Difference between revisions of "Talk:Ruby"

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* What would be the point?  Rails already includes a Ruby-based HTTP listener that's closely integrated with Rails.  You would get no performance benefit from putting AOLserver in front of Rails, as Rails is all single-threaded so requests get processed in serial, as I understand it.  If you wanted to accelerate a Rails app, I'd front it with a load balancing switch and run a bunch of Rails listeners.  But, that'd mean Rails couldn't keep in-memory state information unless you want to run the switch in sticky-session mode, which is lame. ''-- [[User:Dossy|Dossy]] 07:50, 10 December 2005 (EST)''
 
* What would be the point?  Rails already includes a Ruby-based HTTP listener that's closely integrated with Rails.  You would get no performance benefit from putting AOLserver in front of Rails, as Rails is all single-threaded so requests get processed in serial, as I understand it.  If you wanted to accelerate a Rails app, I'd front it with a load balancing switch and run a bunch of Rails listeners.  But, that'd mean Rails couldn't keep in-memory state information unless you want to run the switch in sticky-session mode, which is lame. ''-- [[User:Dossy|Dossy]] 07:50, 10 December 2005 (EST)''
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== Ruby on Aolserver? ==
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Yes, but Ruby on Aolserver would absolutely ROCK!

Revision as of 16:45, 12 December 2007

Ruby on Rails on AOLserver?

Any thoughts or ideas on whether Ruby on Rails would work with the nsruby module? --Caveman 10:28, 9 December 2005 (EST)

  • What would be the point? Rails already includes a Ruby-based HTTP listener that's closely integrated with Rails. You would get no performance benefit from putting AOLserver in front of Rails, as Rails is all single-threaded so requests get processed in serial, as I understand it. If you wanted to accelerate a Rails app, I'd front it with a load balancing switch and run a bunch of Rails listeners. But, that'd mean Rails couldn't keep in-memory state information unless you want to run the switch in sticky-session mode, which is lame. -- Dossy 07:50, 10 December 2005 (EST)

Ruby on Aolserver?

Yes, but Ruby on Aolserver would absolutely ROCK!