L.S.,
You can always give things a go with our minimal distribution (which essentially is just Karaf with a few feature URLs preinstalled and a few extra settings). ServiceMix hasn't really been designed to run in this kind of environment, but the footprint of that installation type is not that big. If you only enable those features afterwards that you're actually using, you can probably get it to run in a pretty resource-constrained environment without any problems. Regards, Gert On Fri, Mar 1, 2013 at 2:41 PM, jdehesa <javier.deh...@clowod.com> wrote: > Hi everyone, > > I have recently gotten interested in ServiceMix and ESB/ESB-like systems > for > some system I'm working on. However, this system is intented to be kind of > a > "home server", providing several common services to be accessible from > several devices. > > The point is, this system will not be a powerful enterprise server; > actually, it will surely be way less powerful than an average laptop - more > like a router on steroids. But I do need powerful integration, service > management, security, standards, and some other nice ServiceMix features. > So > the question is, does it make sense at all putting ServiceMix in there? Or, > being designed for enterprise environment, it is bound to take a > significant > amount of resources? If I'm not wrong, it takes more than 200MB just out of > the box, which could be a breeze for a true server but could be > overwhelming, specially if it grows as features and bundles are installed. > > Final question to complete my nuisance, would things get significantly > better if I build some more humble soultion based just on camel? > > Maybe I'm getting something/everything wrong as I'm a total noob, please > make me know in case. I really hope not to be re-posting anything, but I > really have not been able to found any answer for this. > > Thanks a whole lot. > > > > -- > View this message in context: > http://servicemix.396122.n5.nabble.com/ServiceMix-for-small-systems-tp5716009.html > Sent from the ServiceMix - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com. >