is taken from my own code and then tweaked to try and get similar performance as seen in http://naleid.com/blog/2009/10/01/batch-import-performance-with-grails-and-mysql/
So, in reviewing my code, whenever zipcode_pg.save() is invoked, an insert statement is created and sent to the database. Good for db consistency, bad for bulk operations.
What is the cause of my instant flushes (note: My datasource and congig groovy files have NO relevant changes)? At this rate, it takes about 7 seconds to process each batch of 100 (14 inserts per second), which when you are dealing with 10,000's of rows, is just a long time...
Appreciate the suggestions.
NOTE: I considered using a pure ETL tool, but with so much domain and service logic already built, figured using grails would be a good reuse of resources. However, didn't imagine this quality of bulk operations