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Thanks for you help!
"Avi Abrami" <aabrami_at_intersystemsww.com> wrote in message
news:3C4BB481.FCBF82F3_at_intersystemsww.com...
> "Daniel A. Morgan" wrote:
>
> > It is the middle tier. Though in an n-tier situation I'm not sure quite
how to
> > qualify that.
> >
> > 9i app server used to be nearly impossible to set up. Now it is just
> > challenging. If you have to ask the question ... I would suggest you try
to find
> > someone that has already done it to help you with the project.
> >
> > Daniel Morgan
> >
> > srg wrote:
> >
> > > I am new to this stuff. We have 8i enterprise db on the back end. I
want
> > > to implement the 9i App Server because I heard it's a great J2EE
server with
> > > built in db support and we already use Oracle db...
> > >
> > > Is the 9i app server the middle tier, with browser being the client
tier and
> > > db being the bback end?
> > >
> > > Is 9i app server difficult to set up?
> > >
> > > Thanks for you time!
>
> Hi srg,
> I agree with Daniel, 9iAS is a nightmare to install.
> It took me three days to install it. However, if you
> are intending to develop J2EE applications, then
> you don't need 9iAS at all! You just need OC4J.
> This is a separate, downloadable ZIP file. It took
> me only 3 minutes to install, start up and test OC4J!
>
> In answer to your other question, yes, OC4J is the
> "middle" tier and Oracle 8i is the "data" tier, but
> actually, a web-based client usually means either
> JSP or servlets -- not the web-browser.
>
> If you're new to J2EE, let me suggest reading the
> J2EE specification from SUN:
>
> http://java.sun.com/j2ee/
>
> HTH,
> Avi.
>
>
Received on Wed Jan 23 2002 - 05:47:51 CST
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