On May 16, 2017, at 7:41 AM, Heiko Braun <hbraun(a)redhat.com>
wrote:
> On 16. May 2017, at 13:32, J Pai <jai.forums2013(a)gmail.com
<mailto:jai.forums2013@gmail.com>> wrote:
>
> What I have experienced is that for end users, they are mostly interested in seeing
their (usually large) deployments show noticeable improvements in deployment time, not
necessarily from a cold boot of the server, but when the server is already up and they
either want to deploy something new or re-deploy their application.
+1 the deployments increase the time until “ready to perform work”. This is the point we
should use as a reference. Anything before (i.e. blank WF without deployments) is just
marketing IMO.
I agree that deployment time is important, but I just want to point out that not all
usages of WildFly involve deployments. Examples include proxy servers, static content
servers, message brokers, javascript code, transaction managers, and service based
applications.
--
Jason T. Greene
WildFly Lead / JBoss EAP Platform Architect
JBoss, a division of Red Hat