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Content Tagged with Server + tools

Subversion up and running in 30 minutes or less

Subversion sounds pretty cool. It's a mature, powerful revision-control system that acts a lot like CVS, adds support for atomic commits and real renames, just won the Jolt award, and is free. What more can you ask for?

technology: dzone.com: tech links

From OSGi to GlassFish in 5 Steps

Creating an OSGi bundle and deploying it to GlassFish.

technology: dzone.com: tech links

SpringSource Enterprise Available To All

SpringSource, the company behind Spring, the de facto standard in enterprise Java, and a leading provider of infrastructure software, today announced the general availability of SpringSource Enterprise. SpringSource Enterprise delivers the software, services, and technical support necessary to develop and run Spring-powered enterprise applications more productively, securely and with the greatest uptime.

technology: dzone.com: tech links

SourceForge.net: WampServer

WampServer will install Apache, PHP5 and MySQL on your Windows system. WampServer comes with a service manager as a tray icon. It will allow you to easily manage your server. You can install all releases of Apache, MySQL and PHP as add-ons.

WAMP: del.icio.us/tag/wamp

My testimonial about Hudson

I have tried some tools for Continuous Integration before, like Cruise Control and Continuum. At the time I have tested them, some years ago, the first one was not very simple to configure and the last one used to be visually more interesting, but the project was just starting, so it had some problematic bugs. Because of that and because of the project build that I was working was simple without dependencies (it was just checkout the code from SVN, compile, run the tests, publish the results, deploy the application and notify about breaks sending and email and a SMS), it was decided schedule the Ant scripts directly as cron jobs. It actually worked very nice in that context.

technology: dzone.com: tech links

State Observation: The Good (JXI), Bad (JMX), Ugly (JMX)

One of the most common usages of JMX is to make instances of a particular object and its associated state visible from a remote machine for diagnostics purposes. But how easy is it really?

technology: dzone.com: tech links

GlassFish Application Server Refcard Is Available For Download

If you are a GlassFish user then you will definitely like this reference card as it contains many of day to day information which you may need. It will ease the pain of looking for a command or tip in the web or reference manuals.

technology: dzone.com: tech links

4 Things You Need in a Cloud Computing Infrastructure

Cloud computing is, at its core, about delivering applications or services in an on-demand environment. Cloud computing providers will need to support hundreds of thousands of users and applications/services and ensure that they are fast, secure, and available. In order to accomplish this goal, they'll need to build a dynamic, intelligent infrastructure with four core properties in mind: transparency, scalability, monitoring/management, and security.

technology: dzone.com: tech links

Nikto | CIRT.net

"Nikto is an Open Source (GPL) web server scanner which performs comprehensive tests against web servers for multiple items, including over 3500 potentially dangerous files/CGIs, versions on over 900 servers, and version specific problems on over 250 serv

opensource: del.icio.us tag/opensource

NetBeans 6.5 M1: GlassFish v3 + Rails

NetBeans IDE 6.5 Milestone 1 is now available. The New and Noteworthy feature list certainly makes it worthy for the install - comprehensive PHP support (Editor Screencast and PHP Learning Trail), JavaScript Debugger, Groovy Editor, Grails support and Numerous improvements in other areas are some of them.

technology: dzone.com: tech links

3 Reasons not to use Apache mod_rewrite

After reading this discussion on Slashdot regarding an anti-virus agent pretending to be Internet Explorer and flooding sites with requests I waited to see a response come from an Apache fan on using mod_rewrite to detect and stop the flood of useless traffic coming from these robots. It was sure to come, particularly after the first post in the discussion pointed out how to use an iRule to detect and "nuke from orbit" these nasty little requests. I was not disappointed. It's not the case that the solution won't work. It will, and it's certainly a viable solution. At least if you're only running 2 or 3 web servers. And you don't care about the need to interrupt service to implement the solution. And you aren't worried about potentially introducing errors into the server configuration. And you're aren't running IIS or some other web server. There are a few very good reasons not to use Apache mod_rewrite for this kind of situation.

technology: dzone.com: tech links

Laconica

The open source code that powers Identi.ca

opensource: del.icio.us tag/opensource

How to bridge PHP and Java on Windows with Apache Tomcat

Want to run PHP and access Java? Here's how to do it on Windows XP using Apace and Apache Tomcat. Although the tutorial show you how to do things by installing Apache Tomcat, this may not be ideal or what most want to do. So you may want to try this using the new Xampp Apache Tomcat addon.

technology: dzone.com: tech links

Understanding Netbeans 6.1 Tomcat 6.0 configuration of Catalina Base - GOTCHA

This short tutorial explains how NetBean IDE 6.1 deals with configuration of applications in Tomcat 6.0 Windows. NerBeans copies conf/server.xml under USER_HOME. Knowing this helps you in debugging why the configuration changes are not reflected.

technology: dzone.com: tech links

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