I have a module that is responsible for reading, processing, and writing bytes to disk. The bytes come in over UDP and, after the individual datagrams are assembled, the final byte array that gets processed and written to disk is typically between 200 bytes and 500,000 bytes. Occassionally, there will be byte arrays that, after assembly, are over 500,000 bytes, but these are relatively rare.

I'm currently using the FileOutputStream's write(byte\[\]) method. I'm also experimenting with wrapping the FileOutputStream in a BufferedOutputStream, including using the constructor that accepts a buffer size as a parameter.

It appears that using the BufferedOutputStream is tending toward slightly better performance, but I've only just begun to experiment with different buffer sizes. I only have a limited set of sample data to work with (two data sets from sample runs that I can pipe through my application). Is there a general rule-of-thumb that I might be able to apply to try to calculate the optimal buffer sizes to reduce disk writes and maximize the performance of the disk writing given the information that I know about the data I'm writing?

link|improve this question

feedback

1 Answer

up vote 4 down vote accepted

BufferedOutputStream helps when the writes are smaller than the buffer size e.g. 8 KB. For larger writes it doesn't help nor does it make it much worse. If ALL your writes are larger than the buffer size or you always flush() after every write, I would not use a buffer. However if a good portion of your writes are less that the buffer size and you don't use flush() every time, its worth having.

You may find increasing the buffer size to 32 KB or larger gives you a marginal improvement, or make it worse. YMMV


You might find the code for BufferedOutputStream.write useful

/**
 * Writes <code>len</code> bytes from the specified byte array
 * starting at offset <code>off</code> to this buffered output stream.
 *
 * <p> Ordinarily this method stores bytes from the given array into this
 * stream's buffer, flushing the buffer to the underlying output stream as
 * needed.  If the requested length is at least as large as this stream's
 * buffer, however, then this method will flush the buffer and write the
 * bytes directly to the underlying output stream.  Thus redundant
 * <code>BufferedOutputStream</code>s will not copy data unnecessarily.
 *
 * @param      b     the data.
 * @param      off   the start offset in the data.
 * @param      len   the number of bytes to write.
 * @exception  IOException  if an I/O error occurs.
 */
public synchronized void write(byte b[], int off, int len) throws IOException {
    if (len >= buf.length) {
        /* If the request length exceeds the size of the output buffer,
           flush the output buffer and then write the data directly.
           In this way buffered streams will cascade harmlessly. */
        flushBuffer();
        out.write(b, off, len);
        return;
    }
    if (len > buf.length - count) {
        flushBuffer();
    }
    System.arraycopy(b, off, buf, count, len);
    count += len;
}
link|improve this answer
Something I haven't found yet - what is the default buffer size of the BufferedOutputStream in Java 6? You mention 8KB - is that the default in Java? The Javadocs for 1.4.2 say the buffer is 512 bytes, meaning most of what I write tends to fall between 200 and 400 bytes per array. However, this information is removed from the Java 6 documentation. – Thomas Owens Jan 3 at 13:33
1  
@Thomas - looking at the source code, the default size is 8192. I'd assume they removed the default size specification to be able to change it when a new "most sensible default" appears. If having a specific buffer size is important, you'll probably want to specify it explicitly. – gustafc Jan 3 at 13:45
@gustafc Thanks. I always forget that I can look at the Java source code. – Thomas Owens Jan 3 at 13:46
My other question is if a write that is greater than the buffer size is worse performing than a non-buffered write. I can't think of a reason why it would be significantly worse, although the greater over the buffer size it is, the more times the buffer gets full, written, and full again. So I might need to experiment with that as well. – Thomas Owens Jan 3 at 13:54
The code may answer your question. ;) – Peter Lawrey Jan 3 at 14:54
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.