David,

Using JMS to accomplish the same thing is equally valid.

It's a time to market issue. JMS is pretty new, and its integration with
EJB/J2EE... is still ripening...

Regards,

-Chris

> -----Original Message-----
> From: david sims [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Friday, November 26, 1999 8:42 PM
> To:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject:      why not a JMS-based logger?
>
> I've read some of the postings about an asynchronous, multi-jvm logging
> service. Sounds like in GemStone/J, this is implemented as a Corba object.
>
> Would a logging service based on JMS work out ok? I haven't used JMS yet,
> but
> couldn't there be a "Log" topic with the usual publishers and subscribers?
> A
> pre-defined subscriber could write the log messages to a file. Other
> subscribers could do other things. Publishers would probably be EJBeans
> that
> need to report errors, warnings, etc.
>
> Does such a scheme already exist? Or maybe it's easy to do in JMS? Or
> maybe
> it's just a bad idea?
>
> -david
>
> --
> David Sims               [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sims Computing, Inc.     www.simscomputing.com
>
> ==========================================================================
> =
> To unsubscribe, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] and include in the
> body
> of the message "signoff EJB-INTEREST".  For general help, send email to
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] and include in the body of the message "help".

===========================================================================
To unsubscribe, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] and include in the body
of the message "signoff EJB-INTEREST".  For general help, send email to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] and include in the body of the message "help".

Reply via email to