# Specifies the maximum time an invocation could wait for the # singleton bean instance to become available before giving up. # # After the timeout is reached a javax.ejb.ConcurrentAccessTimeoutException # will be thrown. # # Usable time units: nanoseconds, microsecons, milliseconds, # seconds, minutes, hours, days. Or any combination such as # "1 hour and 27 minutes and 10 seconds" AccessTimeout = 30 seconds # Specifies the maximum time an invocation could wait for the # stateful bean instance to become available before giving up. # # After the timeout is reached a javax.ejb.ConcurrentAccessTimeoutException # will be thrown. # # Usable time units: nanoseconds, microsecons, milliseconds, # seconds, minutes, hours, days. Or any combination such as # "1 hour and 27 minutes and 10 seconds" AccessTimeout = 30 seconds # The passivator is responsible for writing beans to disk # at passivation time. Different passivators can be used # by setting this property to the fully qualified class name # of the PassivationStrategy implementation. The passivator # is not responsible for invoking any callbacks or other # processing, its only responsibly is to write the bean state # to disk. # # Known implementations: # org.apache.openejb.core.stateful.RAFPassivater # org.apache.openejb.core.stateful.SimplePassivater Passivator org.apache.openejb.core.stateful.SimplePassivater # Specifies the time to wait between invocations. This # value is measured in minutes. A value of 5 would # result in a time-out of 5 minutes between invocations. # A value of zero would mean no timeout. TimeOut 20 # Specifies the frequency (in seconds) at which the bean cache is checked for # idle beans. Frequency 60 # Specifies the size of the bean pools for this # stateful SessionBean container. Capacity 1000 # Property name that specifies the number of instances # to passivate at one time when doing bulk passivation. # Must be less than the PoolSize. BulkPassivate 100 # Specifies the time an invokation should wait for an instance # of the pool to become available. # # After the timeout is reached, if an instance in the pool cannot # be obtained, the method invocation will fail. # # Usable time units: nanoseconds, microsecons, milliseconds, # seconds, minutes, hours, days. Or any combination such as # "1 hour and 27 minutes and 10 seconds" AccessTimeout = 30 seconds # Specifies the size of the bean pools for this stateless # SessionBean container. If StrictPooling is not used, instances # will still be created beyond this number if there is demand, but # they will not be returned to the pool and instead will be # immediately destroyed. MaxSize = 10 # Specifies the minimum number of bean instances that should be in # the pool for each bean. Pools are prefilled to the minimum on # startup. Note this will create start order dependencies between # other beans that also eagerly start, such as other @Stateless # beans with a minimum or @Singleton beans using @Startup. The # @DependsOn annotation can be used to appropriately influence # start order. # # The minimum pool size is rigidly maintained. Instances in the # minimum side of the pool are not eligible for IdleTimeout or # GarbageCollection, but are subject to MaxAge and flushing. # # If the pool is flushed it is immediately refilled to the minimum # size with MaxAgeOffset applied. If an instance from the minimum # side of the pool reaches its MaxAge, it is also immediately # replaced. Replacement is done in a background queue using the # number of threads specified by CallbackThreads. MinSize = 0 # StrictPooling tells the container what to do when the pool # reaches it's maximum size and there are incoming requests that # need instances. # # With strict pooling, requests will have to wait for instances to # become available. The pool size will never grow beyond the the # set MaxSize value. The maximum amount of time a request should # wait is specified via the AccessTimeout setting. # # Without strict pooling, the container will create temporary # instances to meet demand. The instances will last for just one # method invocation and then are removed. # # Setting StrictPooling to false and MaxSize to 0 will result in # no pooling. Instead instances will be created on demand and live # for exactly one method call before being removed. StrictPooling = true # Specifies the maximum time that an instance should live before # it should be retired and removed from use. This will happen # gracefully. Useful for situations where bean instances are # designed to hold potentially expensive resources such as memory # or file handles and need to be periodically cleared out. # # Usable time units: nanoseconds, microsecons, milliseconds, # seconds, minutes, hours, days. Or any combination such as # "1 hour and 27 minutes and 10 seconds" MaxAge = 0 hours # Specifies the maximum time that an instance should be allowed to # sit idly in the pool without use before it should be retired and # removed. # # Usable time units: nanoseconds, microsecons, milliseconds, # seconds, minutes, hours, days. Or any combination such as # "1 hour and 27 minutes and 10 seconds" IdleTimeout = 0 minutes JdbcDriver org.hsqldb.jdbcDriver JdbcUrl jdbc:hsqldb:file:data/hsqldb/hsqldb UserName sa Password JtaManaged true JdbcDriver org.hsqldb.jdbcDriver JdbcUrl jdbc:hsqldb:file:data/hsqldb/hsqldb UserName sa Password JtaManaged false