![]() Let’s describe the procedure for Tomcat, the most widely used application server according to the recent Developer Productivity Report 2012. In the development scenario, it is sufficient to have only one container to which to deploy the application. ![]() Yee-freakin’-ha! Installing JRebel to Jelastic PaaSįirst, we need an environment that we’ll use to host the application. So that’s why we are excited to show you how to setup and configure JRebel in Jelastic. Jelastic is a highly-scalable, cloud-based Java host platform that we’ve been following with interest for some time at ZeroTurnaround. With the remoting feature it will be very easy to develop and test Java applications in cloud environments, and Jelastic PaaS is totally suitable for this. JRebel 5.0 was just released and introduces a new functionality called JRebel Remoting(fresh out of Beta) that enables JRebel to be used in the scenarios where the application is running in remote environments. This comes out to over 5 work weeks each year – which is over 1 month salary for each developer on a team. Using JRebel, developers can eliminate the need to build and re-deploy the application during development, saving an average of 10.5 minutes out of each coding hour, according to a recent report on Java EE Productivity. Their latest release, JRebel 5.0, just came out and it's fantastic! Below is a copy of the post they just recently put out showing how their latest feature, JRebel Remoting, works within Jelastic.įor you folks hearing about us for the first time, JRebel is Java’s most popular redeploy killer productivity tool for Java developers that instantly updates the running application whenever changes are made to class structures, resource files and framework configuration files. It's a great tool and we are very excited to be working with the guys over there. ![]() If you haven't used it yet, you should give it a try.
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