Solr does use JEE WEB components

On 4/17/10, Lukáš Vlček <lukas.vl...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> may be you should be aware that JBoss AS is using Tomcat for web container
> (with modified classloader), so if your web application is running inside
> JBoss AS then it is in fact running in Tomcat.
> I don't think Solr uses JEE technologies provided by JEE Application server
> (JMS, Transaction services, pooling services, clustered EJB... etc...). All
> it requires is web container AFAIK. This being said it will always take
> longer for application server to start and it will require more resources
> as
> opposed to lightweight web container.
>
> Regards,
> Lukas
>
>
> On Sat, Apr 17, 2010 at 11:08 AM, Andrea Gazzarini <
> andrea.gazzar...@atcult.it> wrote:
>
> > Hi all,
> > I have a web application which is basically a (user) search interface
> > towards SOLR.
> > My index is something like 7GB and has a lot of records so apart other
> > things like optiming SOLR schema, config ,clustering etc... I'd like to
> keep
> > SOLR installation as light as possible.
> > At the moment my SOLR instance is running under JBoss but I saw that
> > running under the bundled Jetty it takes a very little amount of memory
> (at
> > least at startup and after one hour of usage)
> >
> > So my questions is: since SOLR is using JEE web components what are the
> > drawback of using the following architecture?
> >
> > -My Application (Full JEE application with web components and EJB) on
> > JBoss;
> > - SOLR on Jetty or Tomcat
> >
> > Having said that and supposing that the idea is good, what are the main
> > differences / advantages / disadvamtages (from this point of view)
> between
> > Tomcat and Jetty?
> >
> > Best Regards,
> > Andrea
> >
> >
>



-- 
Abdelhamid ABID

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