On 31 mars 2012, at 16:46, Alex Karasulu wrote: > On Sat, Mar 31, 2012 at 3:35 AM, Darko Hojnik <[email protected]>wrote: > >> Hi there, >> >> Am Samstag, den 31.03.2012, 02:50 +0300 schrieb Alex Karasulu: >>> On Sat, Mar 31, 2012 at 2:29 AM, <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>>> Hi, >>>> I'm looking to allocate ~3GB of memory to the JVM apache ds runs in >> but I >>>> can't do that on 32 bit. The tankui 64bit service wrapper is not a free >>>> software. >>>> >>> >>> Don't we have a 64-bit distribution with the Tanuki wrapper? I thought we >>> did using an earlier release that was still free. >>> >>> >>>> I'm looking for free alternative to run apacheDS 2.0 on windows 64 >> bit. I >>>> see how one could perhaps use procrun, the wrapper used for managing, >>>> starting & stopping tomcat to achieve this. >>>> Although I have not found working examples of this anywhere. Anyone >> have >>>> ideas about this? Thanks and have a nice weekend. Carlo Accorsi. >>>> >>>> >>> Carlos we have installers for 64-bit environments for example see here: >>> >>> >>> >> http://directory.apache.org/apacheds/1.5/download/download-linux-deb.html >>> >> >> >> I'm still hoping about support for JSVC. It is an Apache Projekt and >> smashes Taniku to dust. >> >> > :-) > > When I originally wrote the installers I used jsvc and procrun with a > convenient framework to add any kind of daemon launcher. At that time, > maybe about 8-9 years ago, commons-daemon seemed like a solid option, but > then the Tanuki Wrapper started overtaking commons-daemon due to a lack of > developers but Tanuki's commercialization and turning it's back on the OS > community lead to a resurgence in commons-daemon activity. > > Now commons-daemon looks like a good alternative and perhaps something we > should eventually switch to.
Indeed, it would be better to depend on a living project, rather than on a dead branch of a now-gone commercial project. We really might add that to our ApacheDS 2.0 checklist. Regards, Pierre-Arnaud > > >> You could run it on Linux, Unix or FreeBSD. It could run Apache DS on >> Port 389 and 88 without privileges of rootuser. >> >> > That's definitely a nice feature. > > >> Also it works with Apache James and Apache Tomcat very fine. >> >> > Right it was originally written for Tomcat at the time of inception. > > > -- > Best Regards, > -- Alex
