About a-team Marketing Services
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry

A-Team Insight Blogs

Azul Systems Solves Java Warm-up Problem and Plans More Java Improvements

Subscribe to our newsletter

Azul Systems has added a solution to the warm-up problem associated with Java applications to its Zing Java virtual machine and there is more to come as the Java specialist turns its attention to improving Java libraries, making Hadoop more efficient and optimising Zing for cloud deployments.

The company’s solution to the Java warm-up problem, which is caused by the time taken for a Java virtual machine to compile an application to run on a server and then recompile parts of the app to optimise performance, is called ReadyNow!. It is included free of charge in the latest version of Zing, version 5.9, and has been available in the market for about a month.

Having solved the problems of garbage collection and application hiccups related to Java virtual machines with Zing, Azul responded to market concern about how long it takes for Java apps to get to their peak performance level with ReadyNow!

Scott Sellers, Azul systems president and CEO, says: “Warm-up can take minutes or even tens of minutes. This can be disastrous in high performance, low latency trading environments as most money is made at market open and close. Firms want their apps to be at peak performance as the market opens and closes, so we have developed techniques in ReadyNow! that allow apps to be compiled to a point that is closer to full optimisation at start time than was previously possible.”

ReadyNow! avoids the use of synthetic trade data that can warm up Java applications, but can also cause operational risk if synthetic trades are accidentally executed in the market, and has instead implemented techniques in the compilation and recompilation process that reduce warm-up time. These include minimising the number of deoptimisation occurrences before recompilation, allowing users to prioritise particular code and how it should be compiled, and injecting learnt information from previous compilations into live compilations.

Sellers, explains: “ReadyNow! technology includes capabilities for different types of apps, but they all serve the purpose of minimising the effects of Java application warm-up. Instead of starting an app at 50% performance and building up incrementally to 100%, ReadyNow! can start at 90% or 95% and then build up.”

Azul expects any organisation requiring consistency in trade execution to be interested in ReadyNow! and suggests high frequency traders, exchanges, market makers and trading desks in investment banks are among those that need their Java applications performing as well as possible at runtime. As the solution is designed for any Java app, risk platforms that must be as fast as trading platforms could also use ReadyNow!.

Looking forward, Azul is working to improve specialised Java libraries by using new constructs and language for specific sectors including financial services. It is also considering how to make deployments of the Java Big Data solution Hadoop more efficient and is working to optimise Zing for architecture deployed in the cloud.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Data platform modernisation: Best practice approaches for unifying data, real time data and automated processing

Financial institutions are evolving their data platform modernisation programmes, moving beyond data-for-cloud capabilities and increasingly towards artificial intelligence-readiness. This has shifted the data management focus in the direction of data unification, real-time delivery and automated governance. The drivers of this transition are improved operational efficiency as manual processes are replaced by faster, more accurate automated...

BLOG

Data Platform Modernisation: Why The Hardest Problems Are No Longer Technical

Capital markets firms pursuing data platform modernisation have largely solved the technical challenges of compute and storage, but the organisational, governance and architectural decisions surrounding those platforms remain stubbornly difficult, according to practitioners from Northern Trust, RBC Wealth Management and LSEG, speaking at a recent A-Team Group webinar entitled Data platform modernisation: Best practice approaches...

EVENT

RegTech Summit New York

Now in its 9th year, the RegTech Summit in New York will bring together the RegTech ecosystem to explore how the North American capital markets financial industry can leverage technology to drive innovation, cut costs and support regulatory change.

GUIDE

Regulatory Data Handbook 2023 – Eleventh Edition

Welcome to the eleventh edition of A-Team Group’s Regulatory Data Handbook, a popular publication that covers new regulations in capital markets, tracks regulatory change, and provides advice on the data, data management and implementation requirements of more than 30 regulations across UK, European, US and Asia-Pacific capital markets. This edition of the handbook includes new...