Hi, The problem is that you are using Glassfish in a way that is not the norm
out there. I've done some work with JFastCGI and I know the author of the
framework and neither of us uses it to replace shared hosting in the way you
use it. Of course the behaviour you are seeing is not acceptable and we'd
love to have a look at what's causing your memory issues.
1 How do you use JFastCGI? Do you set it up per virtual host? 2 What other
applications do you use along with the PHP applications? 3 Can you provide
us more information on where most of the memory is spent? (Use VisualVM
memory profiling) 4 What versions of Java, Glassfish and JFastCGI do you
use? What OS? If you give me some more information I'd be happy to see if
I can replicate some of your issues and fix them if they are in the JFastCGI
code. As to answer your last question; Glassfish can be used for professional
Java hosting. Personally I love Glassfish and Java too, but I host Wordpress
PHP sites with Apache and Nginx because they are built for that kind of
thing. Glassfish is built for handling Java Enterprise applications.
As Laird said, you'll get more helpful replies if you are courteous to the
members of this community who provide you these tools and their time for
free.
Regards,
Barry
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