I am also very interested in this. I know that currently jBoss 
is not "clusterable" but it would be nice, for instance, to see 
performance with multiple servlet VM's running. Anyone have a few hours
on a Sun E series they could donate for benchmarking?

thanks,
-ryan

> Has anybody evaluated JBoss for scalability for LARGE applications in
> the J2EE architecture -- say with multiple servlet VMs and multiple EJB
> VMs all implementing.
> 
> In other words, does the system scale beyond a single machine?
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: marc fleury <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: jBoss <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Date: Wednesday, November 29, 2000 10:15 PM
> Subject: RE: [jBoss-User] jBoss Performance - Benchmark
> 
> 
> >Hello
> >
> >|jBoss can handle 2500 calls per second in general.
> >|jBoss can handle 2500 calls per second on a PIII 700Mhz.
> >
> >this one is the right one.  If you have a P200 you will get 715calls/s.
> >
> >|jBoss scales well.
> >
> >That is very true.  The meaning of this is that even though the
> container is
> >juggling 2000 clients coming in *at the same time*, the performance he
> has
> >in delivering the service to the one is un-affected. Sure they all wait
> >since there is so much CPU available but the load doesn't affect the
> time it
> >takes for the container to field a call (up until 2000-5000 on a small
> PC).
> >So the throughput of the container on a P700 of 2500 calls per second
> >(careful no DB and serialization in there just JBoss specific stuff) is
> true
> >even when the container sees 2000 clients.  It starts tapering off at
> that
> >level.
> >
> >I will say that even though it is good news, it probably means that
> hotspot
> >on windows 2000 is really good.  Let's give credit where it is due.
> >
> >|jBoss phucking rulez d00d, just use it!
> >
> >yes that is also a true statement ;-)
> >
> >|If anyone can summarize the results of this benchmark it would be VERY
> >|helpful.
> >
> >regards
> >
> >marc
> >
> >|
> >|Thanks,
> >|-ryan
> >|
> >|The three great virtues of programming are laziness, impatience,
> >|and hubris,
> >|but bigotry makes the open-source world go round.
> >|
> >|
> >|
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> >
> >
> >
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> 
> 
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-- 
Regards,
-ryan

The three great virtues of programming are laziness, impatience, 
and hubris, but bigotry makes the open-source world go round.



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