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Getting Started with Hazelcast, Second Edition

You're reading from   Getting Started with Hazelcast, Second Edition Get acquainted with the highly scalable data grid, Hazelcast, and learn how to bring its powerful in-memory features into your application

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785285332
Length 162 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Matthew Johns Matthew Johns
Author Profile Icon Matthew Johns
Matthew Johns
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. What is Hazelcast? 2. Getting off the Ground FREE CHAPTER 3. Going Concurrent 4. Divide and Conquer 5. Listening Out 6. Spreading the Load 7. Gathering Results 8. Typical Deployments 9. From the Outside Looking In 10. Going Global 11. Playing Well with Others A. Configuration Summary Index

Serialization and classes


One issue that we do introduce when using the client driver is that while our cluster can hold, persist, and serve classes, it doesn't have to and might not actually hold the POJO class itself in its classpath; rather, a serialization of the persisted object. This means that as long as each of our clients holds the appropriate class in its classpath, we can successfully serialize (for persistence) and de-serialize (for retrieval) the objects, but our cluster nodes can't. You can most notably see this when we try to retrieve entries via the TestApp console for custom objects stored to the cluster by a client, as this will produce ClassNotFoundException.

The process used to serialize objects to the cluster starts by checking whether the object is a well-known primitive-like class (String, Long, Integer, byte[], ByteBuffer, and Date); if so, these are serialized directly. If not, Hazelcast next checks whether the object implements com.hazelcast.nio.DataSerializable...

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