Thanks very much for the help. I do understand that there are many variables that will affect the answer to this question. At this time, all I am really after is "what is the best that anyone has done", in any configuration. I am interested in real-world successes.
Thanks again! -----Original Message----- From: Craig R. McClanahan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Monday, June 10, 2002 10:33 AM To: Tomcat Users List Subject: Re: Please help me improve my question skills (number of tomcat apps) On Mon, 10 Jun 2002, Knutsen Jeffrey S wrote: > Date: Mon, 10 Jun 2002 08:48:39 -0500 > From: Knutsen Jeffrey S <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Reply-To: Tomcat Users List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: "'[EMAIL PROTECTED]'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Subject: Please help me improve my question skills (number of tomcat apps) > > I have submitted the following question and received no response. I know > this isn't a technical problem, but I was hoping for responses from real > developers. I thought it was a simple question, and have always received > excellent and quick responses from the tomcat mail list in the past, so the > problem must be with me or the way I am asking. > > Can someone please help me improve myself? Is this a stupid question? Have > I perhaps asked it incorrectly? I am open and receptive to any constructive > criticism available (I can take it, but maybe you could send a direct > response if you want to be extremely brutal?!) > > All I really want to know is how many applications real developers are > putting on one machine in the real world. I am just looking for an abstract > number, and I am not worried about system configurations at this time. > The problem is that there is no generally useful answer to your question as stated. It depends even more on the nature of the applications you are talking about (when the answer might even be zero for a particular server configuration) as the size of the server (an answer based on a 64-CPU mega-server with 4 gigabytes of main memory isn't going to help you on a small single-CPU Linux box with 64 megs). There are no architectural limits on the number of webapps a single Tomcat instance can support, or the number of Tomcat instances on a single server. It all comes down to what resource bottlenecks you run into first in your application environment. In many webapp environments, the first bottleneck encountered is often database access, followed by the number of simultenaous requests being processed. Neither of those bottlenecks has much directly to do with how many different webapps you are talking about. > Thanks! > Craig > > ORIGINAL QUESTION: > > I am doing some Tomcat cost/benefit projections for my company. I need to > determine the maximum number of applications that will run on Tomcat and > still provide stable performance. I am not interested in a theoretical > number at this time, just seeking information about what real developers are > actually doing with real applications. > > At this time, I am not interested in what machine types, OSs, > configurations, versions, are being used. I understand the answer to my > questions will depend heavily on these issues as well as on the applications > themselves. I just need to come up with a realistic number of > instances/apps which are being run on a single machine by real users. I am > seeking an answer to the following two questions: > > Number of Tomcat instances I am running on one machine: > > Number of individual applications I am running in all instances of Tomcat on > one machine: > > Please feel free to respond to the mail list, or to me directly at > [EMAIL PROTECTED] (if we don't want to clog the list with > answers to this question). I will post a final resolution message to the > mail list when I have come to some sort of conclusion. > > Thanks in advance for your help! > > > > > -- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: > <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > For additional commands, e-mail: > <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > > > -- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > For additional commands, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> For additional commands, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> For additional commands, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>