while( result_set.next() )
{
...
}
I have use System.nanoTime() and calculated the time, for each iteration the time taken is in mil
I have set up a table with 4000 rows and 10 columns with 10 characters each and made a simple performance test using the following approach (RealTimeCounter is a class which measures the real time between start() and stop()):
List myResult = new ArrayList<>();
ResultSet rs = s.executeQuery("SELECT * FROM Performance");
RealTimeCounter rtc = new RealTimeCounter();
rtc.start();
while(rs.next()) {
myResult.add(rs.getString(1));
}
rtc.stop();
System.out.println(rtc);
Results:
So, the fetch size does have a significant impact on the execution speed.
Note that, on the other hand, the fetch size has some impact on memory consumption. Interestingly enough, a quick analysis using Runtime.getRuntime().freeMemory(); before and after the above code showed that the impact is much less than I would expect, though. The numbers I got are: