corey:

thanks for your info. just another note on nt. first of all, i'm not a msft
fan. and i also love the concept of java's write once run anywhere. my
impression is that it's not very scalable. i'll tell you my experience and
you can tell me what you think. my company recently wrote a client server
app. we wrote the app server which services about 10k tcp connections with
incoming requests for a sql server. we used i/o completion port such that
socket i/o is very efficient. the machine we use is a single celeron 500
with 256mb ram, running windows 2000 advanced server. under our stress test
with 10k users, we are not hitting any bottlenecks. my question is: if i
were to do this with java, 1. how will i write the code? 2. what hardware do
i need in order to achieve the same performance?

tks,
peter

----- Original Message -----
From: "Corey A. Johnson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, August 31, 2000 1:36 AM
Subject: Re: highly scalable network server app


> Just to comment...  i used Sybase Jaguar CTS servers in a recent project
> i did for a very large client...  using two Solaris servers...
> clustered...  And they are easily handling 1000 simultaneous EJB
> connections each....
>
> Cj
>
> Tarik Makota wrote:
> >
> > Take a look at EAServer from Sybase. www.sybase.com
> >
> > JaguarCTS is the app server and it can host C++ objects, COM, EJB etc..
> > It holds 3 place in market after IBM and it is highly scalable.
> >
> > It will start shippimh in ver. 3.6 soon and this version is J2EE
certified.
> >
> > Tarik
> >
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: Geert Van Damme <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Sent: Wednesday, August 30, 2000 9:22 AM
> > Subject: Re: highly scalable network server app
> >
> > > Do you really mean millions? I hope these are rather small
transactions
> > ;-)
> > > (is that millions simultaneous, or millions per hour or millions per
day?)
> > >
> > > Server side java approaches the speed of C++ (or better). but I
wouldn't
> > do
> > > this for a first project in java. I'm afraid you will always think it
> > would
> > > have been better in C++
> > > I would do it in Java, maybe you better do it in C.
> > >
> > > Geert Van Damme
> > >
> > >
> > > > -----Original Message-----
> > > > From: A mailing list about Java Server Pages specification and
reference
> > > > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of skeptical
> > > > Sent: woensdag 30 augustus 2000 15:13
> > > > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > > > Subject: highly scalable network server app
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > dear all: is there a mailing list that discusses the above topic? i
am
> > new
> > > > to java but am very familiar with c++, windows nt. i need to write a
> > > > distributed server app that can service millions of udp
> > > > connections. i know
> > > > how to do it on windows nt using c++ (using w2k thread pooling,
> > > > iocp, etc.).
> > > > i am attracted to the write once run anywhere concept of java and
> > > > would like
> > > > to investigate the possibility of writing such system using java.
> > > > has anyone
> > > > done this? is it possible/recommended on java?
> > > >
> > > > tks,
> > > > peter
> > > >
> > > > ==================================================================
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> > >
> >
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> > JSP-INTEREST".
> > > Some relevant FAQs on JSP/Servlets can be found at:
> > >
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> > Some relevant FAQs on JSP/Servlets can be found at:
> >
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> --
> Corey A. Johnson
> President/Director of Technology
> Creative Network Innovations, Inc.
> 1-800-264-5547 ** 1-407-259-1984
>
>
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>
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