anonymous wrote : Is a Tomcat that runs on the same physical machine but in 
another process than JBoss a 'remote' client?

Yes. Any Java app that runs in another java process (not the java process 
running JBoss AS) is a remote client. And app that runs within the same java 
process as JBoss AS is considered to be a local client. 

anonymous wrote : how do you go about letting also JSP's and JSP Beans used in 
Tomcat profit from the JBoss connection pooling WITHOUT using the Antipattern 
of putting db resources in the global JNDI namespace

You can't. I'm not exactly sure of why this was declared an anti-pattern, but I 
think it has more to do with the remote access to the datasource than to 
placing the datasource's name in the global JNDI area. Thus, even with the 
datasource name in global JNDI, any local access to the datasource is not 
exhibiting the anti-pattern.

anonymous wrote : Is the only alternative to run the tomcat instance embedded 
in jboss?

There is already a Tomcat instance embedded within JBoss AS. Though since 4.2.0 
it is called JBoss Web which is based on Tomcat.


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