On the 64-bit IBM iSeries, I have 240G of heap.
 
Java Max Heap Size
Win (2000/XP) - 1.6 GB

Mac OS X - 2 GB
Solaris 2.6 and x86 - 2 GB
Solaris 7 and Solaris 8 SPARC - 4 GB 
AS/400 / iSeries (V5R1M0) - 240 GB

 

-----Original Message-----
From: vamsee movva [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, 9 January 2007 9:11 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: how to build 64-bit axis version


Yes, i agree with you, we can use same jar files on 64-bit machine. then
what is the point using 64-bit machines, i think if we use the same 32-bits
jars , we won't get any change in performance.
Am i correct??
Thanking you and excuse my english
cheers 
vamsee


On 1/8/07, Javier Kohen < [EMAIL PROTECTED]
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > wrote: 

El lun, 08-01-2007 a las 15:58 -0600, vamsee movva escribió:
> I think those class files are generated on 32-bit machine with 32-bit
> JVM

The Java compiler generates the bytecode, not the JVM. Any compliant JVM 
should be able to run the bytecode independently of the underlying
hardware.

> On 1/8/07, Javier Kohen < [EMAIL PROTECTED]
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > wrote:
>         El lun, 08-01-2007 a las 15:47 -0600, vamsee movva escribió: 
>         > Hello all,
>         >             I am new to axis, i have to work on 64-bit linux
>         machine,
>         > i didn't find 64-bit version of axis.
>         >       Could some body explain me how to build axis.
>
>         Axis2 is a pure-Java project. There is no 64-bit version, it
>         just works
>         on a 64-bit platform, assuming there is a Java VM for it.
>         --
>         Javier Kohen < [EMAIL PROTECTED]
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >
>         ICQ: blashyrkh #2361802
>         Jabber: [EMAIL PROTECTED]  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
>
>

--
Javier Kohen < [EMAIL PROTECTED]
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >
ICQ: blashyrkh #2361802
Jabber: [EMAIL PROTECTED]  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 





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