One thing to keep in mind since he's using Datomic - there is currently no way
to restrict access to the transactor, so it needs to be run behind a firewall.
This can be done easily on AWS by creating a VPC where only the peer is exposed
to the net.
Outside of AWS, you're pretty much on your o
duct Manager for Java at Engine Yard. Please, drop me a
>> line if you're interested in trying your Clojure code on Engine Yard, or
>> just go ahead and try it out at http://ui.engineyard.com . We're
>> offering a $100 credit to try out the Java platform and give us feed
ing your Clojure code on Engine Yard, or
> just go ahead and try it out at http://ui.engineyard.com . We're offering
> a $100 credit to try out the Java platform and give us feedback.
>
> Richard.
>
>
> On Friday, April 18, 2014 11:36:05 AM UTC+1, Adrian Mowat wrote:
>
Mowat wrote:
>
> Hi Everyone,
>
> I am currently looking at hosting providers for Clojure for my company.
> We are using Engine Yard for our Ruby applications and we looking for
> something comparable in terms of providing an easy path to getting started
> and easy ongoing m
Hi Mike,
That would be really helpful. Thanks!
We're much earlier in the process than you at the moment but I would be
delighted to share anything that comes up
Cheers
Adrian
On Fri, Apr 18, 2014 at 4:11 PM, Mike Haney wrote:
> I know they also have Mongo and Neo4j available on Heroku, but
I know they also have Mongo and Neo4j available on Heroku, but neither of those
are supported as a Datomic back end. Postgres will work with Datomic just
fine, though. The only hitch with Heroku is that I'm not sure how to go about
deploying a transactor. Maybe someone has done it and blogged
Hi,
Thanks for the advice. I should have mentioned that are are going to use
Datomic but I'm not sure of the tradeoffs around different storage
platforms. Have I understood correctly that Heroku only offers Postgres as
a storage option?
Many Thanks
Adrian
On Fri, Apr 18, 2014 at 1:43 PM, Mi
In addition to heroku, there is Amazon Elastic Beanstalk, which lets you deploy
a WAR file on EC2 without having to setup the infrastructure yourself. Both
are great ways to go.
I lean towards using Heroku for it's simplicity, but Amazon makes sense when
you need to use other Amazon services
Hi Adrian,
The only hosting provider that comes to my mind, thinking of your requirements
is heroku. Applying patches is usually as simple as making an empty commit and
pushing to heroku. Not every application will fit into the "heroku" way of
doing things, but in my experience the ones that do
Hi Everyone,
I am currently looking at hosting providers for Clojure for my company. We
are using Engine Yard for our Ruby applications and we looking for
something comparable in terms of providing an easy path to getting started
and easy ongoing maintenance (they allow you to apply OS
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