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caching - Tomcat 8 throwing - org.apache.catalina.webresources.Cache.getResource Unable to add the resource

I have just upgraded Tomcat from version 7.0.52 to 8.0.14.

I am getting this for lots of static image files:

org.apache.catalina.webresources.Cache.getResource Unable to add the resource at [/base/1325/WA6144-150x112.jpg] to the cache because there was insufficient free space available after evicting expired cache entries - consider increasing the maximum size of the cache

I haven't specified any particular resource settings, and I didn't get this for 7.0.52.

I have found mention of this happening at startup in a bug report that was supposedly fixed. For me this is happening not at startup but constantly when the resource is requested.

Anybody else having this issue?

Trying to at least just disable the cache, but I cannot find an example of how to specify not to use the cache. The attributes have gone from the context in Tomcat version 8. Have tried adding a resource but cannot get the config right.

<Resource name="file" 
    cachingAllowed="false"
    className="org.apache.catalina.webresources.FileResourceSet"
/>  

Thanks.

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I had the same issue when upgrading from Tomcat 7 to 8: a continuous large flood of log warnings about cache.

1. Short Answer

Add this within the Context xml element of your $CATALINA_BASE/conf/context.xml:

<!-- The default value is 10240 kbytes, even when not added to context.xml.
So increase it high enough, until the problem disappears, for example set it to 
a value 5 times as high: 51200. -->
<Resources cacheMaxSize="51200" />

So the default is 10240 (10 mbyte), so set a size higher than this. Than tune for optimum settings where the warnings disappear. Note that the warnings may come back under higher traffic situations.

1.1 The cause (short explanation)

The problem is caused by Tomcat being unable to reach its target cache size due to cache entries that are less than the TTL of those entries. So Tomcat didn't have enough cache entries that it could expire, because they were too fresh, so it couldn't free enough cache and thus outputs warnings.

The problem didn't appear in Tomcat 7 because Tomcat 7 simply didn't output warnings in this situation. (Causing you and me to use poor cache settings without being notified.)

The problem appears when receiving a relative large amount of HTTP requests for resources (usually static) in a relative short time period compared to the size and TTL of the cache. If the cache is reaching its maximum (10mb by default) with more than 95% of its size with fresh cache entries (fresh means less than less than 5 seconds in cache), than you will get a warning message for each webResource that Tomcat tries to load in the cache.

1.2 Optional info

Use JMX if you need to tune cacheMaxSize on a running server without rebooting it.

The quickest fix would be to completely disable cache: <Resources cachingAllowed="false" />, but that's suboptimal, so increase cacheMaxSize as I just described.

2. Long Answer

2.1 Background information

A WebSource is a file or directory in a web application. For performance reasons, Tomcat can cache WebSources. The maximum of the static resource cache (all resources in total) is by default 10240 kbyte (10 mbyte). A webResource is loaded into the cache when the webResource is requested (for example when loading a static image), it's then called a cache entry. Every cache entry has a TTL (time to live), which is the time that the cache entry is allowed to stay in the cache. When the TTL expires, the cache entry is eligible to be removed from the cache. The default value of the cacheTTL is 5000 milliseconds (5 seconds).

There is more to tell about caching, but that is irrelevant for the problem.

2.2 The cause

The following code from the Cache class shows the caching policy in detail:

152  // Content will not be cached but we still need metadata size
153 long delta = cacheEntry.getSize();
154 size.addAndGet(delta);
156 if (size.get() > maxSize) {
157 // Process resources unordered for speed. Trades cache
158 // efficiency (younger entries may be evicted before older
159 // ones) for speed since this is on the critical path for
160 // request processing
161 long targetSize =
162 maxSize * (100 - TARGET_FREE_PERCENT_GET) / 100;
163 long newSize = evict(
164 targetSize, resourceCache.values().iterator());
165 if (newSize > maxSize) {
166 // Unable to create sufficient space for this resource
167 // Remove it from the cache
168 removeCacheEntry(path);
169 log.warn(sm.getString("cache.addFail", path));
170 }
171 }

When loading a webResource, the code calculates the new size of the cache. If the calculated size is larger than the default maximum size, than one or more cached entries have to be removed, otherwise the new size will exceed the maximum. So the code will calculate a "targetSize", which is the size the cache wants to stay under (as an optimum), which is by default 95% of the maximum. In order to reach this targetSize, entries have to be removed/evicted from the cache. This is done using the following code:

215  private long evict(long targetSize, Iterator<CachedResource> iter) {
217 long now = System.currentTimeMillis();
219 <b

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