![]() A great thing about GlassFish is that you can run it on a single machine for testing and development and it allows non-java developers to access our Java server application via web services (we can sell Java to non-Java users!). For example, at PDF we run our online PDF to HTML5 converter on a GlassFish server. It’s a server that you can run and test your web applications on. GlassFish is a fully-blown web-application server. In this article I intend to share our lessons learned using GlassFish and NetBeans to save you time and ridicule from your peers. ![]() Lessons Learned Using GlassFish and NetBeansĪfter my talk at JavaOne2013 I felt there was some really useful material which deserved a wider audience so I have decided to use some of it as the basis of this blog article.Īt IDR Solutions we use GlassFish and NetBeans on a daily basis, so we’ve had our fair share of mistakes and gotchas. Nathan also enjoys writing technical blog-articles and playing games in his spare time. Nathan Howard Nathan is a Java/HTML5 developer. ![]()
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