I watched one of the Vmware presentation on the vCloud API and the presenter said that the vCloud Java SDK is **not thread safe by design.** He said that you have to make it thread safe yourself if you are using the SDK.
This seems to confirm what he said: https://communities.vmware.com/message/1900552#1900552 On Tue, Nov 5, 2013 at 1:59 AM, Duncan Johnston Watt < [email protected]> wrote: > BK > > Can you point at the VMware documentation that states this? > > Best > > Duncan > > > On 4 November 2013 21:36, Bk Lau <[email protected]> wrote: > >> According to VMware, their vCloud Java SDK library >> is not "thread-safe" by design. >> >> Q: So is the JCloud's vCloud library thread-safe?. >> >> >> Thanks, >> >> BK >> > > > > -- > Duncan Johnston-Watt > CEO | Cloudsoft Corporation > > Twitter | @duncanjw > Mobile | +44 777 190 2653 > Skype | duncan_johnstonwatt > Linkedin | www.linkedin.com/in/duncanjohnstonwatt > > Cloudsoft Corporation Limited, Registered in Scotland No: SC349230. > Registered Office: 13 Dryden Place, Edinburgh, EH9 1RP > > This e-mail message is confidential and for use by the addressee only. If > the message is received by anyone other than the addressee, please return > the message to the sender by replying to it and then delete the message > from your computer. Internet e-mails are not necessarily secure. Cloudsoft > Corporation Limited does not accept responsibility for changes made to this > message after it was sent. > > Whilst all reasonable care has been taken to avoid the transmission of > viruses, it is the responsibility of the recipient to ensure that the > onward transmission, opening or use of this message and any attachments > will not adversely affect its systems or data. No responsibility is > accepted by Cloudsoft Corporation Limited in this regard and the recipient > should carry out such virus and other checks as it considers appropriate. >
