Is Geronimo ready for prime time, like JBoss, or is that a while off? By the way, thanks for these helpful responses. Very much appreciated. Also, does Geronimo like JBoss incorporate a web container/server like Tomcat or does Geronimo do it all?
On 6/17/05, Sing Li <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Geronimo is a SERVER container with open doors to host > > any services or development frameworks. > > Spring is a DEVELOPMENT FRAMEWORK with an attitude ;) > > You do not have to make a choice, they are not > mutually exclusive. In fact, they are extremely > complementary. > > Today, you can already run your own Spring > applications on Geronimo; leveraging the > ActiveMQ JMS server implementation "inside" > Geronimo, perhaps. > > In the not too distant future, you may actually > see (part of) Geronimo running on Spring. > > Pick Spring! Choose Geronimo! :-D > > - Sing > > > --- Michael McGrady <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > My understanding is that Geronimo is a > > state-of-the-art somewhat > > classic J2EE framework. My understanding also is > > that Spring is a > > somewhat different approach, moving away from > > Enterprise Java Beans. > > If one is merely interested in JMS, is there any > > reason to prefer a > > framework like Geronimo to Spring, given that my > > understanding is > > correct? If my understanding is not correct, would > > you please > > straighten me out? Thanks. > > > > Michael McGrady > > > >
