Since no one answered your JSP question, I will. We have some 3s running as RaQ4s. For some reason, only the RaQ4 OSR CD would work, and not the 4i or 4r CDs. Anyway, the 4s are fine serving JSP pages, but won't take a very high load of visitors... the initial compilation of the JSP page puts the RaQ at 100% CPU usage for a good 30 seconds or so.
Also, to run the Java stuff, you'll need 512MB RAM. Run it with less and you'll end up running the server out of memory and rendering the server unbootable until you put more memory in. The 4s take standard PC100 SDRAM, which is easy to find and cheap to buy. If you're interested in getting colocation a bit cheaper and in a really neat datacenter, drop me a line. We do colocation and we specialize in RaQs. Erica Douglass Lead Web Developer Simpli, Inc. http://www.simpli.biz > -----Original Message----- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of > Sean Warburton > Sent: Friday, March 07, 2003 5:07 PM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: [cobalt-developers] Raq3i options > > > I know that this question has been answered in the past and I > have read > many of the posts but would you mind briefly answering three > questions > for me. > > I just bought two brand new Raq 3i's with 256mb ram and dual 30GB > drives and I am about to set them up and co-locate them but I > am unsure > of the machines capabilities and my options, my questions are this. > > 1. Is installing the Raq 4i system an easy option > 2. Is the Raq 3i capable of running Tomcat and serving JSP pages at a > usable pace > 3. Is the Raq 3i still a viable machine or have I blown my $1500 > > I do have one further question, is it possible to buy a installer CD > that contains the very latest 3i system with all the current updates. > > TIA > > _______________________________________________ cobalt-developers mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://list.cobalt.com/mailman/listinfo/cobalt-developers
