> Yup, I am equally confused. I am realy sorry > > Keep in mind that the X Server is ``serving'' your display, mouse, and > keyboard hardware to applications that would like to utilize them. A > ``client'' of your X Server is utilizing the display, mouse, and > keyboard on the X Server by drawing a window and accepting user input > via the mouse and keyboard.
Ok, my Syntax for my Request is an little bit urly wurly. (I know thadt the Client has the hardest Job on a X-Session, but it was no clear to me how much is the X-Server involved at this Time) > Alexander is right: clustering the X Server makes absolutely no sense. > How can you server multiple instances of your display, mouse, and > keyboard? Why would you want to? The I/O Traffic producing by the Apps on X-Serverside (Harddisk access to the Partitions) I assume thadt a lot of Officeuser thadt would connect to the X-Server, slow down the Machine. With Oracle IFS, (Fileservermodule in the AppServer) the Filesystemoperations would be redirect to the Databasesystem (more and faster then ext2/ext3 or Raiser) while using the Databaseengine to lookup for the File. The Idea: Layer 1: The Oracle 9i R2 J2EE Applicationserver (Internetfilesystem - IFS-Module) managing the in-comming Filerequests and handles, takes care vor Failoversituations and delegating Requests to other RealApplication Cluster. Layer 2: The Oracle 9i R2 Databasesystem handle the IFS-Fileobjects and put it into its Tablepsaces (Databasefiles and its Pratitions) as an Datarecord (BLOB) Next Questions: Ist there an JAVA (or J2EE) Implementation of an X11 Server avaiable thadt can be used for studying? Is it heavy to implement the Programmlgoic (Functional?) if C/C++ to Java Translation is necesarry? Thanks