Hi Chris.

I'm surprised you hadn't heard of it yet.  Disclaimer: I work for MuleSoft.
Just so you know (in case our web pages don't clearly state this), Tcat is
about trying to make it easier to use open source Tomcat in production
enterprise environments.  It's not, in any way, trying to replace open
source Tomcat, nor is it a Java EE app server.  By making it easier to
monitor and manage the open source Tomcat instances people already run in
production via our Tcat Server console, we're helping Tomcat to be easier to
use, more stable, and to perform better in production due to increased
stability and visibility.  In case you want to try it, it's free (as in
beer) to download.  You get the full version.  If you like it enough to
deploy and use it in your production environment, that's when it begins to
cost, but it's free for use in your development environment, test
environment, and staging.  It hooks up to any Tomcat 5.5.x, 6.0.x, and 7.0.x
beta.  We'd like to know what you think of it once you've tried it.

MuleSoft also offers training and consulting on Tomcat, though we're mainly
focused on Tcat and the Mule open source ESB.

Cheers.
--
Jason Brittain
Co-Author, Tomcat: The Definitive Guide (O'Reilly)


On Fri, Sep 24, 2010 at 12:26 PM, Christopher Schultz <
ch...@christopherschultz.net> wrote:

>
> Brian,
>
> On 9/24/2010 2:29 PM, Brian wrote:
> > This company LOOKS like specialists:
> http://www.mulesoft.com/tomcat-support
>
> I've never heard of Tcat, supposedly "the Apache Tomcat app server for
> the enterprise". Beware.
>
> - -chris
>

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