I use only Tomcat (7.0.40) and I must admit that with NIO connector and
useNative=true, the performance looks nice. I have no use for an httpd for
the moment, but I'm not in production.

I plan to load test my app, if you're interested, I can communicate the
results to you.

As a side-note, on the Tomcat list, many people are starting to talk about
better WebSockets support in Tomcat 8 and the dev seem to realize that
there is a strong expectation for them, so maybe they'll try and convince
to work hand-in-hand with the httpd / AJP people?

Anyway, thanks again and keep up the good work!

And of course a big "thank you" to the people from the great Wicket, too!
:-)

Regards,

Pierre


On Wed, Aug 14, 2013 at 3:33 PM, Emond Papegaaij <emond.papega...@topicus.nl
> wrote:

> Hi Pierre,
>
> Good to hear you like it! Unfortunately, we are still waiting for the rest
> of
> the server stack to support websockets before we can actually use it in
> production applications. Hopefully, with the release of jee7 (with jsr356)
> maintainers of httpd and ajp will finally realize they need to support
> websockets as well.
>
> Best regards,
> Emond
>
> On Wednesday 14 August 2013 12:01:05 Pierre Goupil wrote:
> > Good morning,
> >
> > All apologies for this totally off-topic message, but I would like to
> say a
> > big "THANK YOU" to Emond for his work on wicket-atmosphere.
> >
> > His code is far from trivial, yet it is a real pleasure to use it.
> > According to me, the killer-feature is the fact that we have an
> > AjaxRequestTarget to work with which triggers a Comet / WebSocket
> response.
> >
> > Thanks again, man!
> >
> > Pierre
>



-- 
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mal.
Alors frappez-moi de musique !
Frappez-moi de musique, maintenant !"

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