> JMX is the way to get at the information... so from the point of view
of J2EE management,
> Jiro is not that relevent.. all you need is a way to get at the
information and the
> definition of the information you can get at...  Jiro is way too big
(and expensive :-)
> to be used for this purpose....

> Does that make sense ?
> --Geoff


Every real-life management system needs some basic features:
- Authentication and Authorization
- Distributed transactions
- Lookup service

Jiro supports those features, JMX does not (at last in the moment).
So, if you want to use JMX to build a distributed management solution,
you will end writing more code than you would write with Jiro.

Regards,
        Juliano Viana
        ESTRELAR.COM

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