> From: Edi [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> consider, i had 4 java application running in one tomcat, if
> one application
> crashes, all the other 3 application gets crashes. right?

Correct.  But it's not always that simple :-).

It's your choice how you want to split up your applications between different 
containers (Tomcats in this case) to trade off memory use vs reliability.  You 
might get a *less* reliable system by splitting up the applications into 
separate Tomcat instances, though.  Each Tomcat runs in its own JVM, and each 
is allocated a maximum memory size.  If you are not careful when tuning the 
system, you might find that one application in one Tomcat/JVM runs out of 
memory although there is plenty of spare memory in the system.  If you put them 
all into one Tomcat/JVM, the applications all use the same (larger) memory pool.

                - Peter

---------------------------------------------------------------------
To start a new topic, e-mail: users@tomcat.apache.org
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to