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
>
>
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