Hi,
>Depends on your game. I wouldn't use any runtime system that contained
>a garbage collector that could stall the system in a hard real-time
Well, Java (and a couple of other languages, but I won't go into that
debate ;)) does support garbage collector implementations that will
never stall
> From: Bing Li [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Now I attempt to use Tomcat as a game server. Is it a correct
> choice?
Depends on your game. I wouldn't use any runtime system that contained
a garbage collector that could stall the system in a hard real-time
system - which knocks out perl, Java, .N
in this day, most of the servlet containers are about the same in
terms of performance. What matters most is your design and
implementation. there are plenty of sites getting 10million+ page
views a day with tomcat.
who ever told you "tomcat is only for lab use" is totally clueless.
there's an art
Dear all,
I have a lot of Java programming over Tomcat. But I don't have such
experiences to use Tomcat commercially. I heard that Tomcat could only be
used for a laboratory environment and it was not mature enough for real
commercial applications. Is it right or not?
Now I attempt to use T