Application Server

J2EE application server stack
Following the success of the Java platform, the term application server sometimes refers to a Java Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE) application server. The better known commercial open source J2EE application server is JBoss (Red Hat).

Programming language used is Java, the Web modules are servlets and JavaServer Pages, and business logic is built into Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB). J2EE provides standards for containing Web components.

A Java Server Page (JSP) is a servlet from Java that executes in a Web container-the Java equivalent of CGI scripts. JSPs are a way to create HTML pages by embedding references to the server logic within the page. HTML coders and Java programmers can work side by side by referencing each other's code from within their own.

LAMP application server stack
The LAMP (Linux, Apache, MySQL, PHP/Perl/Python) open source stack has been the technology of choice for a "scale out" architecture. LAMP provides a reliable way of deploying rich Web 2.0 applications on inexpensive clusters of commodity computers. Controlled by no single vendor and backed by broad open source global community, it now powers nearly 70% of the world's web.

Until now organizations with significant expertise in handcrafting LAMP implementations could benefit from LAMP's scalability and cost savings. However, things have changed now; iCraft has worked on LAMP stack for more than a decade now and has gained features expected by corporate developers.

iCraft offers various types of application server along with Apache Application Server, Perl Server, and Enterprise JaveBeans.

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