I did a small test - 2 Threads each retrieving a property from different Nodes 100 times each. This executed without Exception. I may try a more elaborate test than this.
Question: what is the maximum number of concurrent read-only uses of a Session would you recommend? 10 / 50 / 100 / no limit? Alexandru Popescu ☀ wrote: > > Paco, as you probably know by now, jcr Sessions are not thread safe, > and so exposing them in a multi-thread environment may become a risk > for the data. I am not sure how your application is behaving and how > do you protect against thread contention at the session level, so it > is kind of hard to give an advise. What I can share is the fact that > in a read-only mode you can probably share a session between different > threads. > > ./alex > -- > .w( the_mindstorm )p. > > > On Nov 21, 2007 6:15 PM, Paco Avila <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> Hi >> >> Our application using Jackrabbit is an Document Management System >> (OpenKM). Actually we prevent an user log into the web aplication twice, >> so there is only one Jackrabbit Session per web user. >> >> But we also expose several methods via WebServices and here is the >> problem: if an user is logged into the web application, the same user >> can't user WebService API because he is already logged into the system. >> >> I have think two options: >> >> - Reuse an existing Jackrabbit Session for both web user and the same >> ws api user. PROBLEM: is it a good practice for Jackrabbit? >> >> - The web user hace one JR Session and the ws api user have another >> session. PROBLEM: Every web user need another WS user and this can be >> hard to manage because we need to set permissions for both users and >> should be the same permissions for them. >> >> Any tip? >> >> >> -- >> GIT CONSULTORS >> >> www.git.es >> >> Tel: +34 971 498 310 >> Fax: +34 971 496 189 >> >> C/ Francesc Rover, 2B. >> 07003 Palma de Mallorca – Illes Balears (España) >> >> >> > > -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/Sharing-a-Session-or-a-Session-per-web-user-tf4851166.html#a13950210 Sent from the Jackrabbit - Users mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
