Segundo um comentário na documentação, o fetch das entidades é feito em duas fases:
A query com todos os filtros e ordenações é executada no banco de dados, mas recuperando somente o id
(chave primária) de cada registro.
Quando você realmente chega até o item no Stream
retornado pela query, então a segunda fase ocorre onde os demais campos são lidos.
Então, como a API parece não fornecer algum outro meio de iterar sobre os resultados, este já seria a forma mais eficiente e dificilmente iria estourar a memória.
Entretanto, o comentário é de 2 anos atrás e realmente não sei se ainda se aplica às versões mais recentes.
Comentário original:
Fetching entities in SORM always goes in two phases: first, all your filters - no matter how intricate, - orderings and etc get applied to a single multitable query which fetches just the ids of the matching entities; in the second phase SORM emits multiple queries to actually populate the resulting entities depending on complexity of their structure. Since all the selects of the second phase are by primary keys, they are very cheap. But this area will definitely become a battlefield for all kinds of optimizations in future. Contibution is much appreciated.
There actually was a querier implementation which was doing everything in a single phase: both querying and object population were being done in a single query in the version 0.1.0, - but then it turned out that, due to specifics of how joining tables works, it could fetch a million rows for certain multicollection entities, literally. So, downshifting to a simpler strategy turned out to be inevitable.
The "Stream" thing is there intentionally. It delays the second phase fetching queries and objects population until you actually reach them in the returned Stream. Although this might be a subject to changes in the future.