The 3.0.0 release notes state: The directory structure of the distribution has changed from a single monolithic default configuration into three distributions:
a.. minimal, a bare JMX core with JNDI naming, Log4j and hot deployment of mbean services. b.. default, the basic J2EE compatible configuration without clustering, JBoss.NET or IIOP c.. all, the complete configuration. All available services including clustering, JBoss.NET and IIOP are included in this configuration. d.. The jars in the top lib directory are no longer loaded by default. The lib directory under a server configuration(server/default/lib for example) is the location for jars that should be loaded by default for the given server configuration. e.. When running without a configuration name the "default" configuration is used. To run with an alternate configuration specify the name using -c to the run script, for example run -c minimal xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Scott Stark Chief Technology Officer JBoss Group, LLC xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ----- Original Message ----- From: "Mary Roderick" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Wednesday, July 10, 2002 12:01 AM Subject: Re: [JBoss-user] JBoss 3.0 Quick Guide/New JBoss distribution structure > > Hi David, > Thanks for your 2 cents :-) ...my actual question is WHY are there three > servers in the new distribution? There had to be a reason but I haven't > found any explanation. I imagine that they are each optimized for something > specific (thus my reference to server/all for clustering)...but what? > > Can you shed some light? > Mary > ------------------------------------------------------- This sf.net email is sponsored by:ThinkGeek Two, two, TWO treats in one. http://thinkgeek.com/sf _______________________________________________ JBoss-user mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/jboss-user