We'll soon be activating JMS in our Fedora installation, in order to 
update our Solr index and memory cache on purge/ingest/update events. 
Has anyone had any other experience using a third-party message broker? 
  In particular, does anyone have any experience using a message broker 
in situations of high traffic or with large datasets or heavy batch 
operations?  Any recommendations or gotchas to look out for?

TIA,

-- Scott

aj...@virginia.edu wrote:
> I may have missed part of the conversation where you describe this,  
> but are you using the JMS gear that comes with Fedora or a separate  
> JMS broker (e.g. ActiveMQ)?
> 
> ---
> A. Soroka
> Digital Research and Scholarship R & D
> the University of Virginia Library
> 
> 
> 
> On Oct 26, 2009, at 6:56 PM, <carsten.friedr...@csiro.au> wrote:
> 
>> ·         Using the message queue with fedoragsearch to update SOLR  
>> seems not to be a good idea for larger datasets. I suspect using the  
>> message queue for anything with a large datasets is not a good idea.  
>> It seems to consume a lot of resources when running, does not seem  
>> to shut down reliably (resulting in very long rebuild time next time  
>> you start tomcat) and seems to scale very badly (performance goes  
>> down significantly the more objects we add). There are a lot of  
>> “seems” in this statement because we didn’t actually measure this  
>> and it is only based on our subjective observation.
> 
> 
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-- 
Scott Prater
Library, Instructional, and Research Applications (LIRA)
Division of Information Technology (DoIT)
University of Wisconsin - Madison
pra...@wisc.edu


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