Hi,

>>I am getting ready to start a project and I will need a good J2EE App
>>Server for development.  Can any of you give me some pro's and/or con's
>> some of the free development solutions available?


There are several open source J2EE servers available round the place:

I'll start off by mentioning OpenEJB, but I'll also point out that its
essentially an advanced "container system" and not a complete full-fledged
J2EE server, runnable out of the box - or the tar.gz if you prefer ;-) But
if you want to know how to use it check it up at www.openejb.org

I'm terrible at reviews, so I'll skip that, but I suggest that you look up
these,

1) The Orion App Server - (www.orionserver.com) - This one's been around for
some time and the development version is FREE. Same thing if you're into
non-commercial deployment. Commercial licenses cost $1500, buts that cheap
by today's standards. Deployment is also easy once you get used to it - its
got auto-deploy, which makes things simple.

2) JBoss (www.jboss.org) - personally, this is my favorite - so my opinions
on this one are biased. Architecture-wise, JBoss is really a cool
proposition - it's design is extremely modular - and it at the cutting edge
of EJB tech today. Its got SO many rad concepts  inside it that your mind
will boggle. Plus, its the only one that's been GPLed. I don't know about
the rest of you out there, but I feel REAL SAFE with GPL. Plus the user and
developer community are very, very friendly. Check out
http://conferences.oreilly.com/java/news/ejboss_0300.html for an O'Reilly
interview with the JBoss top two. These guys have come out with ideas that
have influenced lots of other app server designs.

3) Bullsoft's (think they're Evidian now) JOnAS (www.bullsoft.com/ejb)- OK,
this is a good one. I've never used it, but its pretty popular in the open
source world.

4) Allaire Jrun 3.0 (www.allaire.com) - I haven't used the 3.0 version,
that's the one that's actually got EJB support, but I've used most of the
versions before that, and its very easy to work with. It integrates well
with web servers, like IIS, Apache, NES etc, so if you're going to do web
development on these, this is worth checking out.

5) Enhydra (www.enhydra.org) - This one's supposedly got some great
clustering support. I guess its worth checking out. I'm not too sure how
enhydra.org and lutris.com relate to each other. The way it I figure it out
- Enhydra was open-sourced to make it more poplular and robust. Enhydra's on
a FreeBSD license, so I guess its safe to use it for development at least.
:-)

<<<< For all you GPL advocates out there, I'll recommend "JBoss". I think
its gonna go *places*. >>>>

This is not a comprehensive list, but the ones that are quite popular these
days, and that aren't a pain in the neck to work with.


But I definitely suggest that you take a look at :

http://www.flashline.com/components/appservermatrix.jsp, it's an pretty
uptodate and accurate listing of popular app servers.

Hope this helps!


Sandeep Dath

"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." --
Arthur C. Clarke




-----Original Message-----
From: A mailing list for Enterprise JavaBeans development [mailto:A
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Sent: Monday, August 14, 2000 6:19 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Open-Source or Developers-Edition J2EE App Server advice


Hi all,

I am getting ready to start a project and I will need a good J2EE App
Server for development.  Can any of you give me some pro's and/or con's
to some of the free development solutions available?

Thanks in advance,

Rob

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