If you are looking for connection pooling which will work with any database
check out DbConnectionBroker at http://www.javaexchange.com/

Jim

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Ric Searle [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Wednesday, April 10, 2002 10:23 AM
> To: Tomcat Users List
> Subject: Re: Tomcat 4.x and Database Connection Pooling
>
>
> Not sure - probably a little out of my depth here, but poolman
> (www.codestudio.com), which used to do connection pooling stuff is no
> longer available, and it's author claims that:
>
>       "If you are looking for connection and object pooling
>       mechanisms, they can now be found in application
>       servers such as JRun, Tomcat and the Jakarta Project,
>       and other J2EE products and servers."
>
> Which is where my journey started...!
>
>    Ric Searle
>    Web Application Developer
>    --
>    Dialogue Communications Ltd
>
>    http://www.dialogue.co.uk
>    +44 (0) 114 221 0307
>
>
> On Wednesday, April 10, 2002, at 04:18  pm, rainer jünger wrote:
>
> > Hi Ric,
> >
> >> Struts provides a basic Connection Pool, but user comments suggest that
> >> this is not suitable for large-scale, high-traffic applications, and
> >> also that it will soon be removed from Struts in favour of a
> >> container-managed connection pool
> >
> > So what will Tomcat Users do? Will Tomcat get a container manages
> > connection
> > pool?
> > What is the reason for removing it form Struts?
> >
> > R.
> >
>
>
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