tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5874979429188093780.post3207837207229482648..comments2024-03-18T06:46:54.352+01:00Comments on Andrej Baranovskij Blog: Oracle ADF BC REST - Performance Review and TuningAndrej Baranovskijhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04468230464412457426noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5874979429188093780.post-50956106545143619832018-09-21T14:31:14.203+02:002018-09-21T14:31:14.203+02:00Normally REST request executes very fast, and it i...Normally REST request executes very fast, and it is unlikely all 10 users would run all 10 requests each just in same millisecond.<br /><br />AndrejusAndrej Baranovskijhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04468230464412457426noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5874979429188093780.post-74600974487485633942018-09-21T11:10:43.412+02:002018-09-21T11:10:43.412+02:00Hello,
Can you please suggest a solution to the f...Hello,<br /><br />Can you please suggest a solution to the following use case.<br /><br />1.We define several ADF BC Rest Webservices which are backed by VO & PLSQL<br /><br />2.We define a Javascript based UI with several regions of the page firing off webservices in parallel. We have in some cases atleast 10 webservices firing off. Each of these 10 services will inturn consume 10 connections from the pool.<br /><br />If we have 10 users in parallel, then we will end up with 100 database connections. How do throttle connection say we limit of 4 for each browser session.<br /><br />Do we need to pass any header information to rest calls to ensure this? Do we need make any specific configuration on the AM?<br /><br />Regards,<br />PabloAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com