Are you serving up your front-end HTML views directly with Fedora, or is
there some other software between the Internet and your Fedora service?
We have a Django-based frontend for submissions and administration,
with Fedora 3.x on the backend. There is an intermediate layer of
memcached which I use to cache object retrieval for display purposes, so
that every request doesn't have to fetch the data from Fedora again. Is
working pretty well in testing so far, but we are certainly not
anticipating any massive loads at this point in time.
Etienne Posthumus
TU Delft Library
ICT Consultant
T +31 (0)15 - 27 81949
M +31 (0)6 - 20400434
E [email protected]
SKYPE eposthumus
W www.library.tudelft.nl <http://www.library.tudelft.nl/>
________________________________
From: Gottwig, Jeremy M. (GSFC-272.0)[ZAI]
[mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: vrijdag 10 april 2009 14:46
To: Fedora Users
Subject: [Fedora-commons-users] Fedora and the Digg effect...
I'm curious what sort of experiences anyone has had working with Fedora
3.* in a high traffic situation.
Searching through the commons, I found this post:
http://fedora-commons.org/confluence/display/FCKB/mail/8750419
which was posted back in 2004. Has anyone put Fedora 3.* through any
similar benchmarks?
It's not that I anticipate any serious traffic, but I've been
considering using some sort of caching (possibly Memcached) for some of
our public collections just in case. I'm just trying to ascertain how
necessary this is.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Stay on top of everything new and different, both inside and
around Java (TM) technology - register by April 22, and save
$200 on the JavaOne (SM) conference, June 2-5, 2009, San Francisco.
300 plus technical and hands-on sessions. Register today.
Use priority code J9JMT32. http://p.sf.net/sfu/p
_______________________________________________
Fedora-commons-users mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/fedora-commons-users