Assuming you're considering GlassFish v2.x, I think you could use one
single domain (a single administration unit) managing several clusters
or standalone instances.
That way you'll have the benefits of centralized admin. I don't think
multiple domains are needed unless you need to be running different
versions of GlassFish or different versions of the JDK.
-Alexis
On Oct 1, 2009, at 11:26, glassfish_at_javadesktop.org wrote:
> Hi. I'm pretty new to Glassfish, just a quick question on the setup
> I have in mind. I'm going to be looking after 25 - 30 small JSP
> apps that are going to be hosted on 7 physical servers using
> Glassfish. Some of these applications aren't coded great so I'm
> expecting issues with them - crashing the server, eating up all the
> CPU/RAM etc
>
> Would it be a good idea to create multiple domains on each physical
> server - even give each app it's own domain? Say if I have 5 of
> these apps on one server, give each one it's own domain, would that
> cause the server problems?
>
> I guess I just want to have a situation where one bad app doesn't
> bring down the others on the same server.
>
> Thanks
> [Message sent by forum member 'kentpc' (55094_at_kent.pnn.police.uk)]
>
> http://forums.java.net/jive/thread.jspa?messageID=366452
>
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