Hi Kemp
well this is comletely off-topic
I think that u remember when u  replied me in jboss mailing list about
applying orion application on jboss
I found out that the prblem is the j2ee dtd at  the beginning of  ejb.jar
,web.xml and application.xml
just want to let u know -  or u must know by now
faisal
----- Original Message -----
From: "Kemp Randy-W18971" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Orion-Interest" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, February 16, 2001 5:59 PM
Subject: RE: Where are the perfumes bubble bath beads


> Thanks for the long and well thought out answer.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: bradley mclain [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Friday, February 16, 2001 9:07 AM
> To: Orion-Interest
> Subject: Re: Where are the perfumes bubble bath beads
>
>
> even though all servers must support the spec to be
> j2ee compliant, an app server vendor may add a range
> of additional services or enterprise capabilities to
> differentiate themselves.  for example, i work for a
> company called gemstone, which produces an app server
> for java (we also make one for smalltalk) that we're
> aiming to be certified j2ee compliant by sun by march
> 15.  in addition to supporting the j2ee 1.2 spec, our
> server also contains an object repository (useful for
> caching or as a db of record -- imagine no o/r mapping
> for ejbs), a corba orb and its own version of the jvm.
>  we license sun's jvm sourcecode, and our server has
> the capability to distribute workload among multiple
> activated vm's.  as the load increases, more jvms are
> started up to handle it (either on the same machine,
> or another).  a single vm can only handle 100-200
> concurrent connections before it is tapped out.  plus
> there is a broad suite of swing-based and cmd-line
> utilities, monitors, etc. for our server. (one thing
> we don't include is a webserver -- you must connect it
> to apache or iplanet.)
>
> i don't know how much disk space the installation
> images require, but i imagine quite a lot as the
> source code alone takes up about 250mb.  there is
> included also a lot of instrumentation inside that can
> be turned on or off, enabling fine-grained debugging
> when things go wrong.
>
> that perhaps explains the range of image sizes.  even
> though it only takes 10-20 mb of code to implement the
> spec, other servers may add features in an attempt to
> differentiate themselves.
>
> bradley mclain
>
> --- Kemp Randy-W18971 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
> > Here is a mystery I need help with.  If all JSP
> > engines and EJB servers are approximately equal,
> > then what explains the size differences in the
> > following examples?
> > Latest production Orion - 10 MG
> > Latest production Resin - 12.8 MG
> > Latest productions Jboss/Tomcat - 23.3 Mg
> > Latest production Unify Ewave Engine - 18.1 MG
> > Latest production Iplanet 6.1 - Approximately 1 Gig
> > Latest Productions Oracle 9I AS - Approximately 1
> > Gig
> >   In a past commercial for Motel 6, they talk about
> > not having any perfumed bubble bath beads, like the
> > higher priced hotels.  So I ask these questions.
> > What could possible take up 1 gig, when all JSP
> > engines and EJB servers are supposed to have similar
> > or identical functionality?  Out of curiosity, how
> > much space does Weblogic take up? Where are the
> > perfumed bubble bath beads in the 1 gig space?
> >
> >
>
>
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