User: fleury
Date: 01/02/07 21:31:24
Modified: business binary.html business.html cvs.html doco.html
faq.html jboss-castor.html jboss-jaws.html
jboss-jbossmq.html jboss-jetty.html
jboss-overview.html jboss-server.html
jboss-test.html jboss-tomcat.html jboss-zoap.html
jboss-zola.html jboss.htm lists.html main.css
news.html news082000.htm sponsors.html
testimonials.html tomcat.htm zola.htm
Log:
jBoss -> JBoss
Revision Changes Path
1.6 +2 -2 newsite/business/binary.html
Index: binary.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/binary.html,v
retrieving revision 1.5
retrieving revision 1.6
diff -u -r1.5 -r1.6
--- binary.html 2001/02/01 03:56:13 1.5
+++ binary.html 2001/02/08 05:31:20 1.6
@@ -18,12 +18,12 @@
<td
class="newsheader"><b>Download the jboss/Server products today!</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><b>jBoss 2.0 FINAL is our current version.</b></font>
+ <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><b>JBoss 2.0 FINAL is our current version.</b></font>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">It will run on both 1.2.2 and 1.3 JVMs.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">This is our full suite of Products and it is likely to be all you will need
to try out our technology. Download it and find out why many people are
switching to jboss every day! </font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Download now:</font></p>
<ul>
- <li><a
href="../bin/jBoss-2.0_FINAL.zip"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">jBoss-2.0_FINAL.zip</font></a><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"> (4.19M)</font>
+ <li><a
href="../bin/JBoss-2.0_FINAL.zip"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">JBoss-2.0_FINAL.zip</font></a><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"> (4.19M)</font>
</ul>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">If you need a servlet container, you can also download a bundled package of
jboss and <a href="http://jakarta.apache.org/tomcat" target="_top">tomcat 3.2b7</a> or
<a href="http://jetty.mortbay.com/" target="_top">JBoss-PRE2.1 with jetty 3.0.2</a>
(no configuration needed!)</font></p>
<ul>
1.6 +16 -16 newsite/business/business.html
Index: business.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/business.html,v
retrieving revision 1.5
retrieving revision 1.6
diff -u -r1.5 -r1.6
--- business.html 2000/11/19 01:05:37 1.5
+++ business.html 2001/02/08 05:31:20 1.6
@@ -20,18 +20,18 @@
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody">
- <p>The <a href="jboss.htm">jBoss/Server</a> is an Open Source,
standards-compliant,
+ <p>The <a href="jboss.htm">JBoss/Server</a> is an Open Source,
standards-compliant,
Enterprise JavaBeans application server implemented in 100% Pure
- Java, as is our full product suite. The jBoss community of over
+ Java, as is our full product suite. The JBoss community of over
500 <a href="team.html">developers</a> world wide is working
to deliver the full range of J2EE tools as the premier Enterprise
Java application server for the Java 2 Enterprise Edition platform.
- The jBoss/Server and complement of products are delivered under
+ The JBoss/Server and complement of products are delivered under
a public license. </p>
<p>Why should you pay tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars
to Java-enable your business enterprise? At those costs it doesn�t
take long to figure out there is no future in that, unless you are
- the server vendor! But jBoss is not just about zero cost. Our tools
+ the server vendor! But JBoss is not just about zero cost. Our tools
are innovative. We sport features, such as �hot deploy� and
�runtime-generated
stub and skeleton objects,� that can�t be found in many commercial
Enterprise Java
@@ -39,15 +39,15 @@
no matter how much you are willing to pay!</p>
<p>So what are you waiting for? <a href="binary.html">Download</a>
- jBoss/Server and our other jBoss tools today and try them out. Join
+ JBoss/Server and our other JBoss tools today and try them out. Join
the community by contributing features and fixes. Tell your fellow
- architects, engineers, and programmers about jBoss�we are certain
+ architects, engineers, and programmers about JBoss�we are certain
they will want to know! The hundreds of others who are obtaining
- jBoss products every day are finding out just why we have become
+ JBoss products every day are finding out just why we have become
so popular. </p>
- <p><img src="../pictures/powered_by_jboss_flat_metal.gif" width="159"
height="60" alt="logo: powered by jBoss">
+ <p><img src="../pictures/powered_by_jboss_flat_metal.gif" width="159"
height="60" alt="logo: powered by JBoss">
</p>
- <p>We are jBoss.org. We are creating world-class J2EE technologies
+ <p>We are JBoss.org. We are creating world-class J2EE technologies
in open source. We are �coding the future.�
<tr>
<tr>
@@ -107,7 +107,7 @@
<p>The extreme size and complexity of this sort of operating system
is yet another compelling reason for it to exist in Open Source.
Even Microsoft has had difficulties stabilizing Windows 2000. We,
- at jBoss, believe that Open Source technology is a credible,
efficient
+ at JBoss, believe that Open Source technology is a credible,
efficient
and cost-effective way to scale the development of these large
systems.
</td>
</tr>
@@ -126,7 +126,7 @@
won�t reflect the infrastructure cost. It also makes sense from a
technological standpoint because you have access to the code, which
makes for a tighter integration with your applications. According
- to our statistics, about 20% of people who download jBoss do so with
+ to our statistics, about 20% of people who download JBoss do so with
the objective of embedding it in their applications. <br>
<p><b>2- IT departments/Startups </b><br>
A recent study showed that Java/J2EE, which claims 60% of IT
development,
@@ -141,20 +141,20 @@
<p><b>3- ISP/ASP, the next wave of Enterprise Software Hosting </b><br>
Most ISP providers already offer Web Hosting for static web pages.
For more "enterprise level hosting," you need a J2EE platform. Going
- beyond simple logic and cgi-bin, jBoss was designed for Application
+ beyond simple logic and cgi-bin, JBoss was designed for Application
Service Provider (ASP) settings. One can deploy its applications
on a set of hosted machines and have a web-based Java Management
Extension (JMX) console to manage the remote servers. Our integration
- with Java Server Page (JSP) engines makes jBoss the candidate of
+ with Java Server Page (JSP) engines makes JBoss the candidate of
choice for ISP usage. While most J2EE vendors do not focus on this
market, Jboss is well suited for it in two ways. First, the code
is modular so you can administer various configurations, in order
to fit every client�s specific needs. Second, there is no license
fee per CPU, so you can grow a J2EE server farm at little cost.
<p><b>4- Module and 3rd party developers</b><br>
- Behind jBoss� Open Source success is a highly modular design, which
+ Behind JBoss� Open Source success is a highly modular design, which
allows us to scale development and integrate code. From the ground
- up, jBoss is built around the concept of modules and plug-ins. We
+ up, JBoss is built around the concept of modules and plug-ins. We
use the JMX specification to configure and administer the different
plug-ins. We integrate various modules, from Tomcat to cocobase,
to offer a state-of-the-art J2EE container. By integrating in JBoss,
@@ -172,7 +172,7 @@
recognized individuals in the industry. We see many independent
software
developers in our ranks. If you are a startup looking for a container
to embed in your application you can meet all your needs here. If
- you are a student, you will find jBoss to be a perfect learning tool,
+ you are a student, you will find JBoss to be a perfect learning tool,
as our code implements many modern high-level java software design
concepts. Finally, it�s a chance to do the right thing. We believe
J2EE is the mass platform of the future and we are working hard to
1.4 +2 -2 newsite/business/cvs.html
Index: cvs.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/cvs.html,v
retrieving revision 1.3
retrieving revision 1.4
diff -u -r1.3 -r1.4
--- cvs.html 2001/01/30 09:23:57 1.3
+++ cvs.html 2001/02/08 05:31:20 1.4
@@ -15,10 +15,10 @@
<td
class="pageheader"><b>Source code and CVS</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>jBoss is developed publicly</b></td>
+ <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss is developed publicly</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody">jBoss is
a free implementation of the J2EE interfaces from SUN.
+ <td class="newsbody">JBoss is
a free implementation of the J2EE interfaces from SUN.
<p>Our code is
co-developed and the source is freely available. You can either get the code in a zip
format to browse it or, if you plan on working with the source tree, you can set up a
CVS environment on your machine.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
1.8 +6 -6 newsite/business/doco.html
Index: doco.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/doco.html,v
retrieving revision 1.7
retrieving revision 1.8
diff -u -r1.7 -r1.8
--- doco.html 2001/02/05 22:18:47 1.7
+++ doco.html 2001/02/08 05:31:20 1.8
@@ -19,15 +19,15 @@
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">These manuals are intended to help you get started to jboss.
They cover the installation the basic configuration and all you need to know in order
to get quickly going with our product suite.</font>
- <p><a
href="../documentation/jboss_linux_trail_index.html"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Beginning EJB programming using jBoss (Linux)</font></a></p>
- <p><a
href="../documentation/jboss_win32_trail_index.html"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Beginning EJB programming using jBoss (Windows)</font></a></td>
+ <p><a
href="../documentation/jboss_linux_trail_index.html"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Beginning EJB programming using JBoss (Linux)</font></a></p>
+ <p><a
href="../documentation/jboss_win32_trail_index.html"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Beginning EJB programming using JBoss (Windows)</font></a></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>User
Manual (preliminary)</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">The jboss "User Manual" tries to manage all the
flow of information surrounding jboss. It is a collection of all the information
covered above. It is a collaborative effort started by Aaron Mulder, if you can help
please do so. </font>
- <p><a
href="../manual/index.html"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">jBoss 2.0 Manual
(<b>PRELIMINARY</b>)</font></a></p>
+ <p><a
href="../manual/index.html"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBoss 2.0 Manual
(<b>PRELIMINARY</b>)</font></a></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">If you plan on helping with any of the documentation please read the
following</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a href="../documentation/DOCUMENTATION_STANDARDS.html">Guidelines for
Documentation writing</a></font></td>
</tr>
@@ -37,7 +37,7 @@
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">These manuals are intended to cover advanced jboss topics.
These are to used only if you already are familiar with the basic operation of the
jboss suite of products. Here you will find details on the advanced usages of
jboss.</font>
<p><a
href="../documentation/jbossxml_howto.html"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Using
jboss.xml for advanced configurations (JNDI override, ejb-ref, Container
conf)</font></a></p>
- <p><a
href="../documentation/jboss_cmp_trail_index.html"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Using
container-managed persistence with jBoss</font></a></p>
+ <p><a
href="../documentation/jboss_cmp_trail_index.html"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Using
container-managed persistence with JBoss</font></a></p>
<p><a
href="../documentation/jawsxml_howto.html"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Customizing
JAWS</font></a></p>
</td>
</tr>
@@ -53,7 +53,7 @@
<th width="20%">Last Upd.</th>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td><a href="../documentation/tomcat.htm"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Tomcat + jBoss (EJB,JSP, & Servlet) Howto</font></a></td>
+ <td><a href="../documentation/tomcat.htm"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Tomcat + JBoss (EJB,JSP, & Servlet) Howto</font></a></td>
<td></td>
<td></td>
</tr>
@@ -68,7 +68,7 @@
<td></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td><a
href="../documentation/jbuilder.htm"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Run jBoss and debug
EJBs in JBuilder's Debugger Howto</font></a> (<a
href="../documentation/jbuilder4.htm"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBuilder 4
Update</font></a>)</td>
+ <td><a
href="../documentation/jbuilder.htm"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Run JBoss and debug
EJBs in JBuilder's Debugger Howto</font></a> (<a
href="../documentation/jbuilder4.htm"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBuilder 4
Update</font></a>)</td>
<td>1.0</td>
<td>12/15/2000</td>
</tr>
1.4 +78 -78 newsite/business/faq.html
Index: faq.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/faq.html,v
retrieving revision 1.3
retrieving revision 1.4
diff -u -r1.3 -r1.4
--- faq.html 2001/02/01 04:17:38 1.3
+++ faq.html 2001/02/08 05:31:20 1.4
@@ -12,16 +12,16 @@
<td width="600" valign="top">
<table border="0" cellpadding="2"
cellspacing="0">
<tr>
- <td
class="pageheader"><b>Frequently Asked Questions for jBoss</b></td>
+ <td
class="pageheader"><b>Frequently Asked Questions for JBoss</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><a
name="top_of_faq"></a><b>FAQ contents</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">jBoss is an Open Source, standards-compliant, Enterprise
JavaBeans Application Server implemented in 100% Pure Java.The jBoss organization is
working to deliver jBoss as <i>the</i> premier Enterprise Java application server for
the Java 2 Enterprise Edition platform. jBoss will be delivered under the LGPL
licence. The jBoss project lives at <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/">www.jBoss.org</a>.<br>
+ <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBoss is an Open Source, standards-compliant, Enterprise
JavaBeans Application Server implemented in 100% Pure Java.The JBoss organization is
working to deliver JBoss as <i>the</i> premier Enterprise Java application server for
the Java 2 Enterprise Edition platform. JBoss will be delivered under the LGPL
licence. The JBoss project lives at <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/">www.JBoss.org</a>.<br>
</font>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">This FAQ has been logically divided into the following sections - an <a
href="#FAQ-SECTION-CREDITS">initial section</a> about this document itself, a catchall
section for <a href="#FAQ-SECTION-GENERAL">general and background information</a>, a
section about the <a href="#FAQ-SECTION-JBOSS">jBoss projects and people</a> and
then three role-based sections. Each of this sections is designed to help you based on
what you do with jBoss - <a href="#FAQ-SECTION-BEANDEV">Bean Developer</a>, <a
href="#FAQ-SECTION-SRVDEV">Server Administrator</a> or <a
href="#FAQ-SECTION-SRVDEV">Container Developer</a>.</font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">If you are looking for more Technical Information about jBoss then you
should also read the <a href="../documentation/ejb.html">jBoss 2.0 EJB development
guide</a>.</font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">This FAQ has been logically divided into the following sections - an <a
href="#FAQ-SECTION-CREDITS">initial section</a> about this document itself, a catchall
section for <a href="#FAQ-SECTION-GENERAL">general and background information</a>, a
section about the <a href="#FAQ-SECTION-JBOSS">JBoss projects and people</a> and
then three role-based sections. Each of this sections is designed to help you based on
what you do with JBoss - <a href="#FAQ-SECTION-BEANDEV">Bean Developer</a>, <a
href="#FAQ-SECTION-SRVDEV">Server Administrator</a> or <a
href="#FAQ-SECTION-SRVDEV">Container Developer</a>.</font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">If you are looking for more Technical Information about JBoss then you
should also read the <a href="../documentation/ejb.html">JBoss 2.0 EJB development
guide</a>.</font></p>
<div align="right">
<div
width="100%">
<p>
@@ -72,7 +72,7 @@
<p>
<table
border="0" width="95%">
<tr>
-
<td width="100%"><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS" name="FAQ-SECTION-JBOSS"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">jBoss Questions</font></a></td>
+
<td width="100%"><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS" name="FAQ-SECTION-JBOSS"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBoss Questions</font></a></td>
</tr>
</table>
</p>
@@ -82,18 +82,18 @@
<td width="4%"></td>
<td width="96%">
<ul>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-SUMMARY"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">What is jBoss ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-SUMMARY"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">What is JBoss ?</font></a>
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-PGOV"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">What is Project Game Over (PGOV) ?</font></a>
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-PGO"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">What is Project Go! (PGO) ?</font></a>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-BENEFITS"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">What are the benefits of jBoss ?</font></a>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-COMPLIANCE"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Is jBoss in compliance with the current EJB spec ?</font></a>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-COMMUNITY"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">What is the jBoss community ?</font></a>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-OBTAIN"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How can I get a copy of jBoss ?</font></a>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-INSTALL"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How do I install jBoss ?</font></a>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-SELL"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Can I sell jBoss ?</font></a>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-DISTRIBUTE"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Can I include jBoss in my distribution ?</font></a>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-IIOP"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Does jBoss support RMI/IIOP ?</font></a>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-SOAP"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Does jBoss support SOAP ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-BENEFITS"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">What are the benefits of JBoss ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-COMPLIANCE"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Is JBoss in compliance with the current EJB spec ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-COMMUNITY"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">What is the JBoss community ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-OBTAIN"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How can I get a copy of JBoss ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-INSTALL"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How do I install JBoss ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-SELL"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Can I sell JBoss ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-DISTRIBUTE"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Can I include JBoss in my distribution ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-IIOP"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Does JBoss support RMI/IIOP ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-SOAP"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Does JBoss support SOAP ?</font></a>
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-RMH"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How do I make the RMH samples work ?</font></a>
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-JDKS"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Are there any functional differences between jdk1.2 and jdk1.3 ?</font></a>
<li><a href="#FAQ-JBOSS-PERFORMANCE"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Any benchmark or performance metrics available?</font></a>
@@ -117,8 +117,8 @@
<td width="4%"></td>
<td width="96%">
<ul>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-BEANDEV-RUNJAR"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How can I run my EJB jar in jBoss ?</font></a>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-BEANDEV-GUIDE"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Is a programmer guide available for jBoss ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-BEANDEV-RUNJAR"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How can I run my EJB jar in JBoss ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-BEANDEV-GUIDE"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Is a programmer guide available for JBoss ?</font></a>
<li><a href="#FAQ-BEANDEV-RESOURCEPREFIX"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">When do I need to prefix a lookup with "java:comp/env"
?</font></a>
<li><a href="#FAQ-BEANDEV-ACCESSBEANS"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How do I access beans in a different jar ?</font></a>
</ul>
@@ -139,15 +139,15 @@
<td width="4%"></td>
<td width="96%">
<ul>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-START"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How is jBoss started ?</font></a>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-SHUTDOWN"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How do I cleanly shutdown jBoss ?</font></a>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-NTSERVICE"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How can I set up jBoss as a service in Windows NT ?</font></a>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-BOOT"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How do I configure jBoss to start when the server boots ?</font></a>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-SECURITY"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How do I configure security with jBoss ?</font></a>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-DEPLOY"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">What tasks must be completed to deploy an EJB using jBoss ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-START"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How is JBoss started ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-SHUTDOWN"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How do I cleanly shutdown JBoss ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-NTSERVICE"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How can I set up JBoss as a service in Windows NT ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-BOOT"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How do I configure JBoss to start when the server boots ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-SECURITY"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How do I configure security with JBoss ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-DEPLOY"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">What tasks must be completed to deploy an EJB using JBoss ?</font></a>
<li><a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-UNDEPLOY"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How do I undeploy an application ?</font></a>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-CLUSTER"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Can I cluster multiple jBoss servers ?</font></a>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-DATASOURCE"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How do I configure [Database Type] with jBoss ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-CLUSTER"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Can I cluster multiple JBoss servers ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-DATASOURCE"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How do I configure [Database Type] with JBoss ?</font></a>
<li><a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-JAWSDTD"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Is a DTD available for jaws.xml ?</font></a>
<li><a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-JBOSSDTD"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Is a DTD available for jboss.xml ?</font></a>
</ul>
@@ -168,9 +168,9 @@
<td width="4%"></td>
<td width="96%">
<ul>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-CONTAINER-SPECS"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Where can I find technical specs for the jBoss server ?</font></a>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-CONTAINER-CONTRIBUTE"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How can I contribute to jBoss ?</font></a>
-
<li><a href="#FAQ-CONTAINER-HELP"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">What help exists to help me learn about the jBoss source ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-CONTAINER-SPECS"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Where can I find technical specs for the JBoss server ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-CONTAINER-CONTRIBUTE"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">How can I contribute to JBoss ?</font></a>
+
<li><a href="#FAQ-CONTAINER-HELP"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">What help exists to help me learn about the JBoss source ?</font></a>
</ul>
</td>
</tr>
@@ -200,7 +200,7 @@
<tr>
<td class="newsbody">
<h3><a
name="FAQ-CREDITS-AUTHORS"></a><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Who is responsible for
this FAQ ?</font></h3>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">The first version of the jBoss FAQ was created by <a
href="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">Kunle Odutola</a> in March 2000. The current
version of the FAQ is a rewrite by <a href="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">Jeremiah
Johnson</a> in August 2000. The style and presentation of this FAQ borrows from many
numerous FAQs that the author has been exposed to. The FAQ is currently maintained on
behalf of the jBoss community by <a href="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">Kunle
Odutola</a>. Most of the wisdom contained in the answers presented here however comes
from the collective insights and diligence of the many others who inhabit the jBoss
mailing list(s) and the EJB world-at-large. Particular mention goes to the following
people from the jBoss mailing list:</font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">The first version of the JBoss FAQ was created by <a
href="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">Kunle Odutola</a> in March 2000. The current
version of the FAQ is a rewrite by <a href="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">Jeremiah
Johnson</a> in August 2000. The style and presentation of this FAQ borrows from many
numerous FAQs that the author has been exposed to. The FAQ is currently maintained on
behalf of the JBoss community by <a href="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">Kunle
Odutola</a>. Most of the wisdom contained in the answers presented here however comes
from the collective insights and diligence of the many others who inhabit the JBoss
mailing list(s) and the EJB world-at-large. Particular mention goes to the following
people from the JBoss mailing list:</font></p>
<ul>
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Rickard </font><font size="2" face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Ö</font><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">berg</font>
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Marc Fleury</font>
@@ -216,9 +216,9 @@
<p> </p>
<h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-CREDITS-LATEST"></a>Where can I get the latest version of this
FAQ?</font></h3>
<ul>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">From the jBoss project's homepage at <a
href="http://www.ejboss.org/">www.jBoss.org</a>. There is a link to a release version
of this FAQ that in sync with the latest release of jBoss.</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">From the jBoss binary distribution archives. These are
downloadable from a link on <a href="http://www.ejboss.org/">www.jBoss.org</a> and,
they contain a copy of this FAQ that is appropriate to the version of jBoss in the
archive.</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">From the jBoss CVS repository. The version in CVS is often
under development and is more appropriate for developers and seasoned jBoss pros. The
other versions are derived from the CVS FAQ.</font>
+ <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">From the JBoss project's homepage at <a
href="http://www.ejboss.org/">www.JBoss.org</a>. There is a link to a release version
of this FAQ that in sync with the latest release of JBoss.</font>
+ <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">From the JBoss binary distribution archives. These are
downloadable from a link on <a href="http://www.ejboss.org/">www.JBoss.org</a> and,
they contain a copy of this FAQ that is appropriate to the version of JBoss in the
archive.</font>
+ <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">From the JBoss CVS repository. The version in CVS is often
under development and is more appropriate for developers and seasoned JBoss pros. The
other versions are derived from the CVS FAQ.</font>
</ul>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#top_of_faq">FAQ Contents</a></font></td>
</tr>
@@ -278,26 +278,26 @@
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsheader"><font
color="white" face="Myriad Web,Arial" size="3"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS"></a><b>jBoss
Questions</b></font></td>
+ <td class="newsheader"><font
color="white" face="Myriad Web,Arial" size="3"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS"></a><b>JBoss
Questions</b></font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody">
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-SUMMARY"></a>What is jBoss ?</font></h3>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Basically, jBoss is an application server written in Java that can host
business components developed in Java. The interface and architecture of the jBoss
application server, the Java business components that can be hosted inside jBoss and
various protocols by which a client application (or other business components) can
interact with the business components is defined by the <a
href="http://java.sun.com/products/ejb/docs.html">Enterprise JavaBeans
specification</a>.</font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">jBoss 2 is designed to be an EJB v1.1 container and server. There are <a
href="bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=109">efforts underway</a> currently to extend the
support to EJB v2.0 but the work isn't expected to begin before Q4 2000. The jBoss
server is developed in the Open Source tradition by volunteers and sponsors using 100%
Pure Java. </font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">We are working very hard to ensure that jBoss rightfully becomes <i>the</i>
premier EJB server for the Java 2 Enterprise Edition.</font></p>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-SUMMARY"></a>What is JBoss ?</font></h3>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Basically, JBoss is an application server written in Java that can host
business components developed in Java. The interface and architecture of the JBoss
application server, the Java business components that can be hosted inside JBoss and
various protocols by which a client application (or other business components) can
interact with the business components is defined by the <a
href="http://java.sun.com/products/ejb/docs.html">Enterprise JavaBeans
specification</a>.</font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">JBoss 2 is designed to be an EJB v1.1 container and server. There are <a
href="bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=109">efforts underway</a> currently to extend the
support to EJB v2.0 but the work isn't expected to begin before Q4 2000. The JBoss
server is developed in the Open Source tradition by volunteers and sponsors using 100%
Pure Java. </font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">We are working very hard to ensure that JBoss rightfully becomes <i>the</i>
premier EJB server for the Java 2 Enterprise Edition.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#top_of_faq">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p> </p>
<h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-PGOV"></a>What is Project Game Over or PGOV ?</font></h3>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Project Games Over (pGO or PGOV) is a co-ordinated set of activities that
are designed to produce a production quality jboss2.0 and move us towards jboss3.0 -
<i>the</i> integrated j2EE container. There can be no hard time limits in Open
Source but pGO hope to have a production quality beta of jBoss 2 by Q4
2000. </font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">pGO is a goal-oriented programme that has successfully galvanised even the
most hardcore and eternally galvanised members of the jBoss community. The goal?. A
finished, production version of jBoss 2 that covers EJB1.1, basic integration
with other J2EE components. We will essentially provide the "essentials of
J2EE" in open source.</font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Project Games Over (pGO or PGOV) is a co-ordinated set of activities that
are designed to produce a production quality jboss2.0 and move us towards jboss3.0 -
<i>the</i> integrated j2EE container. There can be no hard time limits in Open
Source but pGO hope to have a production quality beta of JBoss 2 by Q4
2000. </font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">pGO is a goal-oriented programme that has successfully galvanised even the
most hardcore and eternally galvanised members of the JBoss community. The goal?. A
finished, production version of JBoss 2 that covers EJB1.1, basic integration
with other J2EE components. We will essentially provide the "essentials of
J2EE" in open source.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
<h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-PGO"></a>What is Project Go! (pGO!) ?</font></h3>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">After pGO above, the pGO! programme (probably needs a significantly
different name) will move jBoss on towards EJB2.0 compliance and some advanced
features (some have started) but it will take longer, probably around Q1
2001.</font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">After pGO above, the pGO! programme (probably needs a significantly
different name) will move JBoss on towards EJB2.0 compliance and some advanced
features (some have started) but it will take longer, probably around Q1
2001.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-BENEFITS"></a>What are the benefits of jBoss
?</font></h3>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-BENEFITS"></a>What are the benefits of JBoss
?</font></h3>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Lots, here is an initial list:</font></p>
<ul>
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">dynamic "hot" deploy</font>
@@ -311,18 +311,18 @@
</ul>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-COMPLIANCE"></a>Is jBoss in compliance with the current
EJB spec ?</font></h3>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-COMPLIANCE"></a>Is JBoss in compliance with the current
EJB spec ?</font></h3>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Yes. Well mostly. JBoss 2 is <a
href="http://www.telkel.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=136">being continuously
tested</a> for compliance with the <a
href="http://java.sun.com/products/ejb/docs.html">EJB 1.1 specification</a>.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-COMMUNITY"></a>What is the jBoss community ?</font></h3>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">The jBoss community is a pool of contributors working on <b>joint J2EE
projects</b> much like the "Apache group" of Apache Server fame. jBoss
people come from all over the world... 'Silicon Valley' California, London and the
rest of the UK, France, Sweden, Siberia, Hong Kong, Singapore, Australia and there's
even a few from the 'Tropical Antarctic' (otherwise known as New Zealand).</font></p>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-COMMUNITY"></a>What is the JBoss community ?</font></h3>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">The JBoss community is a pool of contributors working on <b>joint J2EE
projects</b> much like the "Apache group" of Apache Server fame. JBoss
people come from all over the world... 'Silicon Valley' California, London and the
rest of the UK, France, Sweden, Siberia, Hong Kong, Singapore, Australia and there's
even a few from the 'Tropical Antarctic' (otherwise known as New Zealand).</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-OBTAIN"></a>How can I get a copy of jBoss ?</font></h3>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-OBTAIN"></a>How can I get a copy of JBoss ?</font></h3>
<ul>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Binary: From the jBoss project's <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/">homepage</a>, there is a link to jBoss <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/binary.htm">binary distributions</a> for JDK 1.2.2 and JDK
1.3 JVMs..</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Source: From the jBoss CVS repository. The jBoss source code
is in CVS and this route is more appropriate for developers and seasoned jBoss pros.
Please note that you will need to build this version before it can be used.</font>
+ <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Binary: From the JBoss project's <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/">homepage</a>, there is a link to JBoss <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/binary.htm">binary distributions</a> for JDK 1.2.2 and JDK
1.3 JVMs..</font>
+ <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Source: From the JBoss CVS repository. The JBoss source code
is in CVS and this route is more appropriate for developers and seasoned JBoss pros.
Please note that you will need to build this version before it can be used.</font>
<p><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><br>
<b>CVS
Settings (permits read-only access only)</b><br>
<br>
@@ -377,26 +377,26 @@
</div>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-INSTALL"></a>How do I install jBoss ?</font></h3>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">If you download the binary, you can use these <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/jBoss2pr4/install.htm">instructions</a>.</font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">The <a href="http://www.jboss.org/getting_startedJB2.htm">Getting
Started</a> guide has information for <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/jboss1.html">installing jBoss for Linux</a> and <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/jboss_win32_1.html">installing jBoss for
Windows</a>.</font></p>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-INSTALL"></a>How do I install JBoss ?</font></h3>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">If you download the binary, you can use these <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/JBoss2pr4/install.htm">instructions</a>.</font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">The <a href="http://www.jboss.org/getting_startedJB2.htm">Getting
Started</a> guide has information for <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/jboss1.html">installing JBoss for Linux</a> and <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/jboss_win32_1.html">installing JBoss for
Windows</a>.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-SELL"></a>Can I sell jBoss ?</font></h3>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-SELL"></a>Can I sell JBoss ?</font></h3>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Yes, and many will. Many will bundle it with J2EE applications for
example.</font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">If you want to sell *only* jBoss, then you need to ask "what is the
value add"? Just putting it on a CD and selling may not get you many customers if
they can download it from the net just as easy.</font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">If you want to sell *only* JBoss, then you need to ask "what is the
value add"? Just putting it on a CD and selling may not get you many customers if
they can download it from the net just as easy.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-DISTRIBUTE"></a>Can I include jBoss in my distribution
?</font></h3>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">There is quite a <a
href="http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg00262.html">long
post</a> discussing this question. In short, if you use a third party plug-in, then
you must adhere to the license of that third party plug-in <i>in addition</i> to the
jBoss license. For jBoss stuff, any of your classes that <b>import</b> jBoss classes
directly must be GPL.</font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Please note that standard Enterprise JavaBeans do not import jBoss code.
They access jBoss's functionality indirectly via the J2EE APIs. Hence they do
<i>not</i> import jBoss classes and do not have to be GPL'ed.</font></p>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-DISTRIBUTE"></a>Can I include JBoss in my distribution
?</font></h3>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">There is quite a <a
href="http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg00262.html">long
post</a> discussing this question. In short, if you use a third party plug-in, then
you must adhere to the license of that third party plug-in <i>in addition</i> to the
JBoss license. For JBoss stuff, any of your classes that <b>import</b> JBoss classes
directly must be GPL.</font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Please note that standard Enterprise JavaBeans do not import JBoss code.
They access JBoss's functionality indirectly via the J2EE APIs. Hence they do
<i>not</i> import JBoss classes and do not have to be GPL'ed.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-IIOP"></a>Does jBoss support RMI/IIOP ?</font></h3>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-IIOP"></a>Does JBoss support RMI/IIOP ?</font></h3>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Not yet. But have a look at <a href="bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=104">this pGO
task</a> that is currently assigned to <a href="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">Jeremiah
Johnson</a>.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-SOAP"></a>Does jBoss support SOAP ?</font></h3>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-SOAP"></a>Does JBoss support SOAP ?</font></h3>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Yes, look at the <a href="zoap/zoap.htm">ZOAP module</a>.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
@@ -435,12 +435,12 @@
<h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-JBOSS-EJX"></a>EJX won't start, what's wrong ?</font></h3>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">The most common problem here is not running EJX from the bin
directory.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-BEANDEV-RUNJAR"></a>How can I run my EJB jar in jBoss
?</font></h3>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-BEANDEV-RUNJAR"></a>How can I run my EJB jar in JBoss
?</font></h3>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Once you have deployed your bean(s), they are ready to be called by clients
or other beans.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-BEANDEV-GUIDE"></a>Is a programmer's guide available for jBoss
?</font></h3>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Yes, take a look at the <a href="http://www.jboss.org/ejb.html">jBoss 2.0
EJB development</a> guide.</font></p>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-BEANDEV-GUIDE"></a>Is a programmer's guide available for JBoss
?</font></h3>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Yes, take a look at the <a href="http://www.jboss.org/ejb.html">JBoss 2.0
EJB development</a> guide.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
<h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-BEANDEV-RESOURCEPREFIX"></a>When do I need to prefix a lookup
with "java:comp/env" ?</font></h3>
@@ -456,34 +456,34 @@
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody">
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-ADMIN-START"></a>How is jBoss started ?</font></h3>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Run the appropriate run script in the bin directory. If your environment is
setup correctly, you can start jBoss with the command </font></p>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-ADMIN-START"></a>How is JBoss started ?</font></h3>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Run the appropriate run script in the bin directory. If your environment is
setup correctly, you can start JBoss with the command </font></p>
<pre><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><code> java -jar run.jar.</code></font></pre>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-ADMIN-SHUTDOWN"></a>How do I cleanly shutdown jBoss
?</font></h3>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-ADMIN-SHUTDOWN"></a>How do I cleanly shutdown JBoss
?</font></h3>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">^C and kill <pid> both cause a clean shutdown.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-ADMIN-NTSERVICE"></a>How can I set up jBoss as a service in
Windows NT ?</font></h3>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-ADMIN-NTSERVICE"></a>How can I set up JBoss as a service in
Windows NT ?</font></h3>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Unfortunately there isn't a clear answer at the moment but please feel free
to follow up this <a
href="http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg02167.html">mailing
list post</a> and report back to the list or this FAQ's authors if you have a
definitive answer.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">It can be done is the generic answer though, it would seem.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-ADMIN-BOOT"></a>How do I configure jBoss to start when the
server boots ?</font></h3>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">For Windows NT see the answer to <a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-NTSERVICE">How can I
set up jBoss as a service in Windows NT ?</a>. For other systems, anyone care to offer
a solution?</font></p>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-ADMIN-BOOT"></a>How do I configure JBoss to start when the
server boots ?</font></h3>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">For Windows NT see the answer to <a href="#FAQ-ADMIN-NTSERVICE">How can I
set up JBoss as a service in Windows NT ?</a>. For other systems, anyone care to offer
a solution?</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-ADMIN-SECURITY"></a>How do I configure security with jBoss
?</font></h3>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Security is still under development with jBoss at the present. Please have
a look at <a href="http://www.jboss.org/project_game_over.htm#security">this pGO
squad's mission</a> for the current status.</font></p>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-ADMIN-SECURITY"></a>How do I configure security with JBoss
?</font></h3>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Security is still under development with JBoss at the present. Please have
a look at <a href="http://www.jboss.org/project_game_over.htm#security">this pGO
squad's mission</a> for the current status.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-ADMIN-DEPLOY"></a>What tasks must be completed to deploy an
EJB using jBoss ?</font></h3>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-ADMIN-DEPLOY"></a>What tasks must be completed to deploy an
EJB using JBoss ?</font></h3>
<ul>
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Compile the bean classes and interfaces. </font>
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Create an ejb-jar.xml file by hand or using EJX. </font>
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">If using Entity Beans with CMP, then use EJX to create a
jaws.xml file. </font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">If using resources, custom containers, or any other jBoss
specific configurations, then use EJX to create a jboss.xml file. </font>
+ <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">If using resources, custom containers, or any other JBoss
specific configurations, then use EJX to create a jboss.xml file. </font>
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Finally, jar the .xml files (note that they must be in
META-INF parent directory) and the .class files for the bean into a jar in the deploy
directory. </font>
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Classes that the bean imports may be included in the deployed
jar, or they can be put into the lib/ext directory (via a jar).</font>
</ul>
@@ -493,11 +493,11 @@
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Removing the .jar file from the deploy directory will cause the file to be
undeployed.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-ADMIN-CLUSTER"></a>Can I cluster multiple jBoss servers
?</font></h3>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Not yet. Clustering is still under development with jBoss at the present.
Please have a look at <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/project_game_over.htm#Clustering">this pGO squad's
mission</a> for the current status.</font></p>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-ADMIN-CLUSTER"></a>Can I cluster multiple JBoss servers
?</font></h3>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Not yet. Clustering is still under development with JBoss at the present.
Please have a look at <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/project_game_over.htm#Clustering">this pGO squad's
mission</a> for the current status.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-ADMIN-DATASOURCE"></a>How do I configure [Database Type] with
jBoss ?</font></h3>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-ADMIN-DATASOURCE"></a>How do I configure [Database Type] with
JBoss ?</font></h3>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Refer to the <a href="../manual/index.html">Manual</a>, which has <a
href="../manual/adv_config.html#poolex">examples</a> for many common databases and <a
href="../manual/adv_config.html#datasources">procedures</a> for the rest.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
@@ -515,15 +515,15 @@
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody">
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-CONTAINER-SPECS"></a>Where can I find technical specs for the
jBoss server ?</font></h3>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">There are two good pages about the jBoss server. <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/server.html">This one</a> describes the directory structure
of jBoss, JMX, the classpaths, and configuration files, and <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/container.html">this one</a> is has information about the
deployment, the persistence managers, invocation layers, and how to write plug-ins for
the server.</font></p>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-CONTAINER-SPECS"></a>Where can I find technical specs for the
JBoss server ?</font></h3>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">There are two good pages about the JBoss server. <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/server.html">This one</a> describes the directory structure
of JBoss, JMX, the classpaths, and configuration files, and <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/container.html">this one</a> is has information about the
deployment, the persistence managers, invocation layers, and how to write plug-ins for
the server.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-CONTAINER-CONTRIBUTE"></a>How can I contribute to jBoss
?</font></h3>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Unless you have your own ideas, browse through the project <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/project_game_over.htm">TODO list</a> to find something that
interests you and then send mail to <a
href="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=%22I%20want%20to%20help%20jBoss!%22">the
board</a> indicating your interests. Even if you have your own ideas, it helps to get
involved in the mailing-list to identify areas of need and avoid duplicated (i.e.
wasted) effort.</font></p>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-CONTAINER-CONTRIBUTE"></a>How can I contribute to JBoss
?</font></h3>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Unless you have your own ideas, browse through the project <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/project_game_over.htm">TODO list</a> to find something that
interests you and then send mail to <a
href="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=%22I%20want%20to%20help%20JBoss!%22">the
board</a> indicating your interests. Even if you have your own ideas, it helps to get
involved in the mailing-list to identify areas of need and avoid duplicated (i.e.
wasted) effort.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"> </font></p>
- <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-CONTAINER-HELP"></a>What help exists to help me learn about
the jBoss source ?</font></h3>
+ <h3><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><a name="FAQ-CONTAINER-HELP"></a>What help exists to help me learn about
the JBoss source ?</font></h3>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">The <a href="#FAQ-CONTAINER-SPECS">technical information</a> listed above
is a great place to start. Don't overlook the mailing list archives for the various
components. As you get into the code, the jboss-dev mailing list is the best place to
direct your questions. The javadocs come with the binary distribution (in the docs
directory), or you can create the javadocs from the source with 'build
javadocs'.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Back to <a href="#FAQ_CONTENTS">FAQ Contents</a></font></td>
</tr>
1.5 +5 -5 newsite/business/jboss-castor.html
Index: jboss-castor.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/jboss-castor.html,v
retrieving revision 1.4
retrieving revision 1.5
diff -u -r1.4 -r1.5
--- jboss-castor.html 2001/01/04 10:04:32 1.4
+++ jboss-castor.html 2001/02/08 05:31:20 1.5
@@ -12,13 +12,13 @@
<td width="600" valign="top">
<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
<tr>
- <td class="pageheader"><b>jBoss/Castor</b></td>
+ <td class="pageheader"><b>JBoss/Castor</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>An integration for
JDO support</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"> <p> The jBoss/CastorJDO
integration is an effort led by Oleg Nitz.
+ <td class="newsbody"> <p> The JBoss/CastorJDO
integration is an effort led by Oleg Nitz.
<p>The <a
href="http://access1.sun.com/jdo/">"Java Data Objects specification"</a>
says:</p>
<p><i>Java Data Objects is a suitable component for
integration with EJB in these scenarios:</i></p>
<ul>
@@ -26,7 +26,7 @@
<li><i>Entity Beans with JDO classes as
delegates for both Bean Managed Persistence</i>
</ul>
<p>This also applies to Castor JDO, which was
inspired by the same source as the quoted specification: <a
href="http://java.sun.com/aboutJava/communityprocess/jsr/jsr_012_dataobj.html">JSR-12
"Java Data Objects Specification"</a>. Castor JDO used with Session beans
and BMP Entity Beans serves as an alternative to CMP Entity Beans, and is in many
cases more fast and efficient. However, Castor doesn't complies to the the Sun JDO
specification yet. Castor JDO is RDBMS-oriented and serves as O/R mapper, while the
current draft of Sun JDO specification seems to be OODBMS-oriented.</p>
- <p>The jBoss/Castor integration makes it possible
to use Castor JDO DataObjects factories as bean resources. These resources can be
found in the JNDI namespace of the beans.</td>
+ <p>The JBoss/Castor integration makes it possible
to use Castor JDO DataObjects factories as bean resources. These resources can be
found in the JNDI namespace of the beans.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
@@ -80,7 +80,7 @@
"use the Castor default value" (which now equals 10 seconds).</li>
<li>the flag of logging. When you set it to <b>true</b>,
the CastorJDO MBean sends information messages and warnings to
- jBoss loggers.</li>
+ JBoss loggers.</li>
<li>tells if your JDO classes are loaded via ClassPathExtension MLET in
jboss.conf - in this case set the argument to <b>true</b>,
or via EJB jar classpath (i.e. either they are in the same jar or
@@ -121,7 +121,7 @@
It is recommended to start JNDI names for JDO resources with "jdo/"
(e.g, the bean JNDI name might be "java:comp/env/jdo/myjdo").
Also it is recommended to use EJX to edit ejb-jar.xml and jboss.xml files
-(in "EJB 1.1 XML" and "EJB 1.1 XML with jBoss XML" modes, respectively).
+(in "EJB 1.1 XML" and "EJB 1.1 XML with JBoss XML" modes, respectively).
</li>
<li>Get the JDO object in your bean as :
<pre>
1.3 +7 -7 newsite/business/jboss-jaws.html
Index: jboss-jaws.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/jboss-jaws.html,v
retrieving revision 1.2
retrieving revision 1.3
diff -u -r1.2 -r1.3
--- jboss-jaws.html 2000/11/17 19:43:53 1.2
+++ jboss-jaws.html 2001/02/08 05:31:20 1.3
@@ -12,7 +12,7 @@
<td width="600" valign="top">
<table border="0" cellpadding="2"
cellspacing="0">
<tr>
- <td
class="pageheader"><b>jBoss/Jaws</b></td>
+ <td
class="pageheader"><b>JBoss/Jaws</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>Just
Another Web Storage/Minerva</b></td>
@@ -20,18 +20,18 @@
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font
face="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif"><img src="../pictures/jaws.jpg"><br>
</font>
- <p>During development of jBoss/Server version 1.0 (then known as
EJBoss),
+ <p>During development of JBoss/Server version 1.0 (then known as
EJBoss),
our team recognized the need for an object-to-relational (O-R)
mapping
tool. Enter JAWS, the acronym for "Just Another Web Storage," an
API for mapping Enterprise JavaBeans objects to relational database
- persistent stores. The jBoss/JAWS project has since taken on a life
+ persistent stores. The JBoss/JAWS project has since taken on a life
of its own. That's because we are not only maintaining and enhancing
the original code base that defined a simple, yet proprietary O-R
mapping tool, we are now also extending the product to support the
- popular third-party O-R mapping tools being employed by some
jBoss/Server
+ popular third-party O-R mapping tools being employed by some
JBoss/Server
users. That means there's plenty of work to do, so you can join
- the jBoss/JAWS project and contribute to the coolest O-R mapping
- open source project around. We encourage you to view the jBoss/JAWS
+ the JBoss/JAWS project and contribute to the coolest O-R mapping
+ open source project around. We encourage you to view the JBoss/JAWS
mail archives. </p>
<p><font face="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif">The Minerva JDBC connection
pooling module has been added to the codebase, thanks to Aaron
Mulder.
@@ -82,7 +82,7 @@
<td
class="newsheader"><b>Distribution and CVS</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">jBoss/Jaws is distributed as part of <a
href="binary.html">jBoss/Server.</a></font>
+ <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBoss/Jaws is distributed as part of <a
href="binary.html">JBoss/Server.</a></font>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">CVS module is <a href="cvs.html">jboss</a></font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
1.3 +2 -2 newsite/business/jboss-jbossmq.html
Index: jboss-jbossmq.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/jboss-jbossmq.html,v
retrieving revision 1.2
retrieving revision 1.3
diff -u -r1.2 -r1.3
--- jboss-jbossmq.html 2001/01/30 04:32:39 1.2
+++ jboss-jbossmq.html 2001/02/08 05:31:20 1.3
@@ -29,7 +29,7 @@
A Publish/Subscribe model is critical for successful collaboration
between the various participants of a distributed, e-business
application.
We believe JMS, through our JBossMQ component, plays a central
- role in the J2EE-based "Web operating system" provided by the
jBoss.</font></p>
+ role in the J2EE-based "Web operating system" provided by the
JBoss.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBossMQ was originaly started
under the leadership
of <b>Norbert Lataille</b>, at that time called spyderMQ.
Since then, spyderMQ
@@ -77,7 +77,7 @@
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBossMQ is
- distributed as part of jBoss/Server.</font>
+ distributed as part of JBoss/Server.</font>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">CVS module is <a
href="cvs.html">jbossmq</a></font></td>
</tr>
</table>
1.4 +5 -5 newsite/business/jboss-jetty.html
Index: jboss-jetty.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/jboss-jetty.html,v
retrieving revision 1.3
retrieving revision 1.4
diff -u -r1.3 -r1.4
--- jboss-jetty.html 2000/11/28 19:41:55 1.3
+++ jboss-jetty.html 2001/02/08 05:31:20 1.4
@@ -13,7 +13,7 @@
<td VALIGN=TOP WIDTH="696">
<table BORDER=0 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=2 NOSAVE >
<tr>
-<td class="pageheader"><b>jBoss/Jetty</b></td>
+<td class="pageheader"><b>JBoss/Jetty</b></td>
</tr>
<tr NOSAVE>
@@ -114,8 +114,8 @@
</tr>
<tr>
-<td class="newsbody"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">jBoss jetty is shipped
-as part of the <a href="binary.html">standard jBoss/Server package</a></font>
+<td class="newsbody"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBoss jetty is shipped
+as part of the <a href="binary.html">standard JBoss/Server package</a></font>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">CVS module is <a
href="cvs.html">contrib</a></font></td>
</tr>
@@ -132,7 +132,7 @@
<tr>
<td WIDTH="696" class="newsheader"><b>How-to package and deploy an EAR file on
- jBoss/Jetty</b></td>
+ JBoss/Jetty</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
@@ -141,7 +141,7 @@
<a href="http://java.sun.com/j2ee/download.html#platformspec">J2EE
specification</a>.
<p><b>Jetty's xml file will not be optimized!</b>
<br>Contexts setup with the jetty.xml file will be given their own classloaders
-which are not shared with jBoss, thus networks overhead will still incurred
+which are not shared with JBoss, thus networks overhead will still incurred
for EJB calls.
<p><b>EAR Deployment</b>
<br>In case you don't want to read all the J2EE spec, here is a brief summary
1.3 +23 -23 newsite/business/jboss-overview.html
Index: jboss-overview.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/jboss-overview.html,v
retrieving revision 1.2
retrieving revision 1.3
diff -u -r1.2 -r1.3
--- jboss-overview.html 2000/11/19 01:05:37 1.2
+++ jboss-overview.html 2001/02/08 05:31:21 1.3
@@ -12,7 +12,7 @@
<td width="600" valign="top">
<table border="0" cellpadding="2"
cellspacing="0">
<tr>
- <td
class="pageheader"><b>jBoss projects</b></td>
+ <td
class="pageheader"><b>JBoss projects</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>A
full J2EE stack with JMX integration</b></td>
@@ -23,71 +23,71 @@
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Get a feature list of the project as a whole (under
construction)</font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>jBoss/Server</b></td>
+ <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/Server</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img height="60" width="159"
src="../pictures/powered_by_jboss_flat_sepia.gif" alt="'powered by jBoss'"></font>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">jBoss the container is an implementation of the EJB container
specification. We currently refer to it as jboss2.0</font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>jBoss 2.0 is truly a 3rd generation container.</b> It takes the patterns
and ideas that were investigated in 1.0. Designed from the ground up to be
<b>modular</b>, jBoss introduces yet again many ground breaking features such as a
full <b>plug-in approach </b>to the container implementation. Borrowing from the
success that met with Linux 2.0 and it's modular approach to software implementation,
jBoss 2.0 is meant to be developed by distributed parties each working on a cleanly
separated part of the server. </font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">jBoss 2.0 also standardizes on <b>JMX</b>, the Java Management eXtension
(TM) to offer standard interfaces to the management of its components as well as the
applications deployed on it. Ease of use is still the number one priority here at
jBoss and jBoss 2.0 will set a new standard.</font></td>
+ <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img height="60" width="159"
src="../pictures/powered_by_jboss_flat_sepia.gif" alt="'powered by JBoss'"></font>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">JBoss the container is an implementation of the EJB container
specification. We currently refer to it as jboss2.0</font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>JBoss 2.0 is truly a 3rd generation container.</b> It takes the patterns
and ideas that were investigated in 1.0. Designed from the ground up to be
<b>modular</b>, JBoss introduces yet again many ground breaking features such as a
full <b>plug-in approach </b>to the container implementation. Borrowing from the
success that met with Linux 2.0 and it's modular approach to software implementation,
JBoss 2.0 is meant to be developed by distributed parties each working on a cleanly
separated part of the server. </font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">JBoss 2.0 also standardizes on <b>JMX</b>, the Java Management eXtension
(TM) to offer standard interfaces to the management of its components as well as the
applications deployed on it. Ease of use is still the number one priority here at
JBoss and JBoss 2.0 will set a new standard.</font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>jBoss/Tomcat</b></td>
+ <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/Tomcat</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img height="71" width="100" src="../pictures/tomcat_3.gif"
align="left" alt="">Apache Tomcat the JSP/Servlet container from the java apache
organization is integrated in jBoss. jBoss/Tomcat provides various integration levels.
With the JMX spine you can either bring Tomcat and jBoss up in the same
VM but as separate stacks or you can run everyone in the same "<b>integrated
stack" </b>with tremendous speed advantages and native pointer passage. We
continue to closely integrate with the latest releases of Tomcat to offer you the
smooth experience you come to expect from jBoss.</font></td>
+ <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img height="71" width="100" src="../pictures/tomcat_3.gif"
align="left" alt="">Apache Tomcat the JSP/Servlet container from the java apache
organization is integrated in JBoss. JBoss/Tomcat provides various integration levels.
With the JMX spine you can either bring Tomcat and JBoss up in the same
VM but as separate stacks or you can run everyone in the same "<b>integrated
stack" </b>with tremendous speed advantages and native pointer passage. We
continue to closely integrate with the latest releases of Tomcat to offer you the
smooth experience you come to expect from JBoss.</font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>jBoss/spyderMQ</b></td>
+ <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/spyderMQ</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">spyderMQ is our messaging service implementation.
Still alpha it is quite stable and functional. A quality product in the making.
It is a fully compliant JMS (Java Messaging Service) implementation</font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>jBoss/JAWS-Minerva</b></td>
+ <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/JAWS-Minerva</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img src="../pictures/jaws.jpg" alt="jaws::just another web
storage"></font>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">jaws as its name indicates is a discreet JDBC based object storage
facility. It is tightly integrated with jBoss and provides startup table
creation as well as some fairly advanced features of O/R mapping. You can define
custom finders and map complex objects with jBoss/GUI. jBoss/Jaws supports all java
types including fancy collections of EJB references. </font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">jBoss/Minerva is an implementation of generic pool management in jBoss. The
are today used to implement the XA compliant database pools. It is integrated in
jBoss/Server and since recently provides the standard pools for the whole
server.</font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">jBoss/JAWS comes with preconfigured settings for each database, to help you
get working in no time. Most leading Database vendors in the market are currently
supported out of the box and the list is growing by the day.</font></td>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">jaws as its name indicates is a discreet JDBC based object storage
facility. It is tightly integrated with JBoss and provides startup table
creation as well as some fairly advanced features of O/R mapping. You can define
custom finders and map complex objects with JBoss/GUI. JBoss/Jaws supports all java
types including fancy collections of EJB references. </font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">JBoss/Minerva is an implementation of generic pool management in JBoss. The
are today used to implement the XA compliant database pools. It is integrated in
JBoss/Server and since recently provides the standard pools for the whole
server.</font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">JBoss/JAWS comes with preconfigured settings for each database, to help you
get working in no time. Most leading Database vendors in the market are currently
supported out of the box and the list is growing by the day.</font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>jBoss/Zola</b></td>
+ <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/Zola</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img height="141" width="108" src="../pictures/wap0.gif"
align="left" alt="">ZOL is made of several types of applications and components,
graphical ones that show GUI heavy applications talking to beans as well as business
one, e-commerce oriented. The Test Suite has mostly an API content and will excercise
the server with more than 100 tests to make sure as we rebuild the server that it is
still API compliant and by the book.</font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>jBoss/GUI</b></td>
+ <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/GUI</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img src="../pictures/jbossgui.gif" alt="graphical management
of containers, beans, resources, security"></font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>jBoss/ZOAP</b></td>
+ <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/ZOAP</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">jBoss/ZOAP is an alternative invocation layer with SOAP as its
basic protocol. To enable interoperability with non-java based systems many take the
alternative invocation layer very seriously. SOAP/XML might well be the wave of
the future.</font></td>
+ <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBoss/ZOAP is an alternative invocation layer with SOAP as its
basic protocol. To enable interoperability with non-java based systems many take the
alternative invocation layer very seriously. SOAP/XML might well be the wave of
the future.</font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>jBoss/Deployer</b></td>
+ <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/Deployer</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">A deployer of EAR. You can take your full war and jar
and deploy at once on jBoss and Tomcat.</font></td>
+ <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">A deployer of EAR. You can take your full war and jar
and deploy at once on JBoss and Tomcat.</font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>jBoss/Castor</b></td>
+ <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/Castor</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img height="24" width="85" src="../pictures/castor_sm.gif"
align="left" alt="">Castor JDO is a Java Data Object implementation. Some
people prefer to use this rather than jaws for performance reasons, and some because
they are used to it. jBoss/Castor provides the integration layer between the two.
</font></td>
+ <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img height="24" width="85" src="../pictures/castor_sm.gif"
align="left" alt="">Castor JDO is a Java Data Object implementation. Some
people prefer to use this rather than jaws for performance reasons, and some because
they are used to it. JBoss/Castor provides the integration layer between the two.
</font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>jBoss/Test</b></td>
+ <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/Test</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">The TestSuite for jBoss. With about 200 tests of compliance,
every release we put in the public has to be compliant with the specification. The
TestSuite allows us to spot problems with fixes and patches early.</font></td>
+ <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">The TestSuite for JBoss. With about 200 tests of compliance,
every release we put in the public has to be compliant with the specification. The
TestSuite allows us to spot problems with fixes and patches early.</font></td>
</tr>
</table>
</td>
1.2 +15 -15 newsite/business/jboss-server.html
Index: jboss-server.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/jboss-server.html,v
retrieving revision 1.1
retrieving revision 1.2
diff -u -r1.1 -r1.2
--- jboss-server.html 2000/11/17 02:29:25 1.1
+++ jboss-server.html 2001/02/08 05:31:21 1.2
@@ -12,21 +12,21 @@
<td width="600" valign="top">
<table border="0" cellpadding="2"
cellspacing="0">
<tr>
- <td
class="pageheader"><b>jBoss/Server</b></td>
+ <td
class="pageheader"><b>JBoss/Server</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>jBoss/Server</b></td>
+ <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/Server</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img height="60" width="159"
src="../pictures/powered_by_jboss_flat_sepia.gif"></font>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">jBoss the container is an implementation of the EJB container
specification. </font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>jBoss 2.0 is truly a 3rd generation container.</b> It takes the patterns
and ideas that were investigated in 1.0. Designed from the ground up to be
<b>modular</b>, jBoss introduces yet again many ground breaking features such as a
full <b>plug-in approach </b>to the container implementation. Borrowing from the
success that met with Linux 2.0 and it's modular approach to software implementation,
jBoss 2.0 is meant to be developed by distributed parties each working on a cleanly
separated part of the server. </font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">JBoss the container is an implementation of the EJB container
specification. </font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>JBoss 2.0 is truly a 3rd generation container.</b> It takes the patterns
and ideas that were investigated in 1.0. Designed from the ground up to be
<b>modular</b>, JBoss introduces yet again many ground breaking features such as a
full <b>plug-in approach </b>to the container implementation. Borrowing from the
success that met with Linux 2.0 and it's modular approach to software implementation,
JBoss 2.0 is meant to be developed by distributed parties each working on a cleanly
separated part of the server. </font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">jBoss 2.0 also standardizes on
<b>JMX</b>,
+ <p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBoss 2.0 also standardizes on
<b>JMX</b>,
the Java Management eXtension (TM) to offer standard interfaces
to the management of its components as well as the applications
deployed on it. Ease of use is still the number one priority here
- at jBoss and jBoss 2.0 will set a new standard.</font>
+ at JBoss and JBoss 2.0 will set a new standard.</font>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
@@ -34,7 +34,7 @@
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"> Being both open and standards-compliant,
jBoss/Server
+ <td class="newsbody"> Being both open and standards-compliant,
JBoss/Server
supports both EJB Session Beans and Entity Beans. EJB Session Beans
are responsible for implementing the business logic of your middle
tier application. As their name implies, they are also responsible
@@ -52,7 +52,7 @@
a single Entity Bean maps to a single relational database table. Entity
Beans can be developed and deployed rapidly using Container Managed
Persistence (CMP) since all the object-to-relational database mapping
- is managed by the jBoss/Server container. But if you must support
+ is managed by the JBoss/Server container. But if you must support
a complex and/or legacy database schema that does not easily map into
CMP, then for you the answer is Bean Managed Persistence (BMP). With
BMP you control the loading and saving of complex Entity Beans from
@@ -65,9 +65,9 @@
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody">
-Modularly developed from the ground up, the jBoss server and container are
completely implemented using component-based plug-ins. Borrowing from the success of
Linux 2.0 and its modular approach to team-based, open source software implementation,
jBoss 2.0 is being developed by distributed team members, each working on a cleanly
separated part of the server. Our approach makes it easy for you to join our team and
contribute to the hottest open source J2EE server project around. It also ensures that
jBoss/Server will be maintained and extended for years to come.
+Modularly developed from the ground up, the JBoss server and container are
completely implemented using component-based plug-ins. Borrowing from the success of
Linux 2.0 and its modular approach to team-based, open source software implementation,
JBoss 2.0 is being developed by distributed team members, each working on a cleanly
separated part of the server. Our approach makes it easy for you to join our team and
contribute to the hottest open source J2EE server project around. It also ensures that
JBoss/Server will be maintained and extended for years to come.
<p>
-The modularization effort is supported by the use of JMX, the Java Management
eXtension API. Using JMX, industry-standard interfaces help us manage both
jBoss/Server components and the applications deployed on it. Ease of use is still the
number one priority here at jBoss.org, and jBoss/Server 2.0 sets a new standard for
both modular, plug-in design and ease of server and application management.
+The modularization effort is supported by the use of JMX, the Java Management
eXtension API. Using JMX, industry-standard interfaces help us manage both
JBoss/Server components and the applications deployed on it. Ease of use is still the
number one priority here at JBoss.org, and JBoss/Server 2.0 sets a new standard for
both modular, plug-in design and ease of server and application management.
<p>
This high degree of modularity benefits the application developer in several ways.
The already tight code can be further trimmed down in support of applications that
must have a very small footprint. For example, if EJB passivation is unnecessary in
your application, simply take the feature out of the server. However, if you later
decide to deploy the same application under an Application Service Provider (ASP)
model, simply enable the server's passivation feature for that Web-based deployment.
Another example is the freedom you have to drop your favorite O-R mapping tool, such
as TOPLink, right into the container.
</tr>
@@ -76,17 +76,17 @@
<td class="newsheader"><b>Features That Speed Development</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody">In addition to the fact that jBoss/Server is an
EJB 1.1 compliant application server, there are some innovative features that make our
server a pleasure to use. Specifically two features make application deployment
extremely easy to perform, saving developers much time and effort. In a phrase,
jBoss/Server takes the grunt work out of EJB application development.
+ <td class="newsbody">In addition to the fact that JBoss/Server is an
EJB 1.1 compliant application server, there are some innovative features that make our
server a pleasure to use. Specifically two features make application deployment
extremely easy to perform, saving developers much time and effort. In a phrase,
JBoss/Server takes the grunt work out of EJB application development.
<p>
-First there's dynamically, runtime-generated stub and skeleton classes. In many
commercial EJB servers the generation of these classes must be performed in an
additional step prior to deployment (e.g. using an "ebjc" tool). It goes without
saying that this extra step requires additional developer overhead, adding significant
time to each change-compile-deploy cycle. By generating stub and skeleton classes on
the fly, jBoss/Server takes at least several seconds, and perhaps minutes, off of each
deployment. As an added benefit, the method used by jBoss/Server to accomplish this
time- and effort-savings feature also saves memory and other server resources since
only a single server object supports every deployed Enterprise JavaBeans component!
+First there's dynamically, runtime-generated stub and skeleton classes. In many
commercial EJB servers the generation of these classes must be performed in an
additional step prior to deployment (e.g. using an "ebjc" tool). It goes without
saying that this extra step requires additional developer overhead, adding significant
time to each change-compile-deploy cycle. By generating stub and skeleton classes on
the fly, JBoss/Server takes at least several seconds, and perhaps minutes, off of each
deployment. As an added benefit, the method used by JBoss/Server to accomplish this
time- and effort-savings feature also saves memory and other server resources since
only a single server object supports every deployed Enterprise JavaBeans component!
<p>
-A second time- and effort-savings feature is automatic hot deploy and redeploy.
Some of the top commercial EJB servers require you to "bounce" the server in order to
successfully deploy your application changes. However, jBoss/Server allows you to
deploy new applications and redeploy existing applications without stopping and
restarting the server. In fact, the feature is as easy as copying your newly built EJB
JAR file to the server deployment directory where jBoss/Server picks up the new file,
automatically undeploys the old JAR (if any) and deploys the new JAR within seconds.
This feature definitely provides the benefit of slicing minutes off of each
change-compile-deploy cycle.
+A second time- and effort-savings feature is automatic hot deploy and redeploy.
Some of the top commercial EJB servers require you to "bounce" the server in order to
successfully deploy your application changes. However, JBoss/Server allows you to
deploy new applications and redeploy existing applications without stopping and
restarting the server. In fact, the feature is as easy as copying your newly built EJB
JAR file to the server deployment directory where JBoss/Server picks up the new file,
automatically undeploys the old JAR (if any) and deploys the new JAR within seconds.
This feature definitely provides the benefit of slicing minutes off of each
change-compile-deploy cycle.
<tr>
<td
class="newsheader"><b>Features</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">We will make a feature matrix available here (under
construction)</font>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">jBoss 2.0</font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">JBoss 2.0</font></p>
<ul>
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Full EJB 1.1 support (all beans, all persistent types and all
transactional tags supported)</font>
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">XML compliant</font>
@@ -138,7 +138,7 @@
<td
class="newsheader"><b>Distribution and CVS</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">jBoss/Server is part of the <a href="binary.html">jBoss/Server
distribution</a></font>
+ <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBoss/Server is part of the <a href="binary.html">JBoss/Server
distribution</a></font>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">CVS module is <a href="cvs.html">jboss</a></font></td>
</tr>
</table>
1.4 +2 -2 newsite/business/jboss-test.html
Index: jboss-test.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/jboss-test.html,v
retrieving revision 1.3
retrieving revision 1.4
diff -u -r1.3 -r1.4
--- jboss-test.html 2000/11/17 19:54:40 1.3
+++ jboss-test.html 2001/02/08 05:31:21 1.4
@@ -12,7 +12,7 @@
<td width="600" valign="top">
<table border="0" cellpadding="2"
cellspacing="0">
<tr>
- <td
class="pageheader"><b>jBoss/TestSuite</b></td>
+ <td
class="pageheader"><b>JBoss/TestSuite</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td
class="newsheader"><b>TestSuite</b></td>
@@ -31,7 +31,7 @@
has been faithfully implemented.</font>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Internaly to jboss, the development
team will use JCTS to make sure that things are implemented correctly and that the
changes commited during the day do not break the server. It will make sure that no
functionality has been overlooked and missed. We need to make sure that new features
do not interfere with old ones, something that is going to get harder and harder to
detect at the code level as the modular base of jboss 2.0 grows.</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">JCTS is built on top of a testing framework (JUnit) that makes it easy to
add and run tests but most of all to get pretty clear feedback as to the outcome. It
will be used to gate the release process and to bless the code as
release-worthy.</font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Recently and with the stabilization of jBoss under way, the TestSuite has
become a scalability, stability, locking detection framework. We ship a series
of tests, benchmarks, and stress-tests that are know to max the biggest hardware out
there.</font></td>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Recently and with the stabilization of JBoss under way, the TestSuite has
become a scalability, stability, locking detection framework. We ship a series
of tests, benchmarks, and stress-tests that are know to max the biggest hardware out
there.</font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td
class="newsheader"><b>Features Tested</b></td>
1.4 +6 -6 newsite/business/jboss-tomcat.html
Index: jboss-tomcat.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/jboss-tomcat.html,v
retrieving revision 1.3
retrieving revision 1.4
diff -u -r1.3 -r1.4
--- jboss-tomcat.html 2000/11/28 19:41:54 1.3
+++ jboss-tomcat.html 2001/02/08 05:31:21 1.4
@@ -13,13 +13,13 @@
<table border="0" cellpadding="2"
cellspacing="0">
<tr>
- <td class="pageheader"><b>jBoss/Apache</b></td>
+ <td class="pageheader"><b>JBoss/Apache</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>A
Full J2EE Stack</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><img
height="71" width="100" src="../pictures/tomcat_3.gif" align="left">The jBoss
organization wants to deliver a complete J2EE based product to the market. The JBoss
organization decided to integrate the Tomcat engine stack with a running version of
JBoss in a single VM. Now you can serve all your servlet and JSP needs with 2 simple
downloads and a couple of configuration files. Check out the Tomcat <a
href="http://jakarta.apache.org" target="_top">homepage</a> for information related to
Tomcat.
+ <td class="newsbody"><img
height="71" width="100" src="../pictures/tomcat_3.gif" align="left">The JBoss
organization wants to deliver a complete J2EE based product to the market. The JBoss
organization decided to integrate the Tomcat engine stack with a running version of
JBoss in a single VM. Now you can serve all your servlet and JSP needs with 2 simple
downloads and a couple of configuration files. Check out the Tomcat <a
href="http://jakarta.apache.org" target="_top">homepage</a> for information related to
Tomcat.
<p>The goal of this
page is to explain how to make JBoss automatically start Tomcat, so that it runs in
the same VM.</p>
<p>We now run<b>
optimized stacks </b>the JSP/Servlet engine talks natively with the EJB engine
resulting in dramatic speed increases. Without the optimization the invocation is
through the network layer. With the optimized layers the invocation<b> is
native, inVM</b>, within the same stack of APIs</td>
</tr>
@@ -35,9 +35,9 @@
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">single startup/shutdown script</font>
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Separated stacks inVM</font>
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Integrated stacks inVM</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">J2EE deployer for jBoss/Tomcat</font>
+ <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">J2EE deployer for JBoss/Tomcat</font>
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Full EAR support</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">jBoss Auto-Deploy for EAR</font>
+ <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBoss Auto-Deploy for EAR</font>
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">JNDI shared visibility</font>
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Integrated Security Model</font>
</ul>
@@ -54,7 +54,7 @@
<td
class="newsheader"><b>Distribution and CVS</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">jBoss tomcat is shipped as part of the <a
href="binary.html">standard jBoss/Server package</a></font>
+ <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBoss tomcat is shipped as part of the <a
href="binary.html">standard JBoss/Server package</a></font>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">CVS module is <a href="cvs.html">contrib</a></font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
@@ -129,7 +129,7 @@
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsheader" width="600"><b>How-to package
and deploy an EAR file on jBoss/Tomcat</b></td>
+ <td class="newsheader" width="600"><b>How-to package
and deploy an EAR file on JBoss/Tomcat</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody" width="600">In order to benefit
from the classloader integration, you have to deploy your application in an EAR file
as recommended by the <a
href="http://java.sun.com/j2ee/download.html#platformspec">J2EE specification</a>.
1.2 +5 -5 newsite/business/jboss-zoap.html
Index: jboss-zoap.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/jboss-zoap.html,v
retrieving revision 1.1
retrieving revision 1.2
diff -u -r1.1 -r1.2
--- jboss-zoap.html 2000/11/17 02:29:26 1.1
+++ jboss-zoap.html 2001/02/08 05:31:21 1.2
@@ -12,16 +12,16 @@
<td width="600" valign="top">
<table border="0" cellpadding="2"
cellspacing="0">
<tr>
- <td
class="pageheader"><b>jBoss/ZOAP</b></td>
+ <td
class="pageheader"><b>JBoss/ZOAP</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsheader"><b>A
SOAP access layer for jBoss</b></td>
+ <td class="newsheader"><b>A
SOAP access layer for JBoss</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">The <a
href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/NOTE-SOAP-20000508/">Simple Object Access Protocol
(SOAP)</a> is a lightweight protocol for the exchange of information in a globally
distributed and loosely coupled environment. The current <a
href="http://msdn.microsoft.com/xml/general/soapspec.asp">SOAPV1.1 specification</a>,
inter alia authored by <a href="http://www.microsoft.com">Microsoft Corp.</a> and <a
href="http://www.ibm.com">International Business Machines (IBM)</a>, has been recently
submitted to and acknowledged by the <a href="http://www.w3c.org/">World-Wide Web
Consortium (W3C)</a> (see <a
href="http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2000/May00/SoapW3CPR.asp">this press
article</a>). </font>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">By embracing existing Internet technologies, SOAP has the potential to
become a powerful and really interoperable standard for messaging middleware: The <a
href="http://www.w3.org/TR/1998/REC-xml-19980210">eXtensible Markup Language (XML)</a>
is chosen as a flexible and tolerant medium for encoding messages and their payload.
For shipping such envelopes in a resource-saving and possibly asynchronous manner, a
variety of bullet-proof and widely available transport protocols is applicable, such
as the <a href="http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616.html">Hypertext Transfer
Protocol (HTTP1.1)</a> and the <a href="http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc821.html">Simple
Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP)</a>.</font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">The <a href="http://www.jboss.org/zoap/zoap.htm">Zero-Effort Object Access
Package (ZOAP)</a> is an Open Source SOAP implementation for the Java2 platform
running under the <a href="../../projects/jbossweb/zoap/license.html">GNU General
Public License</a>. It aims to be a lightweight and modular alternative to the
existing reference implementations. Furthermore, ZOAP is deeply integrated into the <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/">jBoss application server</a> to transparently turn <a
href="http://www.j2ee.com/">Enterprise Java-Beans (TM)</a> into globally interoperable
web services. The source distribution is available via cvs under
:pserver:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/products/cvs/ejboss/zoap </font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">ZOAP has been initiated as a part of <a href="http://www.infor.de/">infor
business solutions AG</a> application component platform. The current alpha has been
released in August 2000 and comes already with a decent set of <a
href="#features">outstanding functionalities</a>. The <a href="#todo">short-term
roadmap</a> ensures that ZOAP, in combination with the technologically advanced jBoss
project, will develop into an up-front application middleware. A first beta release is
planned for September/October 2000. </font></td>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">The <a href="http://www.jboss.org/zoap/zoap.htm">Zero-Effort Object Access
Package (ZOAP)</a> is an Open Source SOAP implementation for the Java2 platform
running under the <a href="../../projects/jbossweb/zoap/license.html">GNU General
Public License</a>. It aims to be a lightweight and modular alternative to the
existing reference implementations. Furthermore, ZOAP is deeply integrated into the <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/">JBoss application server</a> to transparently turn <a
href="http://www.j2ee.com/">Enterprise Java-Beans (TM)</a> into globally interoperable
web services. The source distribution is available via cvs under
:pserver:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/products/cvs/ejboss/zoap </font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">ZOAP has been initiated as a part of <a href="http://www.infor.de/">infor
business solutions AG</a> application component platform. The current alpha has been
released in August 2000 and comes already with a decent set of <a
href="#features">outstanding functionalities</a>. The <a href="#todo">short-term
roadmap</a> ensures that ZOAP, in combination with the technologically advanced JBoss
project, will develop into an up-front application middleware. A first beta release is
planned for September/October 2000. </font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td
class="newsheader"><b>Features</b></td>
@@ -39,7 +39,7 @@
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Builtin HTTP support (no servlet engine needed); Support for
persistent HTTP/1.1 connections. </font>
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Transparent Proxy Access </font>
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Special Proxy Support for XML-enabled Web-Clients (no full
(de-)serialisation needed). </font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Ready-Made Container-Plugin for jBoss2.0. Supports Stateless
Beans. </font>
+ <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Ready-Made Container-Plugin for JBoss2.0. Supports Stateless
Beans. </font>
</ul>
</td>
</tr>
1.3 +6 -6 newsite/business/jboss-zola.html
Index: jboss-zola.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/jboss-zola.html,v
retrieving revision 1.2
retrieving revision 1.3
diff -u -r1.2 -r1.3
--- jboss-zola.html 2000/11/17 19:34:43 1.2
+++ jboss-zola.html 2001/02/08 05:31:21 1.3
@@ -12,26 +12,26 @@
<td width="600" valign="top">
<table border="0" cellpadding="2"
cellspacing="0">
<tr>
- <td class="pageheader"
width="648"><b>jBoss/ZOLA</b></td>
+ <td class="pageheader"
width="648"><b>JBoss/ZOLA</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><font color="white" face="Myriad Web,Arial" size="3"><b>ZOL the
Application Programming Model for jBoss</b></font></td>
+ <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><font color="white" face="Myriad Web,Arial" size="3"><b>ZOL the
Application Programming Model for JBoss</b></font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">As jBoss reaches 2.0, the users of jBoss
need examples and fully built J2EE examples. ZOL was started in February 2000, by
<b>Thierry Janaudy and Juha Lindfors</b> to deliver templates and examples for users
on how to code J2EE applications.</font>
+ <td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">As JBoss reaches 2.0, the users of JBoss
need examples and fully built J2EE examples. ZOL was started in February 2000, by
<b>Thierry Janaudy and Juha Lindfors</b> to deliver templates and examples for users
on how to code J2EE applications.</font>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">ZOL is made of several types of applications and components, graphical ones
that show GUI heavy applications talking to beans as well as business one,
<b>e-commerce oriented</b>. </font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"
width="648"><b>ZOL WebStore</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Thierry with the help of the jBoss team has
developed a WebStore using jBoss 1.0, HypersonicSQL and Tomcat. The Webstore is also
part of the <b>zola</b> module. The characteristics of the WebStore are:</font>
+ <td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Thierry with the help of the JBoss team has
developed a WebStore using JBoss 1.0, HypersonicSQL and Tomcat. The Webstore is also
part of the <b>zola</b> module. The characteristics of the WebStore are:</font>
<ul>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">jBoss 2, HypersonicSQL, Tomcat</font>
+ <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBoss 2, HypersonicSQL, Tomcat</font>
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Session bean, BMP Entity bean</font>
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Servlets, JSP</font>
<li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">I18N (French, English, Spanish, Finnish)</font>
- <li><a
href="Updating-Webstore-to-Jboss2.htm">Updating WebStore to jBoss 2</a> by Luan
O'Carroll
+ <li><a
href="Updating-Webstore-to-Jboss2.htm">Updating WebStore to JBoss 2</a> by Luan
O'Carroll
</ul>
<p><a
href="http://38.179.207.216:8080/zol/zol.jsp"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img
height="129" width="100" src="../pictures/powered_by_jboss_square_metal.gif"
align="middle">Try WebStore Live!</font></a></p>
<p></td>
1.4 +19 -19 newsite/business/jboss.htm
Index: jboss.htm
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/jboss.htm,v
retrieving revision 1.3
retrieving revision 1.4
diff -u -r1.3 -r1.4
--- jboss.htm 2001/01/19 09:12:40 1.3
+++ jboss.htm 2001/02/08 05:31:21 1.4
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF">
<table width="100%" border="0" cellpadding="5">
<tr bgcolor="#FFFFFF">
- <td width="29%"><font color="#FFCC00"><b><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica,
sans-serif" size="5" color="#000000">jBoss/Server</font></b></font>
+ <td width="29%"><font color="#FFCC00"><b><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica,
sans-serif" size="5" color="#000000">JBoss/Server</font></b></font>
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign="top">
@@ -16,12 +16,12 @@
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><b><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4">Overview<br>
</font></b></font><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"
size="2">Formerly
known as EJBoss at version 1.0, the second generation of the open source
- jBoss/Server is truly a <i>third-generation </i>Java 2 Enterprise Edition
+ JBoss/Server is truly a <i>third-generation </i>Java 2 Enterprise Edition
application server. Why do we say "third-generation"? Well,
it's not because our server is <i>completely free</i> for both application
development and deployment; that's been our policy from the beginning.
Rather, our server is "third-generation" because of our highly
- modular design and innovative new features that make jBoss/Server unique,
+ modular design and innovative new features that make JBoss/Server unique,
even when compared to the most costly <ACRONYM title="Java 2 Enterprise
Edition">J2EE</ACRONYM> application servers on the
market.</font> </p>
<table width="300" border="0" cellspacing="3" cellpadding="7" align="right">
@@ -42,18 +42,18 @@
they weren't going to create just any old app server. The project
they worked on would have to result in an industrial-strength,
standards-based
application server. The technology would be Sun's Java-based J2EE
- specification, and the name would be jBoss/Server.</font></p>
+ specification, and the name would be JBoss/Server.</font></p>
<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"
size="2">Development
began in March, 1999 with version 1.0 finally being released in
February, 2000. The server was established as a technological leader
- with many ease-of-use features pioneered by the jBoss.org
team.</font></p>
+ with many ease-of-use features pioneered by the JBoss.org
team.</font></p>
<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Marc
had been working for almost six months on a traditional,
compilation-heavy
approach to the container design. Then Rickard came along with the
revolutionary ideas of logical skeleton classes and dynamic proxies
as the basis for a radically new architecture.</font></p>
<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">With
- a bright light now turned on, Marc started feverishly coding
jBoss/Server
+ a bright light now turned on, Marc started feverishly coding
JBoss/Server
version 2.0. He code-named the container "NextGen," truly believing
it was a blueprint for technologies to be envied�a "next generation"
container. The "smart money" agrees with Marc.</font></p>
@@ -68,7 +68,7 @@
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><b><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4">
Enterprise JavaBeans Support<br>
</font></b><font color="#000000" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"
size="4">
- <font size="2">Being both open and standards-compliant, jBoss/Server
</font></font><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"
color="#000000">supports
+ <font size="2">Being both open and standards-compliant, JBoss/Server
</font></font><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"
color="#000000">supports
both <ACRONYM title="Enterprise Java Beans">EJB</ACRONYM> Session Beans and
Entity Beans.</font></font></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color=white
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"
size="2" color="#000000">EJB
@@ -88,7 +88,7 @@
Beans represent database entities and most often a single Entity Bean
maps to a single relational database table. Entity Beans can be developed
and deployed rapidly using Container Managed Persistence (CMP) since all
- the object-to-relational database mapping is managed by the jBoss/Server
+ the object-to-relational database mapping is managed by the JBoss/Server
container. But if you must support a complex and/or legacy database schema
that does not easily map into CMP, then for you the answer is Bean Managed
Persistence (BMP). With BMP you control the loading and saving of complex
@@ -98,19 +98,19 @@
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><b><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4">Modular
Server Design <br>
</font></b></font><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"
size="2">Modularly
- developed from the ground up, the jBoss server and container are completely
+ developed from the ground up, the JBoss server and container are completely
implemented using component-based plug-ins. Borrowing from the success
of Linux 2.0 and its modular approach to team-based, open source software
- implementation, jBoss 2.0 is being developed by distributed team members,
+ implementation, JBoss 2.0 is being developed by distributed team members,
each working on a cleanly separated part of the server. Our approach makes
it easy for you to join our team and contribute to the hottest open source
- J2EE server project around. It also ensures that jBoss/Server will be
+ J2EE server project around. It also ensures that JBoss/Server will be
maintained and extended for years to come.</font></p>
<p><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The modularization
effort is supported by the use of JMX, the Java Management eXtension API.
- Using JMX, industry-standard interfaces help us manage both jBoss/Server
+ Using JMX, industry-standard interfaces help us manage both JBoss/Server
components and the applications deployed on it. Ease of use is still the
- number one priority here at jBoss.org, and jBoss/Server 2.0 sets a new
+ number one priority here at JBoss.org, and JBoss/Server 2.0 sets a new
standard for both modular, plug-in design and ease of server and
application
management.</font></p>
<p><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">This high degree of
@@ -127,11 +127,11 @@
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><b><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4">
Features That Speed Development<br>
</font></b><font color="#000000" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"
size="4">
- <font size="2">In addition to the fact that jBoss/Server is an EJB 1.1
+ <font size="2">In addition to the fact that JBoss/Server is an EJB 1.1
compliant application server, there are some innovative features that
make our server a pleasure to use</font></font></font><font face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">.
Specifically two features make application deployment extremely easy to
- perform, saving developers much time and effort. In a phrase, jBoss/Server
+ perform, saving developers much time and effort. In a phrase, JBoss/Server
takes the grunt work out of EJB application development.</font></font></p>
<p><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">First there's
<i>dynamically,
runtime-generated stub and skeleton classes</i>. In many commercial EJB
@@ -139,19 +139,19 @@
step prior to deployment (e.g. using an "ebjc" tool). It goes
without saying that this extra step requires additional developer overhead,
adding significant time to each change-compile-deploy cycle. By generating
- stub and skeleton classes on the fly, jBoss/Server takes at least several
+ stub and skeleton classes on the fly, JBoss/Server takes at least several
seconds, and perhaps minutes, off of each deployment. As an added benefit,
- the method used by jBoss/Server to accomplish this time- and effort-savings
+ the method used by JBoss/Server to accomplish this time- and effort-savings
feature also saves memory and other server resources since only a single
server object supports <i>every</i> deployed Enterprise JavaBeans
component!</font></p>
<p><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">A second time- and
effort-savings feature is <i>automatic hot deploy and redeploy</i>. Some
of the top commercial EJB servers require you to "bounce" the
server in order to successfully deploy your application changes. However,
- jBoss/Server allows you to deploy new applications and redeploy existing
+ JBoss/Server allows you to deploy new applications and redeploy existing
applications without stopping and restarting the server. In fact, the
feature is as easy as copying your newly built EJB JAR file to the server
- deployment directory where jBoss/Server picks up the new file,
automatically
+ deployment directory where JBoss/Server picks up the new file,
automatically
undeploys the old JAR (if any) and deploys the new JAR within seconds.
This feature definitely provides the benefit of slicing minutes off of
each change-compile-deploy cycle.</font></p>
1.5 +4 -4 newsite/business/lists.html
Index: lists.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/lists.html,v
retrieving revision 1.4
retrieving revision 1.5
diff -u -r1.4 -r1.5
--- lists.html 2001/01/28 15:32:03 1.4
+++ lists.html 2001/02/08 05:31:21 1.5
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@
<td class="newsheader"
width="648"><b>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</b> </td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Is the <b>main list for general
discussion</b> of jBoss, send support questions here as well. </font>
+ <td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Is the <b>main list for general
discussion</b> of JBoss, send support questions here as well. </font>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>To subscribe</b> just click <a
href="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">here</a> and send the mail "as
is" no need to put a subject or a body. </font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>To unsubscribe</b> follow the directions in the bodies of the mail.
</font></p>
<p><a
href="http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><b>Archive</b></font></a></td>
@@ -44,7 +44,7 @@
<td class="newsheader"
width="648"><b>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBossMQ develops a JMS server as a jBoss
project. This list is unified for now and focused on development at this stage. Most
jBoss projects will rely on the JBossMQ infrastructure at some point. Deep
techno</font>
+ <td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBossMQ develops a JMS server as a JBoss
project. This list is unified for now and focused on development at this stage. Most
JBoss projects will rely on the JBossMQ infrastructure at some point. Deep
techno</font>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>To subscribe</b> just click <a
href="http://www.egroups.com/subscribe/spyderMQ">here</a></font></p>
<p><a
href="http://www.egroups.com/group/spyderMQ"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>Archive</b></font></a><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"> </font></td>
</tr>
@@ -60,14 +60,14 @@
<td class="newsheader"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"
size="3"><b>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</b></font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">This is a private list for board
discussions. However you can send emails that deal with jBoss as a whole and issues
you want to raise to the boards attention. </font>
+ <td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">This is a private list for board
discussions. However you can send emails that deal with JBoss as a whole and issues
you want to raise to the boards attention. </font>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>To send an email to the board</b> just click <a
href="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">here</a></font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"
width="648"><b>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">This list is dedicated to discussions of
license issues regarding jBoss. </font>
+ <td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">This list is dedicated to discussions of
license issues regarding JBoss. </font>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>To subscribe</b> just click <a
href="http://www.egroups.com/subscribe/jbosslicense">here</a></font></p>
<p><a
href="http://www.egroups.com/messages/jbosslicense"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>Archive</b></font></a></td>
</tr>
1.2 +1 -1 newsite/business/main.css
Index: main.css
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/main.css,v
retrieving revision 1.1
retrieving revision 1.2
diff -u -r1.1 -r1.2
--- main.css 2000/11/17 02:29:28 1.1
+++ main.css 2001/02/08 05:31:21 1.2
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-/* Style Sheet document for the new jBoss website */
+/* Style Sheet document for the new JBoss website */
a.menu { color: black; text-decoration: none }
body { background-color: #ffffff; margin: 0 }
1.7 +16 -16 newsite/business/news.html
Index: news.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/news.html,v
retrieving revision 1.6
retrieving revision 1.7
diff -u -r1.6 -r1.7
--- news.html 2001/02/01 04:17:38 1.6
+++ news.html 2001/02/08 05:31:21 1.7
@@ -93,42 +93,42 @@
<td
class="newsheader"><b>October 30- November 5 2000: LGPL, Optimizations, Success
stories</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td
class="newsbody"><b>LGPL: </b>A license change is evaluated for the
FINAL release of jBoss. The reason is the fear some people have about the GPL.
Moving to LGPL will enable a wider diffusion of the jBoss technologies. jBoss
can now be embedded in any product as a Library. Authors vote on the issue.
+ <td
class="newsbody"><b>LGPL: </b>A license change is evaluated for the
FINAL release of JBoss. The reason is the fear some people have about the GPL.
Moving to LGPL will enable a wider diffusion of the JBoss technologies. JBoss
can now be embedded in any product as a Library. Authors vote on the issue.
<p><b>Optimizations:
</b>Preparing for FINAL, the last optimizations of the codebase are done.</p>
- <p><b>Success Stories:
</b>People write in saying "we replace WebSphere by jBoss", a thread of
"me-too" happen on jBoss-user. Visit the "testimonials" page
for some accounts and experiences with our product suite.</td>
+ <p><b>Success Stories:
</b>People write in saying "we replace WebSphere by JBoss", a thread of
"me-too" happen on JBoss-user. Visit the "testimonials" page
for some accounts and experiences with our product suite.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td
class="newsheader"><b>October 23- October 29 2000: Tomcat inVM Done,
J2EE Deployer, BETA-PROD-03</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td
class="newsbody"><b>Tomcat: </b>The Optimized version of Tomcat is done. The
speed increase is dramatic and invocations run well below the millisecond barrier
(0.3ms to be precise). The full J2EE stack can live embedded and in Open
Source.
-
<p><b>J2EE Deployer: </b>Daniel Schulze and Sebastien Alborini post the first
version of the integrated J2EE deployer with full web application support.
Developers can now deploy on the integrated jBoss/Tomcat stack and work with
Enterprise Application Resources (EAR).</p>
+
<p><b>J2EE Deployer: </b>Daniel Schulze and Sebastien Alborini post the first
version of the integrated J2EE deployer with full web application support.
Developers can now deploy on the integrated JBoss/Tomcat stack and work with
Enterprise Application Resources (EAR).</p>
<p><b>BETA-PROD-03: </b>A new refresh of the binary before FINAL, Passivating
Cache, Fixed memory leaks, Integration with Tomcat done, J2EE deployer, Stabilization
Improved instance locking, Security based on JAAS. The code is stable and fast, apart
from J2EE deployer this is a feature freeze 'en route' to FINAL.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>October 16- October 22 2000: Databases, Speed, jBoss on
SUN</b></td>
+ <td
class="newsheader"><b>October 16- October 22 2000: Databases, Speed, JBoss on
SUN</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td
class="newsbody"><b>Oracle, DB2, Interbase, PostgreSQL, Sybase: </b>Aaron Mulder fine
tunes the SQL mappings for JAWS. These databases run the tests of jBoss with no
problem. New Mappings will ship with binary version.
-
<p><b>Speed: </b>After many days of intense tress testing we narrow down the
choke points of jBoss. The Open Source feedback is fast at finding the
"hot-spots" in our codebase and tremendous progress is done on the speed
front. jBoss runs faster by the day.</p>
- <p><b>SUN: </b>3 top
developers of jBoss go down to one of the benchmark centers of SUN microsystems
in Silicon Valley and benchmark jBoss on high-end hardware and heavy loads. jBoss
scales to 5000 clients on a 10 CPU E4500. Fine-tuning of jBoss is done in these
extreme conditions and hotspots are revealed. From 1CPU linux boxes to 10-way
enterprise class machines, jBoss scales on a large variety of hardware.</td>
+ <td
class="newsbody"><b>Oracle, DB2, Interbase, PostgreSQL, Sybase: </b>Aaron Mulder fine
tunes the SQL mappings for JAWS. These databases run the tests of JBoss with no
problem. New Mappings will ship with binary version.
+
<p><b>Speed: </b>After many days of intense tress testing we narrow down the
choke points of JBoss. The Open Source feedback is fast at finding the
"hot-spots" in our codebase and tremendous progress is done on the speed
front. JBoss runs faster by the day.</p>
+ <p><b>SUN: </b>3 top
developers of JBoss go down to one of the benchmark centers of SUN microsystems
in Silicon Valley and benchmark JBoss on high-end hardware and heavy loads. JBoss
scales to 5000 clients on a 10 CPU E4500. Fine-tuning of JBoss is done in these
extreme conditions and hotspots are revealed. From 1CPU linux boxes to 10-way
enterprise class machines, JBoss scales on a large variety of hardware.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>October 9- October 15 2000: Jetty, Security, Large Apps on
jBoss, Cache</b></td>
+ <td
class="newsheader"><b>October 9- October 15 2000: Jetty, Security, Large Apps on
JBoss, Cache</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td
class="newsbody"><b>Jetty: </b>Julian Gosnell post an integration of
jBoss/Jetty. Jetty is a servlet/JSP/HTTP container and the integration in jBoss is a
breeze. For users of jBoss this means more choice in the front end server they can use
for their web applications. We welcome this addition and hope the future collaboration
will go well.
- <p><b>Security</b>: 2
board members are tackling the security implementation of jBoss. Dan O'Connor
and Oleg Nitz work on CVS to bring a full fledged JAAS based implementation
to life.</p>
- <p><b>Large
Apps: </b>As we stress test jBoss people already run jBoss in production with
Large Applications. Several hundred classes, several thousand bean instances, Sandeep
describes his succesful experience migrating from WebLogic to jBoss.</p>
- <p><b>Passivating
Caches: </b>Simone Bordet puts a final version of caches in CVS. These are fast and
scalable taking jBoss further. Final testing and Debugging of jBoss takes
place.</td>
+ <td
class="newsbody"><b>Jetty: </b>Julian Gosnell post an integration of
JBoss/Jetty. Jetty is a servlet/JSP/HTTP container and the integration in JBoss is a
breeze. For users of JBoss this means more choice in the front end server they can use
for their web applications. We welcome this addition and hope the future collaboration
will go well.
+ <p><b>Security</b>: 2
board members are tackling the security implementation of JBoss. Dan O'Connor
and Oleg Nitz work on CVS to bring a full fledged JAAS based implementation
to life.</p>
+ <p><b>Large
Apps: </b>As we stress test JBoss people already run JBoss in production with
Large Applications. Several hundred classes, several thousand bean instances, Sandeep
describes his succesful experience migrating from WebLogic to JBoss.</p>
+ <p><b>Passivating
Caches: </b>Simone Bordet puts a final version of caches in CVS. These are fast and
scalable taking JBoss further. Final testing and Debugging of JBoss takes
place.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td
class="newsheader"><b>October 2- October 8 2000: Catalina, BETA-PROD-02, Stress
Tests</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td
class="newsbody"><b>Catalina: </b>Catalina, the next generation JSP/Servlet
container from Apache is integrated with jBoss. Sebastien Sahuc posts a first
implementation in CVS
+ <td
class="newsbody"><b>Catalina: </b>Catalina, the next generation JSP/Servlet
container from Apache is integrated with JBoss. Sebastien Sahuc posts a first
implementation in CVS
<p><b>BETA-PROD02</b>:
A refresh of the BETA version, early version of locking improvements, New cache
with improved performance, Better inVM integration with Tomcat, Integration with
CastorJDO, CocoBase (in the contrib module), Enhanced Transaction management,
Implemented UserTransaction</p>
-
<p><b>StressTests: </b>As jBoss is now PROD ready we fine tune the kernel
and stress our server. A series of complete tests is designed. They look for
leaks, stress points, hot points, deadlocks, scalability bottlenecks and other parts
of the server we want to eradicate as we reach stability. Thanks to Sebastien
Alborini and Daniel Schulze for the implementation of tests.</td>
+
<p><b>StressTests: </b>As JBoss is now PROD ready we fine tune the kernel
and stress our server. A series of complete tests is designed. They look for
leaks, stress points, hot points, deadlocks, scalability bottlenecks and other parts
of the server we want to eradicate as we reach stability. Thanks to Sebastien
Alborini and Daniel Schulze for the implementation of tests.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td
class="newsheader"><b>September 25- October 1 2000: Production Sites, $50k, Manual,
Todos for FINAL</b></td>
@@ -175,7 +175,7 @@
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><b>Time
is money: </b>Give us time! We are sorry but BETA-PROD is delayed. We want
to make sure that everything is kosher as we know people are going to go into
production with this. Ok so we promised it for September 1st and our deadline is
slipping...so sue us! better yet, help us!
<p><b>EJB Pool: </b>we
just received a notification of a post on ejb-interest pooling the usage of app
servers, we are very happy that people are using the alpha release so massively...
hehe the BETA release should even increase these numbers. The following numbers
are on a total of 310 votes</p>
- <p>BEA Weblogic
(33.5%), Orion Server (14.2%), Inprise Application Server ( 8.7%), IBM Websphere (
8.4%), Pramati Server ( 7.4%), IONA iPortal ( 7.1%), Sun/Netscape iPlanet ( 4.2%),
<b>jBoss ( 3.9%), </b>Gemstone/J (3.2%), Allaire JRun ( 2.6%), Jonas ( 2.3%), Oracle
IAS ( 1.0%), Persistence PowerTier ( 1.0%), Sybase EAServer ( 1.0%), Silverstream (
0.1%), OrCAS Enterprise Server ( 0.6%), ObjectSpace Voyager ( 0.6%), Unify eWave (
0.6%).</p>
+ <p>BEA Weblogic
(33.5%), Orion Server (14.2%), Inprise Application Server ( 8.7%), IBM Websphere (
8.4%), Pramati Server ( 7.4%), IONA iPortal ( 7.1%), Sun/Netscape iPlanet ( 4.2%),
<b>JBoss ( 3.9%), </b>Gemstone/J (3.2%), Allaire JRun ( 2.6%), Jonas ( 2.3%), Oracle
IAS ( 1.0%), Persistence PowerTier ( 1.0%), Sybase EAServer ( 1.0%), Silverstream (
0.1%), OrCAS Enterprise Server ( 0.6%), ObjectSpace Voyager ( 0.6%), Unify eWave (
0.6%).</p>
<p>We know where we
want to be next year ;-)</p>
<p><b>Doco: </b>We
have completely updated the documentation. It now features beginners and advanced
trails. It covers the differential metadata and takes you by the hand for all
sorts of database madness. Using jboss is as simple as a walk in the park, well at
least that is what the doco claims. Go check it out and thanks to the many
contributors who have helped put this massive effort in place.</td>
</tr>
@@ -209,7 +209,7 @@
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><b>Time
is money: </b>Give us time! We are sorry but BETA-PROD is delayed. We want
to make sure that everything is kosher as we know people are going to go into
production with this. Ok so we promised it for September 1st and our deadline is
slipping...so sue us! better yet, help us!
<p><b>EJB Pool: </b>we
just received a notification of a post on ejb-interest pooling the usage of app
servers, we are very happy that people are using the alpha release so massively...
hehe the BETA release should even increase these numbers. The following numbers
are on a total of 310 votes</p>
- <p>BEA Weblogic
(33.5%), Orion Server (14.2%), Inprise Application Server ( 8.7%), IBM Websphere (
8.4%), Pramati Server ( 7.4%), IONA iPortal ( 7.1%), Sun/Netscape iPlanet ( 4.2%),
<b>jBoss ( 3.9%), </b>Gemstone/J (3.2%), Allaire JRun ( 2.6%), Jonas ( 2.3%), Oracle
IAS ( 1.0%), Persistence PowerTier ( 1.0%), Sybase EAServer ( 1.0%), Silverstream (
0.1%), OrCAS Enterprise Server ( 0.6%), ObjectSpace Voyager ( 0.6%), Unify eWave (
0.6%).</p>
+ <p>BEA Weblogic
(33.5%), Orion Server (14.2%), Inprise Application Server ( 8.7%), IBM Websphere (
8.4%), Pramati Server ( 7.4%), IONA iPortal ( 7.1%), Sun/Netscape iPlanet ( 4.2%),
<b>JBoss ( 3.9%), </b>Gemstone/J (3.2%), Allaire JRun ( 2.6%), Jonas ( 2.3%), Oracle
IAS ( 1.0%), Persistence PowerTier ( 1.0%), Sybase EAServer ( 1.0%), Silverstream (
0.1%), OrCAS Enterprise Server ( 0.6%), ObjectSpace Voyager ( 0.6%), Unify eWave (
0.6%).</p>
<p>We know where we
want to be next year ;-)</p>
<p><b>Doco: </b>We
have completely updated the documentation. It now features beginners and advanced
trails. It covers the differential metadata and takes you by the hand for all
sorts of database madness. Using jboss is as simple as a walk in the park, well at
least that is what the doco claims. Go check it out and thanks to the many
contributors who have helped put this massive effort in place.</p>
<p><a
href="news082000.htm">OLDER NEWS</a></td>
1.3 +32 -32 newsite/business/news082000.htm
Index: news082000.htm
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/news082000.htm,v
retrieving revision 1.2
retrieving revision 1.3
diff -u -r1.2 -r1.3
--- news082000.htm 2001/02/01 04:17:38 1.2
+++ news082000.htm 2001/02/08 05:31:21 1.3
@@ -4,8 +4,8 @@
<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1">
<meta name="generator" content="Adobe GoLive 4">
<title>Untitled Document</title>
- <meta name="description" content="jBoss, initially known as EJBoss
dates back to March 1999 when Marc Fleury launched it, is a joint effort of developers
to implement Sun's J2EE and to produce a top-notch Open Source Application server.It
will enable the ployment of EJBs (Enterprise Java Bean) to deliver the coolest
applications online. It's completely free so download it and use it to deploy your
beans.. ">
- <meta name="keywords" content="jBoss EJBoss Marc Fleury Rickard Oberg
J2EE Open Source Sun platform Appication Server EJB Beans Enterprise Java Bean GPL hot
deploy Enhydra WebLogic">
+ <meta name="description" content="JBoss, initially known as EJBoss
dates back to March 1999 when Marc Fleury launched it, is a joint effort of developers
to implement Sun's J2EE and to produce a top-notch Open Source Application server.It
will enable the ployment of EJBs (Enterprise Java Bean) to deliver the coolest
applications online. It's completely free so download it and use it to deploy your
beans.. ">
+ <meta name="keywords" content="JBoss EJBoss Marc Fleury Rickard Oberg
J2EE Open Source Sun platform Appication Server EJB Beans Enterprise Java Bean GPL hot
deploy Enhydra WebLogic">
</head>
<body bgcolor="white" leftmargin="0" topmargin="0" marginwidth="0"
marginheight="0">
@@ -127,12 +127,12 @@
<p>
<table border="0" cellspacing="0"
cellpadding="0" width="100%">
<tr>
- <td valign="top"
bgcolor="#eeeeee"><font size="4" face="arial,helvetica">May 22 - May 28 2000: jBoss
advances on all CVS fronts. </font></td>
+ <td valign="top"
bgcolor="#eeeeee"><font size="4" face="arial,helvetica">May 22 - May 28 2000: JBoss
advances on all CVS fronts. </font></td>
</tr>
</table>
</p>
- <p>A lot of CVS commits this week as
all projects of jBoss advance. Help is pouring and the state of all the projects
progresses fast.</p>
- <p><b>Tuesday</b>: <b>jBoss 2.0</b>. A
lot of bug reports and frantic fixes pace the last days. jBoss 2.0 reaches spec
compliance and stability fast as all development and testing effort focuses on this
version released only weeks ago. We recieve praise on the state of the container and
it feels good, we will be ready by JavaONE, oh yes! we will.</p>
+ <p>A lot of CVS commits this week as
all projects of JBoss advance. Help is pouring and the state of all the projects
progresses fast.</p>
+ <p><b>Tuesday</b>: <b>JBoss 2.0</b>. A
lot of bug reports and frantic fixes pace the last days. JBoss 2.0 reaches spec
compliance and stability fast as all development and testing effort focuses on this
version released only weeks ago. We recieve praise on the state of the container and
it feels good, we will be ready by JavaONE, oh yes! we will.</p>
<p><b>Wednesday</b>: <b>Jaws</b>.
Mucho functionality is required on Jaws and it seems that O/R mapping is everyone's
favorite topic of discussion. Everyone has a favorite database that needs a particular
Mapping. XML mapping permits us to define pretty much any database, mapping it all
takes some time. Jaws is moving fast.</p>
<p><b>Thursday</b> <b>spyderMQ</b>.
The little spyder is growing big. Norbert Lataille commits an advanced implementation
of the queues and moves to 0.3. The topic selection is also coded so that complex
queries on the topics can be specified. spyderMQ is looking more and more like an
advanced JMS implementation. 0.5 coming fast and furious.</p>
<p><b>Friday</b>: <b>Webstore</b> i18n
support for webstore, you can now try the ZOL implementation in many languages.
JSP/Servlet and EJB in mucho ways.</p>
@@ -143,11 +143,11 @@
</tr>
</table>
</p>
- <p>Another Big Week for jBoss with
close to 600 mails on the combined mailing lists. Folks are getting used to the mail
split and discussion happen on Jaws, spyderMQ, jBoss-dev, jBoss-user and Zola</p>
+ <p>Another Big Week for JBoss with
close to 600 mails on the combined mailing lists. Folks are getting used to the mail
split and discussion happen on Jaws, spyderMQ, JBoss-dev, JBoss-user and Zola</p>
<p><b>Monday</b>: We will be at
JavaONE. Thanks to RMH (a graduate of the group) for inviting us to the BOF on J2EE
open source. We will also be on the Telkel stand at J1, pays us a visit, come to the
BOF.</p>
<p><b>Tuesday</b>: Some folks
need the information on the GPL to be clearly layed out. We specify in a NOTE just
like it is done in Linux that we consider beans and applications to be "normal
usage" of our container.</p>
<p><b>Wednesday</b>: Website
down! with too many downloads the bandwidth is maxed on the old website. There was a
service interruption this morning and we apologize to all the visitors that were
greated with "404". The site is back up with a new bigger provider.</p>
- <p><b>Friday</b>: <b>10000
downloads in 10 days! jBoss2.0 is a smashing success! </b>With about 1000 downloads
per day jBoss must be the fastest growing application server! No wonder the website
went down...</p>
+ <p><b>Friday</b>: <b>10000
downloads in 10 days! JBoss2.0 is a smashing success! </b>With about 1000 downloads
per day JBoss must be the fastest growing application server! No wonder the website
went down...</p>
<p>
<table border="0" cellspacing="0"
cellpadding="0" width="100%">
<tr>
@@ -155,12 +155,12 @@
</tr>
</table>
</p>
- <p>Another Big Week for jBoss with
close to 500 mails on the combined mailing lists. The flow is big, and we are
splitting the mailings list.</p>
- <p>Monday: We announce the
composition of the board of jBoss. Early members are Marc Fleury, USA, Rickard Oberg,
Sweden, Juha Lindfors, Finland, Oleg Nitz, Ukraine and Dan O'Connor USA. This
board does the usual, vote on patches, vote on 3rd party integration, vote...</p>
+ <p>Another Big Week for JBoss with
close to 500 mails on the combined mailing lists. The flow is big, and we are
splitting the mailings list.</p>
+ <p>Monday: We announce the
composition of the board of JBoss. Early members are Marc Fleury, USA, Rickard Oberg,
Sweden, Juha Lindfors, Finland, Oleg Nitz, Ukraine and Dan O'Connor USA. This
board does the usual, vote on patches, vote on 3rd party integration, vote...</p>
<p>Tuesday: NEW WEBSITE!!!
you are checking it out.</p>
<p>Thursday: Bugzilla.
Management of the bugs, reports and features is growing out of hand. We have
installed the Open Source standard, Bugzilla.</p>
<p>Saturday: JAWS mailing list is
up. Our favorite little austrilian shark is up at [EMAIL PROTECTED] JAWS is a
powerful little O/R tool, join it's mailing list and feed the fish!</p>
- <p>Sunday: Mailing list split.
Due to the very high volume on jBoss we have decided to split the mailing lists.
ejboss now moves to jboss-user and jboss-dev. Same great place working-dogs.com,
thanks to jon*.</p>
+ <p>Sunday: Mailing list split.
Due to the very high volume on JBoss we have decided to split the mailing lists.
ejboss now moves to jboss-user and jboss-dev. Same great place working-dogs.com,
thanks to jon*.</p>
<p>
<table border="0" cellspacing="0"
cellpadding="0" width="100%">
<tr>
@@ -168,29 +168,29 @@
</tr>
</table>
</p>
- <p>Tuesday: jBoss1.0 PR2 is released.
jBoss1.0 moves in bug-fixing mode and development moves to jBoss2.0. Some bug fixes in
this version, some enhancements 1.0 final here we come</p>
- <p>Wednesday: Major news...
IBM<b> </b>releases the much expected<b> JDK1.3 on Linux. </b>jBoss decided to
standardize on 1.3 long time ago, cool technology is what this is all about and now
our Linux penguin friends can play with us. Thank you!</p>
- <p>Thrusday: Gary Meyer from Vitria
will be talking about jBoss at JavaONE during his "<b>Enterprise Java on Linux
HOWTO</b>" presentation and has given us a heads up!. Dude! thanks, we will get
you going.</p>
+ <p>Tuesday: JBoss1.0 PR2 is released.
JBoss1.0 moves in bug-fixing mode and development moves to JBoss2.0. Some bug fixes in
this version, some enhancements 1.0 final here we come</p>
+ <p>Wednesday: Major news...
IBM<b> </b>releases the much expected<b> JDK1.3 on Linux. </b>JBoss decided to
standardize on 1.3 long time ago, cool technology is what this is all about and now
our Linux penguin friends can play with us. Thank you!</p>
+ <p>Thrusday: Gary Meyer from Vitria
will be talking about JBoss at JavaONE during his "<b>Enterprise Java on Linux
HOWTO</b>" presentation and has given us a heads up!. Dude! thanks, we will get
you going.</p>
<p>
<table border="0" cellspacing="0"
cellpadding="0" width="100%">
<tr>
- <td valign="top"
bgcolor="#eeeeee"><font size="4" face="arial,helvetica">April 24 - April 30 2000: Test
integration, <b>spyderMQ</b>, jBoss 2.0 on Linux</font></td>
+ <td valign="top"
bgcolor="#eeeeee"><font size="4" face="arial,helvetica">April 24 - April 30 2000: Test
integration, <b>spyderMQ</b>, JBoss 2.0 on Linux</font></td>
</tr>
</table>
</p>
- <p>Monday: Zol and jBoss*.0
integrate their test suites. Zola becomes the default test suite for jBoss.</p>
- <p>Tuesday: <b>spyderMQ is
released</b>. jBoss believes that JMS will likely lie at the heart of a scalable
implementation. We get the message! Norbert Lataille the lead developer announces the
availability of the 0.1 source code and the mailing list on egroups.</p>
- <p>Friday: jBoss 2.0 on Linux.
Back by popular demand! Rickard Oberg delivers a <b>jBoss 2.0 on Linux</b>
(1.2.2) version of jBoss2.0. Now folks on Linux can work on the latest and greatest
electronica from the jBoss gang.</p>
+ <p>Monday: Zol and JBoss*.0
integrate their test suites. Zola becomes the default test suite for JBoss.</p>
+ <p>Tuesday: <b>spyderMQ is
released</b>. JBoss believes that JMS will likely lie at the heart of a scalable
implementation. We get the message! Norbert Lataille the lead developer announces the
availability of the 0.1 source code and the mailing list on egroups.</p>
+ <p>Friday: JBoss 2.0 on Linux.
Back by popular demand! Rickard Oberg delivers a <b>JBoss 2.0 on Linux</b>
(1.2.2) version of JBoss2.0. Now folks on Linux can work on the latest and greatest
electronica from the JBoss gang.</p>
<p>
<table border="0" cellspacing="0"
cellpadding="0" width="100%">
<tr>
- <td valign="top"
bgcolor="#eeeeee"><font size="4" face="arial,helvetica">April 17 - April 23 2000:
<b>Board formation, jBoss 2.0</b></font></td>
+ <td valign="top"
bgcolor="#eeeeee"><font size="4" face="arial,helvetica">April 17 - April 23 2000:
<b>Board formation, JBoss 2.0</b></font></td>
</tr>
</table>
</p>
<p>Two major events this week, a busy
one with north of 300 mails on the list.</p>
- <p>Wednesday: Two major events
this week. First the announcement of the new<b> Board formation</b> for the jBoss
organization. jBoss 2.0 with its modular approach makes way for massive parallel
development and collaboration. jBoss will now be headed by a board of 5 to manage CVS,
the people, the outside communication and vote on major issues. We feel it is the
right thing to do at this exciting stage and given the breath taking rate of growth of
jBoss. Expanded management should enable us to scale this modular container.
Marc Fleury will appoint the first members.</p>
- <p>Saturday: Rickard Oberg posts the
<b>first version of jBoss 2.0 in CVS</b>... go get it, it is revolutionary, all JMX,
all componentized, same forward thinking engineering... come code the future with us
and <b>this</b> is the future (applause in the room).</p>
+ <p>Wednesday: Two major events
this week. First the announcement of the new<b> Board formation</b> for the JBoss
organization. JBoss 2.0 with its modular approach makes way for massive parallel
development and collaboration. JBoss will now be headed by a board of 5 to manage CVS,
the people, the outside communication and vote on major issues. We feel it is the
right thing to do at this exciting stage and given the breath taking rate of growth of
JBoss. Expanded management should enable us to scale this modular container.
Marc Fleury will appoint the first members.</p>
+ <p>Saturday: Rickard Oberg posts the
<b>first version of JBoss 2.0 in CVS</b>... go get it, it is revolutionary, all JMX,
all componentized, same forward thinking engineering... come code the future with us
and <b>this</b> is the future (applause in the room).</p>
<p>
<table border="0" cellspacing="0"
cellpadding="0" width="100%">
<tr>
@@ -198,19 +198,19 @@
</tr>
</table>
</p>
- <p>Tuesday: a lively mail thread
is started on the mailing list. It discusses the default database that is
shipped with jBoss. We talk about many of them, most notably HypersonicSQL and
instantDB. Both look good and can be redistributed, a test version with HypersonicSQL
is bundled by Marc Fleury and immediately available.</p>
+ <p>Tuesday: a lively mail thread
is started on the mailing list. It discusses the default database that is
shipped with JBoss. We talk about many of them, most notably HypersonicSQL and
instantDB. Both look good and can be redistributed, a test version with HypersonicSQL
is bundled by Marc Fleury and immediately available.</p>
<p>Thursday: a nagging bug, first
identified by juha lindfors and corrected by Dan O'Connor is integrated by Marc
Fleury. We can now reference the other EJB's from the java: namespace in
JNDI, neat'o.</p>
- <p>Sunday: A must see feature... tired
of seeing all of your messages in one console, tired of not being able to call
system.out from your beans. jBoss just introduced a simple yet powerful feature for
bean debugging: the capacity to overwrite the out messages with the standard
Tracer... neat messages. jBoss 2.0 takes this even further.
+ <p>Sunday: A must see feature... tired
of seeing all of your messages in one console, tired of not being able to call
system.out from your beans. JBoss just introduced a simple yet powerful feature for
bean debugging: the capacity to overwrite the out messages with the standard
Tracer... neat messages. JBoss 2.0 takes this even further.
<table border="0" cellspacing="0"
cellpadding="0" width="100%">
<tr>
- <td valign="top"
bgcolor="#eeeeee"><font size="4" face="arial,helvetica">April 3 - April 9 2000: jBoss
2.0, name change, Rickard Oberg, PR1</font></td>
+ <td valign="top"
bgcolor="#eeeeee"><font size="4" face="arial,helvetica">April 3 - April 9 2000: JBoss
2.0, name change, Rickard Oberg, PR1</font></td>
</tr>
</table>
</p>
- <p>Monday: Following the success
of the conference and in keeping the pace up, Rickard announced the "soon to be
available" jBoss2.0. Just like its predecessor, jBoss1.0, jBoss 2.0 will set
ground breaking features for the rest of the industry to watch. Just like we
introduced dynamic Proxy based designs, we move forward with JMX based
administration and full componentization of the container. jBoss 2.0 is a fully
modular container it will enable all parties to simply integrate their software and
configure the container to suit their particular needs.</p>
- <p>Wednesday: EJBoss will change its
name, we have chosen and reserved and trademarked the name "jBoss". We
drop the "e" as we hear that e-commerce is out of fashion anyway ;-). Plus
jBoss sort of sounds better than EJBoss don't it? try it you will see that it rolls
well on the tongue "jay...Boss" :)</p>
- <p>Friday: Rickard Oberg will join the
Telkel staff full time. Telkel is starting to look like the "who's who" of
jBoss;-). Rickard will be able to dedicate himself fulltime to coding the server and
it's kernel and that is cool ...</p>
- <p>Friday: jBoss in PR1. A
public release of the 1.0 version.</p>
+ <p>Monday: Following the success
of the conference and in keeping the pace up, Rickard announced the "soon to be
available" JBoss2.0. Just like its predecessor, JBoss1.0, JBoss 2.0 will set
ground breaking features for the rest of the industry to watch. Just like we
introduced dynamic Proxy based designs, we move forward with JMX based
administration and full componentization of the container. JBoss 2.0 is a fully
modular container it will enable all parties to simply integrate their software and
configure the container to suit their particular needs.</p>
+ <p>Wednesday: EJBoss will change its
name, we have chosen and reserved and trademarked the name "JBoss". We
drop the "e" as we hear that e-commerce is out of fashion anyway ;-). Plus
JBoss sort of sounds better than EJBoss don't it? try it you will see that it rolls
well on the tongue "jay...Boss" :)</p>
+ <p>Friday: Rickard Oberg will join the
Telkel staff full time. Telkel is starting to look like the "who's who" of
JBoss;-). Rickard will be able to dedicate himself fulltime to coding the server and
it's kernel and that is cool ...</p>
+ <p>Friday: JBoss in PR1. A
public release of the 1.0 version.</p>
<p>
<table border="0" cellspacing="0"
cellpadding="0" width="100%">
<tr>
@@ -218,7 +218,7 @@
</tr>
</table>
</p>
- <p>This week Marc Fleury and Rickard
Oberg presented at the O'Reilly conference on Java. It was great to finally get to
meet many of you and put names on faces. It is good to hear your feedback and see that
jBoss is used in the field. Many contacts were taken, many talks initiated and most
interesting was the talk with Graig McLanahan of SUN/Tomcat. We will integrated Tomcat
and jBoss. The talks with the SUN were also very interesting, our project is
clearly percieved as the leader in the field and it was interesting to hear the plans
that SUN has for the open source. They spoke warmly of jBoss and our technology
"we were told it's not that low end" was the remark (pun) of one of the
proeminent figures of EJB... hee hee who said it was low-end? . </p>
+ <p>This week Marc Fleury and Rickard
Oberg presented at the O'Reilly conference on Java. It was great to finally get to
meet many of you and put names on faces. It is good to hear your feedback and see that
JBoss is used in the field. Many contacts were taken, many talks initiated and most
interesting was the talk with Graig McLanahan of SUN/Tomcat. We will integrated Tomcat
and JBoss. The talks with the SUN were also very interesting, our project is
clearly percieved as the leader in the field and it was interesting to hear the plans
that SUN has for the open source. They spoke warmly of JBoss and our technology
"we were told it's not that low end" was the remark (pun) of one of the
proeminent figures of EJB... hee hee who said it was low-end? . </p>
<p>
<table border="0" cellspacing="0"
cellpadding="0" width="100%">
<tr>
@@ -227,7 +227,7 @@
</table>
</p>
<p>Wednesday: A new version of DR2 is
posted. It contais many bug fixes from the early reports, mainly the class
loader glitches.</p>
- <p>Thursday: Rickard Oberg posts
another exciting enhancement for jBoss 2.0, it will come with a mapping for full
finders and a graphical tool to select the fields you want to work on. With full
R->O mapping jaws, still a "one nostril" implementation will cover
80% of the OR needs out there. And if it doesn't? well somebody has to
make a living selling those pricey OR mappers to you ;-)</p>
+ <p>Thursday: Rickard Oberg posts
another exciting enhancement for JBoss 2.0, it will come with a mapping for full
finders and a graphical tool to select the fields you want to work on. With full
R->O mapping jaws, still a "one nostril" implementation will cover
80% of the OR needs out there. And if it doesn't? well somebody has to
make a living selling those pricey OR mappers to you ;-)</p>
<p>Sunday: Failed interposition bug
solved by Dan O'Connor. </p>
<center>
<p><a
href="http://www.mail-archive.com/ejboss%40list.working-dogs.com/"><font
size="1">(hey, pst! working-dogs is where it's at)</font></a></p>
@@ -298,10 +298,10 @@
</tr>
<tr height="372">
<td
height="372"></td>
- <td
bgcolor="#ffcc00" width="100%" height="372">jBoss was present at JavaONE 2000 as a
guest in Telkel's booth . jBoss is clearly becoming the standard j2ee open source
effort. Thanks for all of those that stopped by and the good buzz.
+ <td
bgcolor="#ffcc00" width="100%" height="372">JBoss was present at JavaONE 2000 as a
guest in Telkel's booth . JBoss is clearly becoming the standard j2ee open source
effort. Thanks for all of those that stopped by and the good buzz.
<p>Keep the buzz going round and round. You can see the pictures <a
href="../../projects/jbossweb/javaone_site/javaone.htm">here</a>.</p>
-
<p>jBoss now has a new logo,</p>
-
<p><b>You love jBoss or you are powered by jBoss</b>? Feel free to use this logo on
your site</p>
+
<p>JBoss now has a new logo,</p>
+
<p><b>You love JBoss or you are powered by JBoss</b>? Feel free to use this logo on
your site</p>
<p><img height="60" width="159"
src="../../projects/jbossweb/picture/powered_by_jboss_flat_metal.gif"></p>
<p><a
href="../../projects/jbossweb/logos.htm">More logos....</a></td>
<td
bgcolor="#99cc66" height="372"></td>
1.2 +4 -4 newsite/business/sponsors.html
Index: sponsors.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/sponsors.html,v
retrieving revision 1.1
retrieving revision 1.2
diff -u -r1.1 -r1.2
--- sponsors.html 2000/11/17 02:29:32 1.1
+++ sponsors.html 2001/02/08 05:31:21 1.2
@@ -12,15 +12,15 @@
<td width="600" valign="top">
<table border="0" cellpadding="2"
cellspacing="0">
<tr>
- <td
class="pageheader"><b>Sponsor jBoss</b></td>
+ <td
class="pageheader"><b>Sponsor JBoss</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsheader"><b>Help
develop jBoss </b></td>
+ <td class="newsheader"><b>Help
develop JBoss </b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">UNDER CONSTRUCTION</font>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">jBoss is today replacing its more pricey competitors, WebLogic and
WebSphere. The jBoss group of developers is delivering tremendous value to you at
little cost. In the words of "Brian Behlendorf", one of the lead developers
of Apache "Open Source is close to a perpetual movement machine, you only need to
feed it from time to time". </font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">We will put up most of jBoss projects for sponsoring. This will
enable the very best developers of jBoss to dedicate quality time to the project.
Your help is needed, want to say "I payed for the deployer"? well help us
out! </font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">JBoss is today replacing its more pricey competitors, WebLogic and
WebSphere. The JBoss group of developers is delivering tremendous value to you at
little cost. In the words of "Brian Behlendorf", one of the lead developers
of Apache "Open Source is close to a perpetual movement machine, you only need to
feed it from time to time". </font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">We will put up most of JBoss projects for sponsoring. This will
enable the very best developers of JBoss to dedicate quality time to the project.
Your help is needed, want to say "I payed for the deployer"? well help us
out! </font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">UNDER CONSTRUCTION</font></td>
</tr>
1.4 +6 -6 newsite/business/testimonials.html
Index: testimonials.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/testimonials.html,v
retrieving revision 1.3
retrieving revision 1.4
diff -u -r1.3 -r1.4
--- testimonials.html 2001/02/02 02:42:52 1.3
+++ testimonials.html 2001/02/08 05:31:21 1.4
@@ -51,26 +51,26 @@
<p>-- Caskey, CTO, LiquidWit.com --</p>
<tr>
- <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><b>jBoss vs. Competition</b></td>
+ <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><b>JBoss vs. Competition</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody" ><font face="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif">"Hi
everyone. I recently went through this frustrating search for a free
EJB server. I found several, but most of them were not easy to use.
- <b>But the BEST free server I have found is the jBoss Server..</b>
- Unlike [..] all the other EJB servers, jBoss is actually easy to use,
+ <b>But the BEST free server I have found is the JBoss Server..</b>
+ Unlike [..] all the other EJB servers, JBoss is actually easy to use,
so at last, you won’t have to spend 3 days trying to troubleshoot
configuration files just to get it to run."</font><br>
<font
face="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif">-CJ- </font><font
face="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif"><i>Read on java.sun.com</i></font>
<p><font face="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif">" [...]In summary,
- <b>I chose jBoss </b>because of the better standards compliance,
+ <b>I chose JBoss </b>because of the better standards compliance,
the ease of bean development, the richer feature set, the better
performance"</font><br>
<font face="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif">- Charles Crain -<i>
</i></font></p>
<p><font face="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif">"This is my first
- experience with open source. The <b>support for jBoss on the mailing
+ experience with open source. The <b>support for JBoss on the mailing
lists is better than my extremely expensive paid support</b> for
other products."</font><br>
<font face="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif">- Bill Pfeiffer -</font></p>
@@ -85,7 +85,7 @@
<td class="newsheader"
width="648"><b>It's what development ought to be</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif">"Listening in on the jBoss
mail list is like being a fly on the wall of a great party where all the guests are
java/ejb heavies who are having a great time tossing ideas around . It's what
development ought to be like. <b>Can't you feel the ground moving under your feet?</b>
Yeah, that's them! <b>Techwise, they are flying.</b> Join their list and hold on to
your hats"</font><br>
+ <td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif">"Listening in on the JBoss
mail list is like being a fly on the wall of a great party where all the guests are
java/ejb heavies who are having a great time tossing ideas around . It's what
development ought to be like. <b>Can't you feel the ground moving under your feet?</b>
Yeah, that's them! <b>Techwise, they are flying.</b> Join their list and hold on to
your hats"</font><br>
<font
face="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif">-Heitzso-</font><i> <a
href="http://www.enhydra.org/community/mailingLists/enhydra-announce/msg00058.html">Read
on Enhydra.org</a> </i>
<p><font face="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif"><b>"The quality, pace
1.3 +29 -29 newsite/business/tomcat.htm
Index: tomcat.htm
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/tomcat.htm,v
retrieving revision 1.2
retrieving revision 1.3
diff -u -r1.2 -r1.3
--- tomcat.htm 2001/01/19 09:14:35 1.2
+++ tomcat.htm 2001/02/08 05:31:21 1.3
@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@
<table width="100%" border="0" cellpadding="5">
<tr bgcolor="#FFFFFF">
<td width="29%"><font color="#FFCC00"><b><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica,
sans-serif" size="5" color="#000000">Apache
- Tomcat With jBoss/Server</font></b></font> </td>
+ Tomcat With JBoss/Server</font></b></font> </td>
</tr>
<tr valign="top">
<td width="29%">
@@ -17,11 +17,11 @@
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><b><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4">Why
We Use Tomcat<br>
</font></b></font><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">As
- part of the Project Game Over initiative, the goal of jBoss.org is to
+ part of the Project Game Over initiative, the goal of JBoss.org is to
deliver a complete J2EE-based product to the market. This means that
JavaServer
- Pages (JSP) and Java Servlets must be supported. Therefore, the jBoss
+ Pages (JSP) and Java Servlets must be supported. Therefore, the JBoss
organization decided to integrate the Apache Tomcat engine stack with
- a running instance of jBoss/Server in a single Java VM. Hence, you can
+ a running instance of JBoss/Server in a single Java VM. Hence, you can
fill all your JSP and servlet needs with two downloads and a few
modifications
to configuration files. Check out the Apache <a
href="http://jakarta.apache.org">Tomcat
home page</a> for detailed information regarding the Tomcat engine.
</font></p>
@@ -36,7 +36,7 @@
<tr bgcolor="#FFFF00" valign="top">
<td>
<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"
size="2">Currently
- you can run Tomcat in the same Java VM that the jBoss/Server is
+ you can run Tomcat in the same Java VM that the JBoss/Server is
running in, but the performance is not as optimal as expected when
using intra-VM method invocations. The reason: currently we serialize
method invocations as an interim solution.</font></p>
@@ -52,7 +52,7 @@
</tr>
</table>
<p><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">One benefit of running
- Tomcat inside the same Java VM that jBoss/Server is running in is to more
+ Tomcat inside the same Java VM that JBoss/Server is running in is to more
easily manage the application server. The primary benefit, however, is
greatly enhanced performance. By eliminating object serialization and
unnecessary network calls by keeping all method invocations inside a single
@@ -62,7 +62,7 @@
performance because the method invocations will be intra-VM (no network
access). </font></p>
<p><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The remainder of this
- page explains how to make jBoss/Server automatically start Tomcat, so
+ page explains how to make JBoss/Server automatically start Tomcat, so
that they both run in the same Java VM.</font> </p>
<p><font color=white
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><b><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4">What
@@ -74,26 +74,26 @@
3.1</b>. You can get the <a
href="http://jakarta.apache.org/builds/tomcat/release/v3.1/bin/jakarta-tomcat.tar.gz">Unix/Linux</a>
version or the <a
href="http://jakarta.apache.org/builds/tomcat/release/v3.1/bin/jakarta-tomcat.zip">Windows</a>
version. We also successfully integrated and ran Tomcat version 3.2b3
- with jBoss/Server on September 1, 2000.</font></li>
- <li><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><b>jBoss/Server
+ with JBoss/Server on September 1, 2000.</font></li>
+ <li><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><b>JBoss/Server
version 2.0</b></font></li>
</ul>
<p><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Once you have obtain
these products you will be ready to begin the next step of configuring
- Tomcat to run with jBoss/Server.</font> </p>
+ Tomcat to run with JBoss/Server.</font> </p>
<p> <font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color=white
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><b><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4">How
- To Configure Tomcat and jBoss/Server<br>
+ To Configure Tomcat and JBoss/Server<br>
</font></b><font color="#000000" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"
size="4">
- <font size="2">Follow these steps to configure Tomcat to run with
jBoss/Server.</font></font></font></font></p>
+ <font size="2">Follow these steps to configure Tomcat to run with
JBoss/Server.</font></font></font></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color=white
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4"><font size="2"><b>1.
Set environment variables</b></font></font></font></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color=white
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4"><font size="2">If
- you launch jBoss/Server from a batch/shell script, set the following
environment
+ you launch JBoss/Server from a batch/shell script, set the following
environment
variables in that script before the command that launches the server.
- If you don't launch jBoss/Server from a script, these environment variables
+ If you don't launch JBoss/Server from a script, these environment variables
must somehow be set before the server starts (e.g. from a login script,
startup script, of from a workstation console or "control panel"
interface):</font></font></font></font></p>
@@ -118,7 +118,7 @@
<td width="161" valign="top"><font
color="#000000"><code><b>CLASSPATH</b></code></font></td>
<td width="230"><font color="#000000" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"
size="2">This
variable should actually be <i>unset</i>�not include any value (unless
- you really know what you're doing!). Both Tomcat and jBoss/Server
+ you really know what you're doing!). Both Tomcat and JBoss/Server
have startup scripts that associate the necessary JARs with the
classpath.</font></td>
</tr>
</table>
@@ -149,12 +149,12 @@
debug="0" /> </p>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color=white
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4"><font size="2">
- <b>3. Edit the jBoss/Server's jboss.conf
file</b></font></font></font></font></p>
+ <b>3. Edit the JBoss/Server's jboss.conf
file</b></font></font></font></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color=white
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4"><font size="2">The
<code>jboss.conf</code> file is located in the <code>conf</code> directory
- under the base of your jBoss/Server binary distribution, or in the
<code>dist/conf</code>
- directory if you built jBoss/Server yourself from source code. There are
+ under the base of your JBoss/Server binary distribution, or in the
<code>dist/conf</code>
+ directory if you built JBoss/Server yourself from source code. There are
some commented lines near the end of the file that deal with Tomcat:
</font></font></font></font></p>
<p><font size="2"><code><!--<br>
<font color="#FFCC00" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica,
sans-serif"><b> </b></font>--<font color="#FFCC00" face="Verdana,
Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b> </b></font>Uncomment<font color="#FFCC00"
face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b> </b></font>this<font
color="#FFCC00" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica,
sans-serif"><b> </b></font>to<font color="#FFCC00" face="Verdana, Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif"><b> </b></font>add<font color="#FFCC00" face="Verdana,
Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b> </b></font>Tomcat<font color="#FFCC00"
face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b> </b></font>support.<font
color="#FFCC00" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica,
sans-serif"><b> </b></font>Be<font color="#FFCC00" face="Verdana, Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif"><b> </b></font>sure<font color="#FFCC00" face="Verdana,
Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b> </b></font>to<font color="#FFCC00"
face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica,!
sans-serif"><b> </b></font>set<font color="#FFCC00" face="Verdana, Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif"><b> </b></font>your<font color="#FFCC00" face="Verdana,
Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b> </b></font>'TOMCAT_HOME'<br>
@@ -185,7 +185,7 @@
</font></font></font></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color=white
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4"><font size="2">
- <b>5. Add jBoss/Server client JAR files </b></font><b><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><font color=white
+ <b>5. Add JBoss/Server client JAR files </b></font><b><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><font color=white
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4"><font size="2">to
the Tomcat Web application
directory</font></font></font></font></b></font></font></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color=white
@@ -214,27 +214,27 @@
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color=white
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4"><font size="2">
These files can be found in the <code>client</code> directory under your
- jBoss/Server binary distribution installation, or <code>dist/client</code>
+ JBoss/Server binary distribution installation, or <code>dist/client</code>
for source code distributions. </font></font></font></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color=white
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4"><font size="2"><b>6.
Add support for JNDI to the Tomcat Web applications
directory</b></font></font></font></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color=white
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4"><font size="2">Put
- the jBoss/Server's JNDI configuration file <code>jndi.properties</code>
+ the JBoss/Server's JNDI configuration file <code>jndi.properties</code>
in the <code>WEB-INF/classes</code> directory under your Tomcat Web
application
directory (for example,
<code>Jakarta-tomcat/webapps/myapp/WEB-INF/classes</code>).
The </font><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color=white
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4"><font
size="2"><code>jndi.properties</code></font></font></font></font>
<font size="2">file can be found in the <code>conf</code> directory under
- your jBoss/Server binary distribution installation directory, or
<code>dist/conf</code>
+ your JBoss/Server binary distribution installation directory, or
<code>dist/conf</code>
for source code distribution. </font></font></font></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color=white
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4"><font size="2"><b>7.
- Finally, start jBoss/Server</b></font></font></font></font></p>
+ Finally, start JBoss/Server</b></font></font></font></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color=white
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4"><font size="2">If
- you start jBoss/Server now by executing <code>run.sh</code>
(<code>run.bat</code>
+ you start JBoss/Server now by executing <code>run.sh</code>
(<code>run.bat</code>
for Windows) you should see the following Tomcat related output in your
server's log messages:</font></font></font></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color=white
@@ -273,19 +273,19 @@
should only see the lines following <code>[Tomcat] OK</code> if you have
installed the examples that come with Tomcat. Nonetheless, you should
see the same sort of </font><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color=white
- face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4"><font
size="2">jBoss/Server</font></font></font></font>
+ face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4"><font
size="2">JBoss/Server</font></font></font></font>
<font size="2">log messages you would see directly from Tomcat if you
had deployed Tomcat in standalone mode. Also, the <code>tomcat
install</code>,
- <code>classpath</code>, and other such portions of the jBoss/Server log
+ <code>classpath</code>, and other such portions of the JBoss/Server log
output will vary from installation to
installation.</font></font></font></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color=white
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4"><font size="2">
- If you want to move jBoss/Server and Tomcat to separate machines at a
+ If you want to move JBoss/Server and Tomcat to separate machines at a
later time, you will need to change the <code>hostname</code> in
<code>jndi.properties</code>
- and alter <code>jboss.properties</code> in the jBoss/Server
configuration.</font></font></font></font></p>
+ and alter <code>jboss.properties</code> in the JBoss/Server
configuration.</font></font></font></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color=white
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4"><font size="2">Well,
- that's it! You only have to launch jBoss/Server now and it will start
+ that's it! You only have to launch JBoss/Server now and it will start
Tomcat. As a result you will have both servers�EJB server and JSP/Servlets
server�running in a single Java VM.</font></font></font><font face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">
</font></font></p>
1.2 +11 -11 newsite/business/zola.htm
Index: zola.htm
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/business/zola.htm,v
retrieving revision 1.1
retrieving revision 1.2
diff -u -r1.1 -r1.2
--- zola.htm 2000/11/12 20:32:02 1.1
+++ zola.htm 2001/02/08 05:31:22 1.2
@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@
<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF">
<table width="100%" border="0" cellpadding="5">
<tr bgcolor="#FFFFFF">
- <td width="29%"><font color="#FFCC00"><b><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica,
sans-serif" size="5" color="#000000">jBoss/Zola</font></b></font>
+ <td width="29%"><font color="#FFCC00"><b><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica,
sans-serif" size="5" color="#000000">JBoss/Zola</font></b></font>
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign="top">
@@ -25,10 +25,10 @@
<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The
Zola project has several goals. First, we provide a comprehensive
coding guide to EJB. It mocks the APM module from Sun by providing
- a full-fledged J2EE application you can deploy on a
Tomcat-jBoss/Server
+ a full-fledged J2EE application you can deploy on a
Tomcat-JBoss/Server
platform.</font></p>
<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"
size="2">Additionally,
- Zola provides a test suite for jBoss/Server. Every time jBoss/Server
+ Zola provides a test suite for JBoss/Server. Every time JBoss/Server
is rebuilt we run the more than 100 tests to make sure it is still
API compliant.</font></p>
<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The
@@ -41,17 +41,17 @@
</table>
<p><font color=white
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><b><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4">Application
- Programming Samples for jBoss<br>
+ Programming Samples for JBoss<br>
</font></b></font><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">When
- you need sample applications on developing with the jBoss suite of tools,
+ you need sample applications on developing with the JBoss suite of tools,
turn to Zola. This project is dedicated to providing full J2EE applications
- to bring you up to speed with jBoss as quickly as possible. </font></p>
+ to bring you up to speed with JBoss as quickly as possible. </font></p>
<p><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Zola is constructed
from several different types of applications and components. Zola comes
with graphical examples that show GUI-heavy applications conversing with
Enterprise JavaBeans. Zola also provides the highly demanded e-business
and e-commerce oriented examples. Finally, Zola provides a Test Suite
- that excercises the jBoss/Server using more than 100 tests to ensure that
+ that excercises the JBoss/Server using more than 100 tests to ensure that
each build run by developers is still J2EE API-compliant, that is to say
"by the book."</font></p>
<p><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Please note that Zola
@@ -61,8 +61,8 @@
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><b><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4">Zola
WebStore<br>
</font></b></font><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"
size="2">Thierry,
- with the help of the jBoss development team, has developed a WebStore
- using jBoss/Server, HypersonicSQL database server, and Apache Tomcat.
+ with the help of the JBoss development team, has developed a WebStore
+ using JBoss/Server, HypersonicSQL database server, and Apache Tomcat.
The WebStore is also part of the Zola CVS module. Here's what the WebStore
example consists of:</font></p>
<ul>
@@ -71,7 +71,7 @@
<li><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">EJB Session
Bean</font></li>
<li><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"> EJB Bean-Managed
Persistence (BMP) Entity Bean</font></li>
- <li><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">jBoss/Server version
+ <li><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">JBoss/Server version
2.0</font></li>
<li><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"> HypersonicSQL
Database</font></li>
@@ -81,7 +81,7 @@
<p><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a
href="http://38.179.207.216:8080/zol/zol.jsp">Try
WebStore Live</a></font></p>
<p><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Tutorial on <a
href="http://www.jboss.org/Updating-Webstore-to-Jboss2.htm">updating
- WebStore to jBoss/Server version 2</a> by Luan O'Carroll</font></p>
+ WebStore to JBoss/Server version 2</a> by Luan O'Carroll</font></p>
<p> <font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><font color=white
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><b><font color="#000000" face="Arial,
Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4">WAP
Sample, Coming Soon<br>