True, but then you actually have a single-point again. Lose the server and
your stickiness is useless.
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: vrijdag 20 juli 2001 16:41
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: NewB: Is Struts completely reliant on sessions
Renzo, Felix,
If your front-end web server/load balancer (also known as Local Director or
Resonate, etc) is implemented to use IP stickiness, then this is a
non-issue since the Web user will be returned to the server which serviced
the original request.
Brian
"Renzo Toma"
<renzo.toma@x To:
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
s4all.nl> cc:
Subject: RE: NewB: Is Struts
completely reliant on sessions
07/20/2001
05:40 AM
Please
respond to
struts-user
Hi
As long as you carry over all properties to the next request using form
elements (text, hidden, ...), you will only miss the LOCALE session
variable. But you set that by subclassing ActionServlet.
Actually when you stay away from wizard-like/multipage forms, you'll be
fine.
Renzo
-----Original Message-----
From: Felix Ulrich [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: vrijdag 20 juli 2001 11:29
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: NewB: Is Struts completely reliant on sessions
Hi
We have to build & deploy some web applications with
JSP/Servlets on an LVS cluster. At the moment,
though, I don't think we can guarantee session
affinity (i.e. subsequent requests will end up on
different machines), and it seems that Struts uses
sessions quite heavily.
Am I right in thinking that sessions are a
pre-requisite of using the Struts framework? Is there
any part of Struts I could still use without sessions
(e.g. some of the taglibs maybe)?
Thanks
Felix.
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