The one thing I miss from Ice is being to host multiple servants from a single server. With Thrift I usually end up with a class that has 200 one-liners. Not that big a deal.

-Matt

On 16/01/14 14:53, henry.jykim@google wrote:
before we are going to process, I could get a conviction from yours that the 
thrift is already matured library.

thanks for all your comments.

On Jan 15, 2014, at 1:59 AM, Jens Geyer <[email protected]> wrote:

Amen to the swiss army knife!
________________________________
Von: Rush Manbert
Gesendet: 14.01.2014 17:21
An: [email protected]
Betreff: Re: any recommendable open-sources for c++ developers

We use Thrift in both C++ and Java on Mac and Windows. Servers are Mac/Java, clients are 
Mac/Windows/C++. It all works very well. We also use C++ Thrift clients and servers 
within the client side machines and internally between server components. We even SWIG 
Thrift-based client side libraries for use by the server side code. And we also use it to 
"flatten" structures into buffers and files.

It is easy to write your own transports and protocols as extensions of the 
originals. It is easy to modify the code generator.

As I have said to a number of people, Thrift is the Swiss Army Knife of 
software.

- Rush

On Jan 13, 2014, at 5:49 PM, henry.jykim@google wrote:

hi, all
I am newbie to use the thrift library.

Our team’s legacy software is using CORBA very heavily.
yes, we got now the time to change it for more lighter, more faster.

There are 2 big libraries for bmt.
the first is ICE.
the second is THRIFT.

AYK, there are good and worse relatively.

I believe that the thrift is used very nicely in JAVA world. however does it be 
also used in C++ world?
does anybody be able to recommend good use-cases?

very thanks for your concerns.

Reply via email to