Awesome, Steve. I'll check it out as asap. BTW, I've been wrangling with Ari and Steve Harris (both Terracotta folks) to work up some detailed comments on your proposed Edge/Origin architecture. I was hoping to have something by today, but I couldn't make everyone's schedule line up yesterday. I'll try again today.
Dan, taking Terracotta in and out is usually as simple as adding or removing some JVM arguments from the java startup command. I do that all the time to test whether clustering is working by looking at the counter case. Cheers, Orion Dan Rossi-5 wrote: > > We can definitely apply this in production once most things are nutted > out assuming its also revertable in case of problems, and produce some > feedback. I'm really not sure if there is a way to test such a thing on > our scale without sending it live first :) > > Storm wrote: >> wow steve great job, Red5 is doing a huge step to usability in high >> load scenarios. A few guys on the list sure will be happy with this >> quick progress. Congrats >> >> Cheers >> >> Carlos >> >> On 7/25/07, *Steven Gong* <[EMAIL PROTECTED] >> <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote: >> >> Hi all, >> I have just committed a preview version of Remote SharedObject >> clustering code to SVN on branch: >> >> http://svn1.cvsdude.com/osflash/red5/java/server/branches/clustering >> >> <http://svn1.cvsdude.com/osflash/red5/java/server/branches/clustering> >> >> This implementation is based on the idea to cluster the whole >> scope tree without explicit Terracotta hack to the code base. >> Great thanks to original work from Terracotta buddies, especially >> Orion Letizi. There're still bugs though (some life-cycle issues >> of Scope and some init issues of SO) but you can see the RSO >> clustering works on two nodes. >> >> How to play around with it on Eclipse? >> * Download and install the latest version of Terracotta Eclipse >> plugin. (2.4.0) >> * Check out the branch from SVN and create the Red5 TC >> application. (Using Standalone) >> * Start the TC server >> * Start the Red5 TC application (Node 1). The port is 1935. >> * Start the Red5 TC application again (Node 2). The port is >> 1935+1=1936. >> * Run BallControl demo to connect to 1935. >> * Run another BallControl demo to connect to 1936. >> * Move the ball and you will see it moving on another BallControl >> window and vice versa. >> >> Welcome to any feedbacks. Thanks ahead! >> >> -- >> I cannot tell why this heart languishes in silence. It is for >> small needs it never asks, or knows or remembers. -- Tagore >> >> Best Regards >> Steven Gong >> _______________________________________________ >> Red5 mailing list >> [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >> http://osflash.org/mailman/listinfo/red5_osflash.org >> >> >> >> >> -- >> ------------------------------------------------------------------- >> If a man speaks in a forest and his wife is not there, is he still wrong? >> ------------------------------------------------------------------------ >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Red5 mailing list >> [email protected] >> http://osflash.org/mailman/listinfo/red5_osflash.org >> > > > _______________________________________________ > Red5 mailing list > [email protected] > http://osflash.org/mailman/listinfo/red5_osflash.org > > -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/Red5-%2B-Terracotta----A-Preview-Version-of-Remote-SharedObject-Clustering-Prototype-is-available-on-SVN-tf4140489.html#a11782843 Sent from the Red5 - English mailing list archive at Nabble.com. _______________________________________________ Red5 mailing list [email protected] http://osflash.org/mailman/listinfo/red5_osflash.org
