JBoss: Difference between revisions
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=Disambiguation= | =Disambiguation= | ||
WildFly is the community edition JBoss. Enterprise Application Platform (EAP) is the subscription-backed enterprise version JBoss. Both of them are built in top of a "JBoss" code base: the package names start with "org.jboss", the Java system properties start with "org.jboss", etc. The management scripts refer to "JBOSS_HOME" and other JBOSS* environment variables, in both cases. <font color=red>Not sure about this, keep thinking about it: Operationally, it is best if we refer to an instance specifically as "WildFly" and "EAP", and avoid mentioning to them as "JBoss" | WildFly is the community edition JBoss. Enterprise Application Platform (EAP) is the subscription-backed enterprise version JBoss. Both of them are built in top of a "JBoss" code base: the package names start with "org.jboss", the Java system properties start with "org.jboss", etc. The management scripts refer to "JBOSS_HOME" and other JBOSS* environment variables, in both cases. <font color=red>Not sure about this, keep thinking about it: Operationally, it is best if we refer to an instance specifically as "WildFly" and "EAP", and avoid mentioning to them as "JBoss".</font> | ||
=Flavors= | =Flavors= |
Revision as of 01:24, 10 January 2016
Disambiguation
WildFly is the community edition JBoss. Enterprise Application Platform (EAP) is the subscription-backed enterprise version JBoss. Both of them are built in top of a "JBoss" code base: the package names start with "org.jboss", the Java system properties start with "org.jboss", etc. The management scripts refer to "JBOSS_HOME" and other JBOSS* environment variables, in both cases. Not sure about this, keep thinking about it: Operationally, it is best if we refer to an instance specifically as "WildFly" and "EAP", and avoid mentioning to them as "JBoss".