Cheong,
From a performance perspective Tomcat is a rather cool toy.
I suppose that it absolutely not intended for external classical web use,
but I use it for an intranet and it performs pretty well.
The main draw back is that there is no log file and the settings are very
scarce (in fact there is no settings for the web server, only a config file
that tells it where the default webapp is located and some stuff like that).
Tomcat main advantage is to be:
1) Very easy and quick to set up (once you understand the web-app stuff)
2) Very small in size
3) Last API compliant (JSP and servlet)
If you want a "real" Java Web server, you may want to look at Jigsaw 2.0.3
(www.w3c.org/Jigsaw)
or Jetty (www.mortbay.com).
Le 16:54 16/08/99 +0800, Cheong Takhoe a �crit:
>Hi,
>
>I would like to enquire about the JSDK Web Server 2.1 provided by the
>JSP1.0 development kit by SUN. Are there any limitations to the web server
>that would hinder me from deploying web-based applications with it?
>If so, which web server that could do jsp 1.0 would be suitable?
>
>Would like to know. THanks
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