I haven't done myself, but from what I've seen from other Tomcat developers
that have tried gcj, you get a small improvement in start-up time, and after
that, not much of an improvement over JIT.
Oscar Carrillo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
I saw this in Fedora 2 release schedule.
We have set a very aggressive schedule for Fedora Core 2. Red Hat
considers two items absolutely stop-ship -- that is, we will slip the
release if necessary to include them. These two items are the 2.6 Linux
kernel and SELinux functionality integrated into the distribution. Other
areas of technology that the Fedora Community (Red Hat and third parties
together) will focus on will include GNOME 2.6 (tight schedule,
particularly dependent on Gtk+ 2.4), KDE 3.2, more Java software using gcj
(Ant, Tomkat, Jakarta, Eclipse, but not Mozilla plugins, AWT, or Swing),
and integrating work on other architectures (at least AMD64, and possibly
also SPARC).
Does anyone have any ideas on Tomcat running under gcj? Does it work well
already, and would we expect real performance benefits from it?
Since Tomcat (Tomkat) isn't spelled correctly in the release schedule, I
don't have a lot of confidence that this means anything.
Oscar
http://daydream.stanford.edu/tomcat/install_web_services.html
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