On Mon, Sep 20, 2004 at 01:31:52AM +0200, Bj?rn T Johansen wrote:
: So basically, I would like some advice on why I should/shouldn't continue
: with Weblogic? :)

I've used Tomcat and Weblogic, and can offer a brief comparison:

1/ Co$t.  You can't beat Tomcat's price.  WL licensing is based on the
number of CPUs in the machine.  (Doesn't sound too bad until you have
40+ CPUs involved. ;)

2/ Spec compliance/upkeep: Tomcat 5.x implements servlet spec 2.4,
while (IIRC) Weblogic 8.1 is still 2.3.  Granted, BEA has several
reasons to take the Corporate "slow and steady" Pace; but it's nice
that I can use the servlet 2.4/JSP 2.0 features *now* instead of
waiting.

3/ Clustering: Weblogic wins here, not so much because WL clustering
is any "better" but because it's been tried and tested.  I've been
using WL clusters for more than 4 years now, since v5.1.  By
comparison, Tomcat clustering appeared in v5.0 (last year, was it?) so
it hasn't experienced nearly as much road-testing.

4/ Webserver connectivity: I've never had a problem with mod_jk; but
based on list posts, I'm the pathological case.  (The ratio of jk
flaws vs pilot error is beyond me.) Setting up the Weblogic Proxy
Plugin was a complete no-brainer, vs mod_jk which was a partial
no_brainer.

5/ All-In-One package: What are your long-term app dev goals?  WL
provides EJB and other features out of the box.  As others have
mentioned, doing that with Tomcat involves adding other products to
the mix, which can slow down a pre-product R&D effort.

6/ Hand-holding: for a fee, BEA can send a pro-serv team to your site
and/or provide training.  There is no "official" (Apache-based) Tomcat
consulting/pro-serv, as far as I know.  While unofficial services are
certainly available, you'd have to shop around, check credentials,
etc.

That said, don't let the "open source" vs "vended" labels fool you.
The support models aren't too different as long as you don't deviate
too far from the norm with your app/setup, and you're conservative
about upgrades.

What you really have to worry about is "in it for the long run" vs
"fly-by-night"; and neither Tomcat nor Weblogic show any signs of
disappearing for the forseeable future.

-QM

-- 

software  -- http://www.brandxdev.net
tech news -- http://www.RoarNetworX.com


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