Sorry, but I think you have to upgrade to the newest release in order to get StreamingAddResource running.
cheers, Gerald On 5/19/06, Yasushi Okubo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
David G. Friedman wrote: Tomahawk is a inside the optional MyFaces Tomahawk component jar. See: http://myfaces.apache.org/tomahawk/ Specifically, the last 3 notes on that page. Regards, David Ok, I understarnd that part. When I looked my myfaces1.1.1 installation directory, it looks like the following. [EMAIL PROTECTED] myfaces-1.1.1]# ls javadoc LICENSE.txt myfaces-all.jar myfaces-api.jar myfaces-impl.jar NOTICE.txt sandbox.jar tlddoc tomahawk.jar Then, I opened the documentaion uder tlddoc, I do not see any t:document entry in tomahawk extension. Then, when I tried to use this t:document tag, it does not recognize this tag. I only see this tag for tomahawk 1.1.3 core when I googled, but not sure if truely so. If I can use this tag for myfaces1.1.1, that will be great. But I cannot find a way to do so now. If you can advise me how I can use it without upgrading to 1.1.3, that will be great. thanks, yasushi -----Original Message----- From: Yasushi Okubo [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Friday, May 19, 2006 2:05 PM To: MyFaces Discussion Subject: Re: How to improve JSF performance? Hi, Gerald Could you advise where I can find t:document TLD ? Is it in tomahawk extension inside myfaces1,1/1.1.1 ? I cannot find this tag in documentation. Thanks, yasushi Gerald Müllan wrote: Performance measurements have shown that plain server side state saving (without serialization and without compressing state) comes with the best values. Also usage of StreamingAddResource brings about 20% performance improvements. Apart from that, using JSP as page description slows down. Facelets would be the better choice concerning performance. cheers, Gerald On 5/19/06, Murat Hazer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: did you see this on the wiki http://wiki.apache.org/myfaces/Performance regards... On 5/19/06, iSquareOne LLC <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Hi, all, This is a bit tricky. We have two applications - one is built on pure JSP and the other one is built on JSF. We found the JSF application performance is much worse than the pure JSP application. We did not expect that much difference. JSF uses JSP page after all. So, what could have caused the slow down? Are there ways to improve JSF performance? We build the application on My Faces 1.1 and JBoss 4.0.2 Any thoughts are very welcome! Thanks in advance! - Shawn ________________________________ How low will we go? Check out Yahoo! Messenger's low PC-to-Phone call rates. -- Murat HAZER Elektrik-Elektronik Mühendisi - Electrical-Electronics Engineer Tel - Phone: +90 222 335 05 80 - 1395 Cep Tel - Mobile Phone: +90 532 472 00 63 Blog URL: http://www.projedunyasi.org Yahoo Group: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/malatyafenlisesi/
-- Gerald Müllan Schelleingasse 2/11 1040 Vienna, Austria 0043 699 11772506 [EMAIL PROTECTED]