Hello, are you saying you want to have a java appserver, cocoon, postgresql and a big database on a machine with 1mb ?? you mean 1GB right ?? 256 would be the bare minimum imho...
-----Message d'origine----- De : Yves Vindevogel [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Envoye : lundi 5 juillet 2004 10:37 A : [EMAIL PROTECTED] Objet : Re: Load Cocoon servers I can run on space ship on slackware with 1 mb ;-)) Problem is that I need to make the bid before the application. So any hints would be nice. So you would go for more RAM in the machine right away ? On 05 Jul 2004, at 06:17, Antonio Gallardo wrote: > Yves Vindevogel dijo: >> Is there a website where I can find statistics on the number of >> servers >> you need to run a Cocoon application. >> Or somebody who is willing to share his/her information about their >> stress tests ? >> >> I'm making a bid for a webapp. Completely Cocoon based. >> There's a big postgresql database behind it, but the database will >> only >> be queried from time to time. >> Most of the work is done by generating XML out-of that database and >> storing it into Cocoon's folders. >> Most files will be around 1000 lines of xml, with about 30 attributes >> in each line, so let's say 30k per file. >> Every screen based on a single file like that, should be generated in >> 1-3 seconds max. > > That is a lot of time! I think cocoon can manage it easily. > >> App is completely running on Slackware, with "personal" configuration, >> that is, no gui, no overhead, just the basics. >> Server will be a Compaq DL 380, 1 mb (or 2 when needed) ram, full >> scsi3 >> in raid 5, 3x 320u 72.8 HD. > > The suggested numbers are too low. I wonder how you can run slackware > on > just 1 MB of ram! ;-) > >> The only thing I need to know now or estimate, is how many >> simultanious >> users this thing can pull. >> Is there a way to quickly calculate this ? >> Or does somebody have a similar setup and willing to tell me what >> beauties he/she has in the server room ? > > I think you need to make some test for you application. In particular, > long time ago I found JMeter to be very useful for stress tests.... > And of > course!, JMeter is part of the Apache crop ;-) > > Here is the link: > > http://jakarta.apache.org/jmeter/index.html > > BTW, run JMeter on a second client computer to avoid using server > resources for JMeter while testing. > > Good luck. > > Best Regards, > > Antonio Gallardo > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
