Here is a data collected from JVMs Plumbr Agents showing the statistic of the most widely used Java EE servers.
Java has set the global standard for developing website application, desktop application, mobile application, games and enterprise software. Java ensures developer to develop and deploy exciting applications. Java EE containers have been widely used, therefore, it is important to know which Java EE containers have hit the market in 2015.
Java EE Containers Statistics of 2015
This data is collected from 1,240 deployments where the container vendors were identified in around 70% of the environment or on 862 occasions.
The statistics of Java EE Containers vendors are as follows:
Java has set the global standard for developing website application, desktop application, mobile application, games and enterprise software. Java ensures developer to develop and deploy exciting applications. Java EE containers have been widely used, therefore, it is important to know which Java EE containers have hit the market in 2015.
Java EE Containers Statistics of 2015
This data is collected from 1,240 deployments where the container vendors were identified in around 70% of the environment or on 862 occasions.
The statistics of Java EE Containers vendors are as follows:
- Tomcat – Tomcat hits its peers with a 58.22% market share, succeeded its base with 50% threshold.
- JBoss / WildFly – Securing the second position, JBoss/WildFly hits 20.22% of the market share.
- Jetty – Jetty securing a little less of 10.67% market share, gains the third position.
- Glassfish – Its installations contribute 5.56% of market share.
- Oracle Weblogic – Incur installations of 2.44% with deployment.
- Other – This category staged the name with the installation of less than 2.5%. The list named SAP NetWeaver, Resis, Orion, IBM WebSphere deployment and OC4J, all experienced less than five deployments.
The JVMs have not reported Java EE container were mostly like:
- Containerless server software like TIBCO, Elasticsearch etc.
- Desktop applications using AWT or Swing
- Dynamic language runtimes like Scala or Groovy
- Hidden into development environment launchers like Maven, Eclipse sbt, IDEA, etc
- Making use of Netty like Play Framework