yes, sorry, 1 gig (typo)

On 05 Jul 2004, at 10:41, Samuel Tribehou wrote:

Hello, are you saying you want to have a java appserver, cocoon, postgresql
and a big database on a machine with 1mb ??
you mean 1GB right ??
256 would be the bare minimum imho...


-----Message d'origine-----
De : Yves Vindevogel [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Envoye : lundi 5 juillet 2004 10:37
A : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Objet : Re: Load Cocoon servers


I can run on space ship on slackware with 1 mb ;-))

Problem is that I need to make the bid before the application.
So any hints would be nice.

So you would go for more RAM in the machine right away ?


On 05 Jul 2004, at 06:17, Antonio Gallardo wrote:

Yves Vindevogel dijo:
Is there a website where I can find statistics on the number of
servers
you need to run a Cocoon application.
Or somebody who is willing to share his/her information about their
stress tests ?

I'm making a bid for a webapp.  Completely Cocoon based.
There's a big postgresql database behind it, but the database will
only
be queried from time to time.
Most of the work is done by generating XML out-of that database and
storing it into Cocoon's folders.
Most files will be around 1000 lines of xml, with about 30 attributes
in each line, so let's say 30k per file.
Every screen based on a single file like that, should be generated in
1-3 seconds max.

That is a lot of time! I think cocoon can manage it easily.

App is completely running on Slackware, with "personal" configuration,
that is, no gui, no overhead, just the basics.
Server will be a Compaq DL 380, 1 mb (or 2 when needed) ram, full
scsi3
in raid 5, 3x 320u 72.8 HD.

The suggested numbers are too low. I wonder how you can run slackware on just 1 MB of ram! ;-)

The only thing I need to know now or estimate, is how many
simultanious
users this thing can pull.
Is there a way to quickly calculate this ?
Or does somebody have a similar setup and willing to tell me what
beauties he/she has in the server room ?

I think you need to make some test for you application. In particular, long time ago I found JMeter to be very useful for stress tests.... And of course!, JMeter is part of the Apache crop ;-)

Here is the link:

http://jakarta.apache.org/jmeter/index.html

BTW, run JMeter on a second client computer to avoid using server
resources for JMeter while testing.

Good luck.

Best Regards,

Antonio Gallardo


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