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https://community.progress.com/technicalusers/f/19/t/1904.aspx?pi624=2 In 2010 some of you preferred stateless over state-free. Stateless requests could perform better and you could maintain context. How are the opinions nowadays, with 11.3 /11.4 available? I never tested the performance difference (anyone did in 11.3 / 11.4?), maintaining context sounds like using shared vars for me. I never used another mode then state-free. But now there is a customer moving from 9.1E to 11.3 and my first idea is to advise switching to state-free instead of the stateless mode used in 9.1E. Shared context is not used. Parallel running agents could become interesting. State-free looks most flexible, offering the most possibilities. 11.4 docs state: ( http://documentation.progress.com/output/OpenEdge114/pdfs/asaps/asaps.pdf ) Performance considerations A state-free AppServer provides the highest degree of availability and responsiveness to clients compared to a comparable configuration using any other operating mode. Because multiple state-free AppServer instances and their agents can handle multiple requests from one or more clients, multiple requests even from the same client can execute in parallel, vastly increasing the potential response time for a given request.This capability provides the highest degree of scalability compared to other operating modes. That is, a relatively small number of AppServer agents can support many more client requests than even for stateless operating mode. As long as clients never use bound agents, a state-free AppServer can make maximum use of its available agent resources to handle client requests. This operating mode thus maximizes throughput for large numbers of clients, especially if no attempt is made to maintain any context between client requests. “If your application requires no context management on the AppServer and otherwise has no programming dependency on a session-managed operating mode, you can choose the session-free operating mode (state-free). For an existing session-managed AppServer application that meets these requirements (maintains no context), you can immediately change the AppServer operating mode to state-free with no code changes, thus converting the entire application to a session-free model with potentially greater performance benefits.” If you can use the session-free operating model, it has the following advantages over the session-managed model: • Both application services and Web services scale much more readily compared to session-managed. • The programming model for session-free applications—for the AppServer application and for the client application—is simpler than for session-managed applications.
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