Re: Book recommendations for performance tuning

2007-03-22 Thread Leon Rosenberg

Christopher,

I think you should just start by measuring different layers of your
application and different pathes the use cases go, and then start to
think how to improve things that are slow.
Blind performance tuning without knowing where the problem lies is the
last thing that will help you.

regards
Leon

On 3/21/07, Christopher Loschen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Hi all,



I guess this is partially off-topic, but I've been asked to start
looking at improving the performance of our application, and wanted to
start reading up on things I should be looking for, techniques to
improve performance, and so on.



Our application has a pretty standard stack of J2EE, WebLogic, Oracle,
Struts, JavaScript, plus some web services and SOAP, so I'm interested
in any recommendations anyone has for any of those. I found one
apparently classic text on Oracle Performance Tuning from O'Reilly
(aka the bee book) but it's from 1996 and apparently hasn't been
updated since, so I'm concerned that it's so out-of-date I wouldn't be
able to use it.



What would you recommend? Thanks!



Chris Loschen






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Re: Book recommendations for performance tuning

2007-03-22 Thread Ed Griebel

I'd second that book recommendation. I've read it and there's a lot of
good tips in there.

On 3/22/07, Karr, David [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

One I like is Pro Java EE 5 Performance Management and Optimization,
by Steven Haines.  Note that Steven Haines is associated with Quest
Software and Jprobe (and related products).  Although the book uses some
pictures from those products, it is not in any way a veiled ad for
those products.  In the one section where he discusses actual products,
he clearly discloses his relationship, and gives a very even survey (not
really a review) of the products on the market.



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RE: Book recommendations for performance tuning

2007-03-22 Thread Christopher Loschen
Great suggestion -- thanks to both of you!

JProbe is one of the other tools we were considering anyway, so it could
be very useful to have a comparison handy. I'll take a look!

Chris

-Original Message-
From: Ed Griebel [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, March 22, 2007 9:08 AM
To: Struts Users Mailing List
Subject: Re: Book recommendations for performance tuning

I'd second that book recommendation. I've read it and there's a lot of
good tips in there.

On 3/22/07, Karr, David [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 One I like is Pro Java EE 5 Performance Management and Optimization,
 by Steven Haines.  Note that Steven Haines is associated with Quest
 Software and Jprobe (and related products).  Although the book uses
some
 pictures from those products, it is not in any way a veiled ad for
 those products.  In the one section where he discusses actual
products,
 he clearly discloses his relationship, and gives a very even survey
(not
 really a review) of the products on the market.


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Book recommendations for performance tuning

2007-03-21 Thread Christopher Loschen
Hi all,

 

I guess this is partially off-topic, but I've been asked to start
looking at improving the performance of our application, and wanted to
start reading up on things I should be looking for, techniques to
improve performance, and so on.

 

Our application has a pretty standard stack of J2EE, WebLogic, Oracle,
Struts, JavaScript, plus some web services and SOAP, so I'm interested
in any recommendations anyone has for any of those. I found one
apparently classic text on Oracle Performance Tuning from O'Reilly
(aka the bee book) but it's from 1996 and apparently hasn't been
updated since, so I'm concerned that it's so out-of-date I wouldn't be
able to use it.

 

What would you recommend? Thanks!

 

Chris Loschen

 



RE: Book recommendations for performance tuning

2007-03-21 Thread Asthana, Rahul
Chris,
I think before going for performance tuning you would have to decide on two 
things- A Load Generator and a Performance Profiler. Then you generate load and 
profile the application to find out exactly which layer\section of code\network 
needs to be tuned\upgraded. Then you focus on tuning of that particular 
section.You dont want to spend hours tuning Java code when the  problem lies in 
a different layer. I find this prioritization of the object of tuning more 
important than the tuning itself, which in most cases is trivial.
Thanks,
Rahul   

-Original Message-
From: Christopher Loschen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, March 21, 2007 5:10 PM
To: Struts Users Mailing List
Subject: Book recommendations for performance tuning


Hi all,

 

I guess this is partially off-topic, but I've been asked to start
looking at improving the performance of our application, and wanted to
start reading up on things I should be looking for, techniques to
improve performance, and so on.

 

Our application has a pretty standard stack of J2EE, WebLogic, Oracle,
Struts, JavaScript, plus some web services and SOAP, so I'm interested
in any recommendations anyone has for any of those. I found one
apparently classic text on Oracle Performance Tuning from O'Reilly
(aka the bee book) but it's from 1996 and apparently hasn't been
updated since, so I'm concerned that it's so out-of-date I wouldn't be
able to use it.

 

What would you recommend? Thanks!

 

Chris Loschen

 


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RE: Book recommendations for performance tuning

2007-03-21 Thread Christopher Loschen
Good recommendation, thank you. We are proceeding on that front as well,
as I should have mentioned. I think the plan is to use Optimize-It to do
the profiling, though I've been trying out the TPTP modules for Eclipse
as well and some other possibilities have also been floated. We've also
got some code set up to simulate load -- I think we're starting with
200,000 devices and building up from there.

What I meant to ask for was more along the lines of background, to
further my general education and to help me do better with the data from
the load generator and performance profiler when we work with them.

Thanks, Chris

-Original Message-
From: Asthana, Rahul [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, March 21, 2007 5:30 PM
To: Struts Users Mailing List
Subject: RE: Book recommendations for performance tuning

Chris,
I think before going for performance tuning you would have to decide on
two things- A Load Generator and a Performance Profiler. Then you
generate load and profile the application to find out exactly which
layer\section of code\network needs to be tuned\upgraded. Then you focus
on tuning of that particular section.You dont want to spend hours tuning
Java code when the  problem lies in a different layer. I find this
prioritization of the object of tuning more important than the tuning
itself, which in most cases is trivial.
Thanks,
Rahul   

-Original Message-
From: Christopher Loschen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, March 21, 2007 5:10 PM
To: Struts Users Mailing List
Subject: Book recommendations for performance tuning


Hi all,

 

I guess this is partially off-topic, but I've been asked to start
looking at improving the performance of our application, and wanted to
start reading up on things I should be looking for, techniques to
improve performance, and so on.

 

Our application has a pretty standard stack of J2EE, WebLogic, Oracle,
Struts, JavaScript, plus some web services and SOAP, so I'm interested
in any recommendations anyone has for any of those. I found one
apparently classic text on Oracle Performance Tuning from O'Reilly
(aka the bee book) but it's from 1996 and apparently hasn't been
updated since, so I'm concerned that it's so out-of-date I wouldn't be
able to use it.

 

What would you recommend? Thanks!

 

Chris Loschen

 


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RE: Book recommendations for performance tuning

2007-03-21 Thread Karr, David
One I like is Pro Java EE 5 Performance Management and Optimization,
by Steven Haines.  Note that Steven Haines is associated with Quest
Software and Jprobe (and related products).  Although the book uses some
pictures from those products, it is not in any way a veiled ad for
those products.  In the one section where he discusses actual products,
he clearly discloses his relationship, and gives a very even survey (not
really a review) of the products on the market.

If you were actually looking at products, I'd say Jprofiler and Jprobe
are definitely worth looking at, and probably YourKit, although I only
briefly looked at it, compared to Jprofiler and Jprobe.

 -Original Message-
 From: Christopher Loschen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 Sent: Wednesday, March 21, 2007 2:10 PM
 To: Struts Users Mailing List
 Subject: Book recommendations for performance tuning
 
 Hi all,
 
 I guess this is partially off-topic, but I've been asked to 
 start looking at improving the performance of our 
 application, and wanted to start reading up on things I 
 should be looking for, techniques to improve performance, and so on.
 
 Our application has a pretty standard stack of J2EE, 
 WebLogic, Oracle, Struts, JavaScript, plus some web services 
 and SOAP, so I'm interested in any recommendations anyone has 
 for any of those. I found one apparently classic text on 
 Oracle Performance Tuning from O'Reilly (aka the bee 
 book) but it's from 1996 and apparently hasn't been updated 
 since, so I'm concerned that it's so out-of-date I wouldn't 
 be able to use it.
 
 What would you recommend? Thanks!

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Book recommendations

2004-07-06 Thread Davis, Nick
Hi All,

I am looking for a good Struts book. Does anyone have any recommendations?

-Nick


Re: Book recommendations

2004-07-06 Thread Christopher . Marsh-Bourdon
Jakarta Struts, Chuck Cavaness, O'Reilly





Davis, Nick [EMAIL PROTECTED]
06/07/2004 15:39
Please respond to Struts Users Mailing List

 
To: 'Struts Users Mailing List' [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cc: 
Subject:Book recommendations


Hi All,

I am looking for a good Struts book. Does anyone have any recommendations?

-Nick





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RE: Book recommendations

2004-07-06 Thread McCormack, Chris
The corner stone of most struts developers on this list is a copy of 'struts in 
action' by Ted Husted published by Manning.

A typical example on how you could use struts would be 'programming jakarta struts' by 
Chuck Cavaness and published by O'Reilly.

I would read them in that order too.

-Original Message-
From: Davis, Nick [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 06 July 2004 15:39
To: 'Struts Users Mailing List'
Subject: Book recommendations


Hi All,

I am looking for a good Struts book. Does anyone have any recommendations?

-Nick

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RE: Book recommendations

2004-07-06 Thread Marco Mistroni
Struts In Action

My 2 c

- marco

-Original Message-
From: Davis, Nick [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: 06 July 2004 15:39
To: 'Struts Users Mailing List'
Subject: Book recommendations

Hi All,

I am looking for a good Struts book. Does anyone have any
recommendations?

-Nick


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AW: Book recommendations

2004-07-06 Thread Albrecht, Michael
Hi Nick!

I think on http://wiki.apache.org/struts/StrutsBooks you will find, what
you`re looking for.

Bye,
Michael
http://www.struts-it.de

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Re: Book recommendations

2004-07-06 Thread Bryan Hunt
I would suggest Struts , the complete reference by James Holmes.
It is incredibly clearly laid out and has a section on JSTL as well.
It is good as both an introduction and a reference.
Out of the last 5 tech books that I have bought ( not including
J2EE design and Development by Rod Johnson) it is the only
one worth the paper it was printed on.
--b
Davis, Nick wrote:
Hi All,
I am looking for a good Struts book. Does anyone have any recommendations?
-Nick
 

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Book Recommendations

2004-07-06 Thread Davis, Nick
Hi All,

I am looking for a good Struts book. Does anyone have any recommendations?

Thank you in advance for your help.

Kind Regards,
Nick



RE: OT Book recommendations

2004-07-06 Thread Wendy Smoak
 From: Bryan Hunt [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 Out of the last 5 tech books that I have bought ( not including
 J2EE design and Development by Rod Johnson) it is the only
 one worth the paper it was printed on.

With apologies to the resident authors... With rare exceptions, I don't
buy tech books anymore, they go out of date too fast.  Instead, I rent
them from O'Reilly for a while: http://safari.oreilly.com

-- 
Wendy Smoak
Application Systems Analyst, Sr.
ASU IA Information Resources Management 



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RE: Book Recommendations

2004-07-06 Thread Danilo Gurovich
I have two go-to books.  Struts in Action, which has many wonderful
pieces, especially tiles, the intricacies of the Struts-config file and some
other goodies (feel free to ignore the chapters involving Scaffold and
lucene -- both good technologies but the code samples are kinda weak).  The
Orielly book is also very good in that it really gets under the covers with
Struts.

One of the missing pieces for Struts has been recipes for how to do
certain specific things.  In a shameless attempt at self-promotion, George
Franciscus and I have written Struts Recipes which is in final edit right
now and will be published by Manning this summer.



Danilo Gurovich
Manager, Web Development
LowerMyBills.com
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
2401 Colorado Ave., 2nd Floor 
Santa Monica, CA 90404
(310) 998-6412


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Re: Book Recommendations

2004-07-06 Thread klute
I highly recommend this one: Struts Survival Guide:
Basics to Best Practices 

http://www.programming-reviews.com/Struts_Survival_Guide_Basics_to_Best_Practices_0974848808.html

- to the point
- practical
- advanced stuff-galore

HTH,
James


http://www.devbistro.com -- web dev jobs


--- Davis, Nick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Hi All,
 
 I am looking for a good Struts book. Does anyone
 have any recommendations?
 
 -Nick
 




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Re: Book Recommendations

2004-07-06 Thread Frank Burns
A few months ago I was thrown into the deep end on an urgent Struts-based
project with a VERY tight deadline.

To help me get up to speed ASAP, I bought and read/used these three books
during that time:

1) Pro Jakarta Struts, Second Edition by John Carnell, Rob Harrop
2) Programming Jakarta Struts by Chuck Cavaness
3) Struts In Action by Ted Husted, et al

Having used them all in anger, in summary, my opinion is that the first of
these is the best, by a mile.

The other two are flawed: Programming Jakarta Struts is a very good
introduction, has a great structure and index, but it is a bit shallow;
Struts In Action has a lot of excellent detail, but an esoteric layout
and an almost-useless index (and unfortunately is littered with typos).

Whereas Pro Jakarta Struts has an excellent and comprehensive layout, a
more-than-intermediate-level of detail and an excellent index. Numerous
times it was the only book of the three that had the answers to the
questions I had as a newbie, and then some. It also takes a best
practices/patterns approach and provides excellent, real-world examples.

Cheers,

Frank.

- Original Message - 
From: Davis, Nick [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, July 06, 2004 4:06 PM
Subject: Book Recommendations


 Hi All,

 I am looking for a good Struts book. Does anyone have any recommendations?

 -Nick



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AW: Book recommendations

2004-07-06 Thread Michael Albrecht
Hi Nick!

I think on
http://wiki.apache.org/struts/StrutsBooks
you will find, what you`re looking for.

Bye,
Michael
http://www.struts-it.de
--
NEUSTA Computersprachen GmbH
Ostertorsteinweg 30
28203 Bremen
Tel.: +49 421 20696-22
Fax: +49 421 20696-99
Mobil: +49 171 4289299

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Re: Book Recommendations

2004-07-06 Thread Martin Gainty
Ted Husted
Struts in Action
http://www.manning.com/husted
-martin
- Original Message -
From: Davis, Nick [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, July 06, 2004 8:42 AM
Subject: Book Recommendations


 Hi All,

 I am looking for a good Struts book. Does anyone have any recommendations?

 Thank you in advance for your help.

 Kind Regards,
 Nick



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