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Glassfish blog
Glassfish blog





  1. #Glassfish blog update#
  2. #Glassfish blog software#
  3. #Glassfish blog download#

#Glassfish blog update#

The next update will be GlassFish 4.0. But there are many more reasons to consider other options. Firstly, GlassFish 6.x uses the Jakarta namespace which means you have to adapt your application to this namespace before you can run it on JDK 11. Development versions of ongoing work for the next GlassFish iteration are thus already available. In this blog, I explain why GlassFish 6.x is not the best choice for your mission critical deployments. More importantly, Jason is married to a beautiful woman and has two sons who, thankfully, look like their mother. Director Product Management As an open source project, GlassFish is being developed in an open and transparent manner. You can read more about what Jason's working on at his blog at Īpart from work, he is currently serving as the president of the Oklahoma City Java Users Group, where he is an active member and presenter. Incorporate bugs fixes addressed since GF 4.0, see the list of fixed bugs (recent fixes. Development versions of ongoing work for the next GlassFish iteration are thus already available. As an open source project, GlassFish is being developed in an open and transparent manner.

#Glassfish blog download#

While Glassfish is the reference implementation of the Java EE standard (which includes Servlet and JSP). GlassFish Server Open Source Edition 4.0 Download nightly builds. Tomcat being the reference implementation for the Servlet and JSP specification.

glassfish blog

Finally, they are reference implementations for various Java standards.

#Glassfish blog software#

Jason has been writing software professionally since 1997 in a wide variety of languages and environments, including Java, PHP, C/C++, and Delphi on both Linux/Unix and Windows. Tomcat has a single license whereas GlassFish has dual license. He is currently the main developer of Mojarra Scales, working to create a set of high quality JSF components wrapping libraries such as the Yahoo! User Interface Library, as well as bring Facelets compatibility to JSFTemplating. Again Tomcat is the victor, this time by a larger margin of around 7 for response time, elapsed time and transaction rate.

glassfish blog

Jason has extensive experience working with web-based technologies such as JavaServer Faces and Ajax, as well as enterprise technologies based on the GlassFish platform. Generally Tomcat seems to be about 3 faster than GlassFish except for in the area of concurrency where the difference was only 1.45.

glassfish blog

Jason Lee is a Senior Java Developer for Sun Microsystems working on the GlassFish Administration Console, and is a member of the JSF 2.0 ( JSR 314) Expert Group.







Glassfish blog