Thank you all very much for the helpfull information.

Greetz Erik

On Thu, Mar 12, 2009 at 12:12 AM, Jordan Michaels <[email protected]>wrote:

>
> Each J2EE server will be different with regards to *exactly* how it's
> done, but the basic concept is to add openBD to the core libraries and
> configs in the J2EE engine. Like Jasper, the JSP processor.
>
> While I haven't done this with Glassfish at all, you could see example
> configs with the Jetty ready-2-run version of OpenBD and the version of
> Tomcat from the installer. Both of these have implementations of OpenBD
> in the ROOT context like you're wanting.
>
> Warm regards,
> Jordan Michaels
> Vivio Technologies
> http://www.viviotech.net/
> Open BlueDragon Steering Committee
> Adobe Solution Provider
>
>
> EECOLOR wrote:
> > "So its only a recommended route for trusted sites."
> >
> > This is indeed the case, they are trusted sites, as we are the only ones
> > editing them.
> >
> > Could you explain how to configure OpenBD for this setup?
> >
> > Thanks, Erik
> >
> >
> > On Wed, Mar 11, 2009 at 11:27 PM, Alan Williamson <[email protected]
> > <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
> >
> >
> >     There are pro's and con's to each.
> >
> >     but yes, you can configured OpenBD to run in the root context like
> >     JSP does.
> >
> >     *however* in a shared hosting environment that is something YOU DO
> NOT
> >     want to do.   why?  because you are sharing each others data; two
> people
> >     name the <CFAPPLICATION NAME="xx"> and they both have the same data.
> >
> >     So its only a recommended route for trusted sites.
> >
> >     EECOLOR wrote:
> >      > Hello,
> >      >
> >      > I do not know enough about J2EE, so I hope someone can enlighten
> >     me. We
> >      > have a GlassFish server. On this server we want to offer virtual
> >     hosting
> >      > for our customers. A simple setup would be to deploy each
> application
> >      > with it's own OpenBD, Quercus, ColdFusion, JRuby or Railo engine.
> >     This
> >      > gives us one big problem: memory. With this setup, each
> application
> >      > using OpenBD will start up it's own version (instance) of OpenBD.
> >     This
> >      > results in having X copies of OpenBD running, capable of doing
> >     the same
> >      > thing.
> >      >
> >      > Would it be possible to share OpenBD (or Quercus, ColdFusion,
> Railo,
> >      > JRuby) so that multiple applications could use the engine?
> >      >
> >      > It seems that JSP support is implemented in the same way.
> >      >
> >      > The way this problem has been addressed by ColdFusion, Quercus and
> >      > BlueDragon is the use of a webservice connector (mod_jrun,
> >     mod_caucho,
> >      > etc.). This however ties the usage of the engine to a specific
> J2EE
> >      > server. We want to keep the freedom of choosing.
> >      >
> >      > Any insights are appreciated.
> >      >
> >      > Thanks, Erik
> >      >
> >      >
> >      > >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > >
>
> >
>

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