BEA has been hailed as one of the best, however that might be just maketing. It would be interesting for them to show you bench mark results against other App Servers such as, WEBSPHERE, JRUN, TOMCAT. dl >>> Don Makoviney <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 01/31/01 01:14PM >>> Anyone familiar with BEA WebLogic Server? www.bea.com They are coming over for a demo soon. . .would like to hear your thoughts. Thanks, DM -----Original Message----- From: Kevin Duffey [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, January 31, 2001 11:53 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Which JSP Engine/Application Server is the best? As someone else said..are you looking for JSP/Servlet engine only? Or do you plan to move to EJB as well? I think overall Orion app server (www.orionserver.com) is a hard to beat product given its performance, price, ease of setting up, full J2EE implementation, and so on. Resin is a very good jsp/servlet engine without the middle-tier capabilities. JRun 3.0 isn't bad either as a servlet/jsp engine. Tomcat is decent and its free. I thinkt he combo of Tomcat 4 (when it comes out) and JBoss will be hard to beat. They are both open-source free products and there is tight integration via Tomcat 4 and JBoss 2. JBoss 2 is a great EJB app server that is very scalable and has a full featured plugin capability, as well as is built around the JMX for administration of just about everything. Tomcat 4, although I haven't read anything on it other than on the JBoss page, is said to have direct JVM integration with JBoss 2, which will make EJB calls from Servlets much faster than the other method..over the network. I believe this is only if you run Tomcat and JBoss on the same server though. WebLogic 6 is nice, but at $17,000 per cpu per server, its far from affordable. I also find it a pain in the rear to develop with..mainly because it takes about a minute to restart. Our web-app isn't taking advantage of hot-deploy though..so its possible we don't need to restart it and it would be much faster. WebSphere..bah..they are behind the times. Being that IBM is so active in the Java community I am really surprised their app server is such a beast to work with and does not yet support Servlet 2.2/JSP 1.1 (unless a new version came out recently that does). I would think they would be up on top of the list of J2EE supporters. iPlanet is another one to watch as it is directly from Sun (via the Netscape alliance). However, at $25,000 per cpu per server, it is the most expensive one, and seems to have alot of problems still. I personally use Orion for development because it is so fast, including restarting it. Orion and Resin are the only two servlet/jsp engines (Orion being a full fledged J2EE app server all in one) that support a nice development feature in which you point a "source" dir to your source, and every time you make a change in ANY class, it will save, recompile and reload the web-app for you. Most other app servers and servlet engines simply reload servlets that are in the servers classpath. Orion and Resin go a step further. > -----Original Message----- > From: A mailing list about Java Server Pages specification and reference > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of ZHU Jia > Sent: Wednesday, January 31, 2001 4:57 AM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Which JSP Engine/Application Server is the best? > > > Hi there, > > we have used Perl/CGI for years in our company, now we are > considering switch > to JSP/Servlet. I've had some early experiments with JSP (Tomcat > 3.2) and I'm > convinced that this is better than CGI. > Now my question is which JSP Engine/Java Application Server > should we use in > our production environment? I only tried out Tomcat, it's OK and > it's free, > but is there anything better out there, considering the stability/ease of > configuration/feature/price? > Any hints or tips will be highly appreciated, and many thanks in advance! > > regards > ZHU Jia > > ================================================================== > ========= > To unsubscribe: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "signoff > JSP-INTEREST". > For digest: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "set > JSP-INTEREST DIGEST". > Some relevant FAQs on JSP/Servlets can be found at: > > http://java.sun.com/products/jsp/faq.html > http://www.esperanto.org.nz/jsp/jspfaq.html > http://www.jguru.com/jguru/faq/faqpage.jsp?name=JSP > http://www.jguru.com/jguru/faq/faqpage.jsp?name=Servlets =========================================================================== To unsubscribe: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "signoff JSP-INTEREST". For digest: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "set JSP-INTEREST DIGEST". Some relevant FAQs on JSP/Servlets can be found at: http://java.sun.com/products/jsp/faq.html http://www.esperanto.org.nz/jsp/jspfaq.html http://www.jguru.com/jguru/faq/faqpage.jsp?name=JSP http://www.jguru.com/jguru/faq/faqpage.jsp?name=Servlets =========================================================================== To unsubscribe: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "signoff JSP-INTEREST". For digest: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "set JSP-INTEREST DIGEST". Some relevant FAQs on JSP/Servlets can be found at: http://java.sun.com/products/jsp/faq.html http://www.esperanto.org.nz/jsp/jspfaq.html http://www.jguru.com/jguru/faq/faqpage.jsp?name=JSP http://www.jguru.com/jguru/faq/faqpage.jsp?name=Servlets =========================================================================== To unsubscribe: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "signoff JSP-INTEREST". For digest: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "set JSP-INTEREST DIGEST". Some relevant FAQs on JSP/Servlets can be found at: http://java.sun.com/products/jsp/faq.html http://www.esperanto.org.nz/jsp/jspfaq.html http://www.jguru.com/jguru/faq/faqpage.jsp?name=JSP http://www.jguru.com/jguru/faq/faqpage.jsp?name=Servlets
