HornetQ Persistence Concepts
Internal
Overview
This article provides a high level overview of the HornetQ persistence concepts. It will describe what kind of data is persisted, as well as where and when. It will also discuss paging, which is a protection mechanism against running out of memory; persistence is relevant in this context because messages that do not fit in memory go to the filesystem, even if the messages themselves are marked as non-persistent.
There is No Database
Unlike other messaging systems, which do offer the option of storing message data in a relational database, HornetQ does not. For reasons that led to this decision see https://developer.jboss.org/thread/153581. More details in "Messaging persistence in EAP 6.x" https://access.redhat.com/solutions/226743.
What Does HornetQ Persist?
Naturally, HornetQ persists persistent messages, as required by the JMS specification. It also persists some topology information (bindings and JMS information). HornetQ allows sending large messages - a message can be larger than the total amount of memory available to a broker - by fragmenting the messages and storing the fragments on the filesystem. Finally, HornetQ is capable of storing any message, including the non-persistent messages, on the filesystem, when the amount of memory available to the broker is not sufficient to allow handling all messages for a specific address in memory.
Persistent Messages
All persistent messages must be stored on persistent storage, as mandated by the JMS specification. This is necessary to protect against messaging system failure: a persistent message can be presumably recovered from the persistent storage and re-sent.
Bindings
JMS
Large Messages
Non Persistent Messages
Journal
When a node is started for the first time it persists a unique identifier into its journal directory. This ID is needed for proper formation of clusters.