I thought about it and I vote "YESSSSSSS" :)...
On Wed, Jul 22, 2009 at 8:43 PM, Niels Mayer <nielsmayer(a)gmail.com> wrote:
http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/whatisgoogleappengine.html
Java is supported via Java 6 JVM and standard libs:
http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/java/gettingstarted/
My biggest question w/r/t Xwiki is AppEngine's database support:
The Datastore
App Engine provides a powerful distributed data storage service that
features a query engine and transactions. Just as the distributed web
server
grows with your traffic, the distributed
datastore grows with your data.
The App Engine datastore is not like a traditional relational database.
Data objects, or "entities," have a kind and a set of properties. Queries
can retrieve entities of a given kind filtered and sorted by the values
of
the properties. Property values can be of any of
the supported property
value types<
http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/python/datastore/typesandpropertyclas…
.
Datastore entities are "schemaless." The structure of data entities is
provided by and enforced by your application code. The Java JDO/JPA
interfaces and the Python datastore interface include features for
applying
and enforcing structure within your app. Your app
can also access the
datastore directly to apply as much or as little structure as it needs.
The datastore is strongly consistent<
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consistency_model>and uses optimistic
concurrency control<
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optimistic_concurrency_control>gt;.
An update of a entity occurs in a transaction
that is retried a fixed
number
of times if other processes are trying to update
the same entity
simultaneously. Your application can execute multiple datastore
operations
in a single transaction which either all succeed
or all fail, ensuring
the
integrity of your data.
The datastore implements transactions across its distributed network
using
"entity groups." A transaction
manipulates entities within a single
group.
Entities of the same group are stored together
for efficient execution of
transactions. Your application can assign entities to groups when the
entities are created.
http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/java/gettingstarted/usingdatastore.ht…
App Engine includes support for two different API
standards for the
datastore: Java Data Objects <http://java.sun.com/jdo/index.jsp> (JDO)
and
Java Persistence API<
http://java.sun.com/developer/technicalArticles/J2EE/jpa/>(JPA)PA). These
interfaces are provided by DataNucleus
Access Platform
<http://www.datanucleus.org/>, an open source
implementation of several Java persistence standards, with an adapter for
the App Engine datastore.
..............
Question:
What would it take to make Xwiki work on Google App-engine? Is the
"datastore" google provides compatible with xwiki's database needs?
What other Java-hosting services "out there" support Xwiki? Database and
java "hosting" issues for Xwiki can be problematic, even though it makes
more sense, to public-host using a language like Java.
I think for my own situation, I would end up "hosting" Xwiki myself, as a
$500.00 box can run a few Xwiki-based sites just fine. However, for
people/customers wanting an Xwiki-based site that don't know about system
administration, JVM's, apache, etc, it would be nice if there was an easier
path to managed hosting in an "open market." This needn't limit
xwiki.com
's
hosting market, as much as it would open-up xwiki for wider deployment and
use, and make it competitive in situations where Php or RoR might have
easier buy-in, such as in the USA....
Imagine if in the future, one of the installers
Xwiki.org offered worked
directly with
http://appengine.google.com/ so that people would
actually have their own live, public xwiki sites hosted for them. There's
plenty of sites that would be happy with this level of free
service (
http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/quotas.html ):
Resource Free Default Quota Billing Enabled Quota Daily Limit Maximum
Rate Daily
Limit Maximum Rate Requests 1,300,000 requests 7,400 requests/minute
43,000,000
requests 30,000 requests/minute Outgoing Bandwidth
(billable<
http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/quotas.html#Billable_Quotas_and_Fixed…
,
includes HTTPS) 1 gigabyte 56
megabytes/minute 1 gigabyte free; 1,046
gigabytes maximum 740 megabytes/minute Incoming Bandwidth
(billable<
http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/quotas.html#Billable_Quotas_and_Fixed…
,
includes HTTPS) 1 gigabyte 56
megabytes/minute 1 gigabyte free; 1,046
gigabytes maximum 740 megabytes/minute CPU Time
(billable<
http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/quotas.html#Billable_Quotas_and_Fixed…
) 6.5 CPU-hours 15 CPU-minutes/minute 6.5
CPU-hours free; 1,729 CPU-hours
maximum 72 CPU-minutes/minuteNiels
http://nielsmayer.com
PS: although at 1 gigabyte outgoing bandwidth, and some of the sizable
javascript libraries these days... you probably want to use
http://webmuch.com/how-why-you-should-use-google-cdn/ alongside :-)
_______________________________________________
devs mailing list
devs(a)xwiki.org
http://lists.xwiki.org/mailman/listinfo/devs