Witold Szczerba wrote:
> The real
> question is how many domains could be handled by one server and how
> many resources (memory/cpu) is required for every single domain
> excluding resources taken by deployed applications...
>
and how many ports would be needed? It seems that the work on grizzly will
be
consolidating all those ports which glassfish currently uses.
>> Forgive me if this has been asked and answered, but. :P
>>
>> I'm trying to convince my web hoster (dreamhost.com :) to offer Java
>> support, but they are reluctant to do so. The problem for many in the
>> shared hosting biz, as I'm sure most of you know, is that if one app in a
>> shared Tomcat instance (for example) goes crazy, it takes the whole
>> server
>> out. I'm curious if Glassfish suffers from the same problem. Can
>> different
>> virtual servers be restarted independently of others, and are they
>> isolated
>> enough so that the death of one doesn't negatively affect others (beyond
>> issues like memory and CPU utilization, which are, largely, outside the
>> scope of the app server, though I guess it's conceivable that the server
>> could enforce some sort of quota on its virtual servers)? I do all sort
>> of
>> cool stuff with JSF and Glassfish at work, but am forced to use PHP (not
>> that there's anything wrong with that ;) for everything I do at home due
>> to
>> the lack of Java hosting that's comparable in price and features to PHP
>> hosting. I'm hoping Glassfish can help rectify that. :)
>>
>> Thanks!
>>
>> -----
>> Jason Lee, SCJP
>> Programmer/Analyst
>> http://www.iec-okc.com
>>
>
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