All the latest UK technology news, reviews and analysis

Faulty connections slow Java deployments

by Miya Knights

23 Feb 2004

Be the first to comment

  • Tweet this

Faulty connections to databases, mainframes and inside application servers are the main cause of Java 2 Platform Enterprise Edition (J2EE) application-related downtime, research claims.

Connectivity issues concerning J2EE applications are causing always-on systems to lose around a day's productivity every week, according to research sponsored by Java software management vendor Wily Technologies.

The survey stated that only 42 per cent of J2EE-based applications deliver against the performance targets set at the point of deployment. But the problem clearly did not lie with Java itself, as respondents indicated that it achieves high performance levels.

With only 13 per cent of respondents citing code-related issues as the cause of downtime for web services and consumer websites, the remaining 86 per cent blamed faulty connections to and from the Java application.

The survey found that surrounding environment and connectivity with other systems were often the sources of performance and availability issues.

Application code bugs were seen as the likely cause by 13.7 per cent, with configuration and tuning problems coming second with 11.9 per cent.

"Most large organisations are at various stages of porting applications over to a Java environment," said Roger Andrews, UK managing director at Wily Technologies.

"The biggest loads are imposed on the back-end connectors. Tools can give visibility of these during testing and development as well as in production, because Java environments have so many moving parts they should be constantly monitored."

Mike Thompson, principal research analyst at Butler Group, told vnunet.com: "The failure rates [according to the survey] are not that much greater than other projects - it is a very high figure, but only slightly higher than doing a standard development in Java."

But Thompson was surprised at the role of connectors in the high failure rate.

"The fact that connections to databases rate highly [as reasons cited for causing downtime] surprises me. It's something that's been done long before Java," he said.

"But that is inherently where problems might arise as Java is not very lightweight and so connecting to transaction-heavy systems isn't going to be that fast."

Do you agree?

 

Add your comment

We won't publish your address
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms & Conditions. Your comment will be moderated before publication.

Poll

IT priorities for 2012

What is the most important IT priority for your company this year?

99%

0%

1%

0%

0%

Connect with V3.co.uk

Sign up to our daily or weekly newsletters

Accurev

Top 5 software development challenges

This paper focuses on a series of best practices and techniques for development teams looking to improve their software development processes

Talend

Rubbish in, rubbish enterprise

Why good data management at all levels is essential in the modern business (video, 6mins)

Graduate Developer, Software, London

Skills: OO Development, Scripting, Functional My client...

Java Agile Developer - Media

Agile Java Developer - Media - London Key Words: Agile...

Technical support Specialist (2/3rd Line) CCNA/MCITP

Technical support Specialist (2/3 rd Line) CCNA...

Test Engineers, Berkshire, up to £30k

Functional Test Engineers needed, Berkshire, up to £30k...

To send to more than one email address, simply separate each address with a comma.