Hi,

These days I get to see which Java people run not only through
consulting clients at Sematext, but also because a lot of Solr, ES,
etc. people are using our performance monitoring service.  When they
send us info about their systems I get to see which Java they are
running and these days I am seeing probably > 50% OpenJDK, and the
rest is Oracle.  I haven't seen anyone run IBM's Java for many years
now.  I also don't see JRockit or Zing.

We run all our stuff on Oracle's Java and a mixture of CentOS and Ubuntu.

Otis
--
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On Sat, May 11, 2013 at 11:39 AM, Jason Hellman
<jhell...@innoventsolutions.com> wrote:
> I have run across plenty of implementations using just about every common 
> servlet container on the market, and haven't run across any common problems 
> to dissuade you against any one of them.
>
> On the JVM front most people seem to use Oracle because of it ubiquity.  But 
> I have also run across a solid minority of Open and they seem just fine.  For 
> that matter, more hand a handful of custom JVMs (usually via IBM).
>
> The advice I always give on this topic leans heavily on practical 
> consideration:
>
> What servlet container and JVM does your team know best how to address if a 
> problem occurs?
>
> If you're unsure, I'd stick with Tomcat and Oracle since they are the most 
> common and you'll find metric tons of help via posts on the internet that may 
> coincide with an issue or optimization you're considering.
>
> Hope that's useful!
>
>
> On May 11, 2013, at 4:56 AM, Spadez <james_will...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I was wondering, what setup have people had the most luck with from a
>> performance point of view?
>>
>> Tomcat Vs Jetty
>> Open JDK vs Oracle JDK
>>
>> I haven't been able to find any information online to backup any sort of
>> performance claims. I am planning on using Tomcat with Open JDK, has anyone
>> had any experience with this and is it a wise path to go down?
>>
>> Thanks!
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> View this message in context: 
>> http://lucene.472066.n3.nabble.com/Solr-Best-Java-Combination-for-performance-tp4062554.html
>> Sent from the Solr - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
>

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