esxx.blogspot.com
ESXX - Friendly Server-side JavaScript: August 2008
http://esxx.blogspot.com/2008_08_01_archive.html
ESXX - Friendly Server-side JavaScript. Sunday, August 24, 2008. More documentation has been added to the Wiki. Classes have been (rudimentary) documented. Thursday, August 21, 2008. Today, I released the second binary release of ESXX. Go get. Your favourite server-side JavaScript platfrom while it is still hot! Thursday, August 7, 2008. Pretty neat. It's also possible to unload an application from memory using the JMX console. What is an MXBean? Tuesday, August 5, 2008. The first thing you need to do is...
esxx.blogspot.com
ESXX - Friendly Server-side JavaScript: September 2008
http://esxx.blogspot.com/2008_09_01_archive.html
ESXX - Friendly Server-side JavaScript. Saturday, September 27, 2008. The last minor release unfortunately contained a bug that caused System.console(). To return null in script mode, which is bad because I use it all the time to call the readPassword(). I also fixed a problem with the internal HTTP server, which would mess up keep-alive connections when returning 1xx, 204 and 304 responses. Wednesday, September 24, 2008. I made a new minor release today, available here. It's worth a read.
esxx.blogspot.com
ESXX - Friendly Server-side JavaScript: May 2009
http://esxx.blogspot.com/2009_05_01_archive.html
ESXX - Friendly Server-side JavaScript. Sunday, May 24, 2009. Scaling up with GoGrid. My small GoGrid experiment the other day made me curios. Assume the blog I put online became really popular. How would my deployment cope, and how would I be able to increase capacity? BASE=http:/ 216.121.78.66/blog/index.esxx. AB} /dev/null -n 600 -c 60 -e apa ${BASE} &. AB} /dev/null -n 300 -c 30 -e apa ${BASE}/posts/1.html &. While [ -n "$(ps grep -E " *(${pid1} ${pid2} ${pid3})")" ]; do. Java -cp h2/bin/h2-1.1&#...
esxx.blogspot.com
ESXX - Friendly Server-side JavaScript: JavaScript servlets
http://esxx.blogspot.com/2009/02/javascript-servlets.html
ESXX - Friendly Server-side JavaScript. Sunday, February 15, 2009. Today, I checked in support for running ESXX as a inside servlet a Java EE application server. Why, someone may ask, run an application server within another application server? Rebuild and deploy the generated. Archive on your app server. More work is required, but if you're interested to try it, just check out trunk from the Subversion repository at http:/ svn.berlios.de/svnroot/repos/esxx/trunk/. To build your own. What does alpha mean?
esxx.blogspot.com
ESXX - Friendly Server-side JavaScript: ESXX advances into beta
http://esxx.blogspot.com/2009/05/esxx-advances-into-beta.html
ESXX - Friendly Server-side JavaScript. Thursday, May 21, 2009. ESXX advances into beta. Whoo, long time, no see . It's been a while since the last blog post, but today, we celebrate the fact that ESXX is no longer considered alpha quality with an all-new look of esxx.org. I've already blogged about some of the new features in this release, but I just want to mention that there are now two tutorials. It's definately worth a read! Nice job. And the website has actually improved a lot!
esxx.blogspot.com
ESXX - Friendly Server-side JavaScript: June 2009
http://esxx.blogspot.com/2009_06_01_archive.html
ESXX - Friendly Server-side JavaScript. Sunday, June 14, 2009. Using Apache's HttpClient on Google App Engine. If you, like me, have tried to use Google's URL Fetch Java API. On the Google App Engine, you've probably been disappointed. Sure, it's a small, clean API, but it's totally feature-less. The most advanced thing it supports seems to be . well, it can follow redirects automatically. Wow. Cookies? In ESXX, I use Apache's HttpClient 4. And it works really. In-memory H2) and data. I got most of ESXX ...
esxx.blogspot.com
ESXX - Friendly Server-side JavaScript: February 2009
http://esxx.blogspot.com/2009_02_01_archive.html
ESXX - Friendly Server-side JavaScript. Sunday, February 22, 2009. JavaScript web applications/browser services, the ESXX way. In ESXX, the difference between a web service (a program that produces XML or JSON intended for other programs) and a web application or browser service (a program that produces HTML documents intended to be viewed by a human using a web browser) is minimal. Basically, it's only the data format (XML/JSON vs HTML) that differs. As mentioned before, stylesheet handlers can be trigg...
esxx.blogspot.com
ESXX - Friendly Server-side JavaScript: Using Apache's HttpClient on Google App Engine
http://esxx.blogspot.com/2009/06/using-apaches-httpclient-on-google-app.html
ESXX - Friendly Server-side JavaScript. Sunday, June 14, 2009. Using Apache's HttpClient on Google App Engine. If you, like me, have tried to use Google's URL Fetch Java API. On the Google App Engine, you've probably been disappointed. Sure, it's a small, clean API, but it's totally feature-less. The most advanced thing it supports seems to be . well, it can follow redirects automatically. Wow. Cookies? In ESXX, I use Apache's HttpClient 4. And it works really. In-memory H2) and data. I tried to compile ...
esxx.blogspot.com
ESXX - Friendly Server-side JavaScript: From localhost to live in 60 minutes using GoGrid
http://esxx.blogspot.com/2009/05/from-localhost-to-live-in-60-minutes.html
ESXX - Friendly Server-side JavaScript. Friday, May 22, 2009. From localhost to live in 60 minutes using GoGrid. I made an experiment today. The question I wanted to answer was this:. Given a locally developed ESXX application, running on my laptop, how long would it take to go live, assuming you own no servers or Internet connection suitable for such deployment? For this, I turned to my favourite grid/cloud service, GoGrid. The app I tested was the Ajax Blog tutorial. Ourselves. No big deal. Root@17914 ...
esxx.blogspot.com
ESXX - Friendly Server-side JavaScript: Scaling up with GoGrid
http://esxx.blogspot.com/2009/05/scaling-up-with-gogrid.html
ESXX - Friendly Server-side JavaScript. Sunday, May 24, 2009. Scaling up with GoGrid. My small GoGrid experiment the other day made me curios. Assume the blog I put online became really popular. How would my deployment cope, and how would I be able to increase capacity? BASE=http:/ 216.121.78.66/blog/index.esxx. AB} /dev/null -n 600 -c 60 -e apa ${BASE} &. AB} /dev/null -n 300 -c 30 -e apa ${BASE}/posts/1.html &. While [ -n "$(ps grep -E " *(${pid1} ${pid2} ${pid3})")" ]; do. Java -cp h2/bin/h2-1.1&#...