note
monsieur_champs
<p>Fellow Joost</p>
<p>I'm actually using mod_perl, as Catalyst provides a content handler.</p>
<p>The Java test was made with just 5 seconds of "ramp-up" time. Perl was running under the same conditions. Is that fair?</p>
<p>My machine shares the Intel Pentium 4 Processor 2.8 GHz and 512Mb Ram with Oracle (nicely tunned to use less memory as usual) with the Tomcat (only when running Java) or Apache/ModPerl (only when running Perl). I know this is not the best situation, but this is what I have.</p>
<p>We're using the same machine to run tests, just shutdown the application (Java or Perl) that will not be tested and run tests against the other.</p>
<p>I don't know a lot about the Java code. I guess its simmilar to the Perl code, but this is only a guess. I'll ask about this to the Java programmer tomorrow moring.</p>
<p>I don't know about the templating system, also. Maybe just servlets, the java application was made on sunday, only for the benchmarks.</p>
<p>My Catalyst::Plugin::Session::Flex is trully serializable (and just hold some integers, anyway).</p>
<p>I choosen to use Apache::DBI to handle the database connections, and load it from my <code>httpd.conf</code> file.</p>
<p>Guess Java is using just one or two database connections, while I'm forced (not sure about "forced") to use a connection per server process.</p>
<p>You gave me nice tips on what to look for at the Java code so I can state if this is a fair benchmark. Thank you very much and may the [gods] [bless] you!</p>
<!-- Node text goes above. Div tags should contain sig only -->
<div class="pmsig"><div class="pmsig-260843">
<p align="right"><small>-- [monsieur_champs]</small></p>
</div></div>
487618
487624