Opera Unite Web Server Benchmarked
worb writes "Opera Unite comes with a web server which is supposedly going to 'redefine the web.' But how well does it actually perform? Is it a threat to other server solutions? Someone put it to the test, and published the results. While nginx, one of the fastest web servers available, is 5 times faster, a PHP+Apache+MySQL server is only 2 times as fast. A compiled C++ server, the MadFish WebToolkit, is 6 times faster. He concludes that Opera Unite's server is impressive, and that the others come nowhere close to the ease of use."
Opera's Unite is not meant to refine the web as a hosting solution in the traditional sense, but as a way to make your files accessible to yourself and others through it. I don't think anyone is questioning whether it is a better hosting solution then a dedicated server. It's also worth it to note that Unite is a Alpha release with lots of bugs to be fixed and performance tuning and optimization to be done.
I'm disturbed by the centralization taking place on the web, where by networks like email are replaced with proprietary walled-garden social networks, and entire webpages once written in the open html standard are being done entirely in flash. I'm starting to have hope for the future now. HMTL 5 will reduce the need for proprietary plugins, for sure. This Opera web server thing could work towards decentralizing the web as well. Sure, anybody can set up a web server to host their own content in theory, but its too difficult for average folks to do. With this technology, perhaps more people will sidestep commercial options, and host web pages on their own - meaning less reliance on geocities, google sites, ect. And thats good. It's not healthy for a few companies to have that sort of control over a medium.
Is it a threat to other server solutions?
In one word, No.
In more words, can it run apps written in PHP, Ruby, Python, Java, etc. with SQL server database back ends? No.
Can it be load-balanced, clustered, etc. on servers in a data center? Well, maybe if you tried hard enough. Heck, you do anything if you try hard enough. But in one word, No.
...and leave all your data on someone else's server, which is exactly what Unite allows you NOT to do. Why would I pay for web hosting or let Facebook hold my data hostage when I can distribute whatever I want, including any size pictures (have you seen the size of Facebook photos?) to whomever I want using Unite?
And yet it's still smaller than the so-called "pure browsers" ;)
You realize it is still smaller download then Firefox and has a smaller memory footprint then all other browsers, right?
The summary conflated a web server with a database and a programming language (PHP+Apache+MySQL) when discussing benchmarking of just a web server.
I'll go ahead and assume that the article isn't worth reading.
...He concludes that Opera Unite's server is impressive, and that the others come nowhere close to the ease of use...
When I suggested that Apache needed some thing near to easy configuration, I was labeled a troll and requested not to tinker with such a server if I did not know what I was doing. By the way, I know Apache has some configuration GUIs but none comes close to Opera's offer.
In fact, I was castigated for being one of those who crave "point and click" interfaces that are "responsible" for most of the chaos on the internet.
I am happy that I have one fellow who agrees with me. I will not be surprised if Opera's web server snatches market share from the established ones.
"So what? It's a somewhat slow web server. It's easy, guys. If you want to leave your home machine naked to the net, use real and tested server software. If you want to do all the tasks done by Unite but easier, get cheap or free web hosting and a Facebook page."
I'm guessing you haven't actually tried the software. But you know about problems with it already even though it isn't actually a "webserver/daemon" in the classic sense of the word.
That's kinda like saying "I don't like asparagus but I've never tried it because I don't like it".
Maybe it does have a security hole in it. But shouldn't we actually find out first before we just guess and assume that it does?
Security hole. Pffft. BindOutlookXPIEExcel. Life goes on.
Need Mercedes parts ?
No it isn't. That's something so easy to verify i can't beleive you're at +4 right now.
http://www.mozilla.com/firefox/
http://unite.opera.com/
Opera Unite is a 40% larger download than Firefox.
>>If you don't trust it on a remote host, it probably shouldn't be web accessible.
Yeah, but maybe this product (and ones already out there and soon to follow) will allow us to expand our idea of what should be web accessible.
For example I wouldn't make my entire MP3 collection web accessible using Google storage space. Why because even though my intention is to use it only so "I" can access all my music anywhere I go, Google might not see it that way. (Or what ever company I happen to have storing my data). With Unite and a few clicks I can have my music available to me and not have to worry about the company hosting it thinking I might be breaking the law.
Also, with all this extra stuff, it still runs faster and smoother than any previous version of their browser, there is absolutely no feeling of 'bloat'... and when you turn something off, it stays that way, Turbo, Unite, Mail, Widgets, Dragonfly, etc...
v10 alpha was already faster than v9.64, and almost every new snapshot has been quicker/better than the previous.
It's memory footprint isn't really better, but isn't worse than most others... mine's been running for about 4 days since the last time I closed/re-opened it
Current: 161MB
Peak: 398MB
VM: 205MB
Handles: 708
Threads: 26
But I don't care about that, from a cold start it launches in under a second, whereas Safari and Chrome take about 4, IE and FF 3.5 take about 9, I've ran into 0 problems with webpages with Opera v10, but FF 3.5 (just as Beta as Opera) won't even allow Slashdot to work half the time, however it is a bit faster on some sites, like Facebook... Plus, Opera hides in the systray, and stays completely idle until i need it, or it shows me a new RSS, or email... making it show up instantly when asked, which is more important (to me) than any memory footprint.
How dumb, or seriously ADD,
do you have to be, when the major question you ask about
a new technology is: Yeah, but how fast is it?
"We've invented this program that is smarter than the average bear"
"Yeah, but how fast is it?"
"You don't understand! This baby even knows that you're not SUPPOSED
to fight forest fires!"
"Yeah, but how fast is it?"
Seriously, these speed evaluations are irrelevant, boring, and inane to
the extreme. How about some evaluation of the possible uses this new
technology will be put to, and how its abilities to support these uses
compares to other competing or similar technologies.
"Look at this new amp we've got! Look at this. It goes up to 11! Unbelievable!"
"Yeah, but how fast does it go pedal to the metal, man?"
Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
I can set up 40GB+ of music to play via a decent-looking web interface for anyone I send a password and URL to in less than a minute and with 5 or 6 clicks using my Facebook account and some shared web hosting? 'Cuz I did that earlier today with Opera Unite.
I went in to this skeptical, and I barely even used Opera before this (I'm a web developer and, though I admire Opera, I need the tools available in Firefox) but it only took about 5 minutes of tinkering with this thing for me to be sold on it. I believe my exact words on testing the media sharing were "whoa, fuckin' cool!"
From TFA:
.. /. and why are the most incompetent articles imaginable being posted?
"Well, since I don't want to kill my HDD I'm doing a test where PHP takes a value from simple MySQL table, increments a value and saves it back (using a set of functions that are typically used in web programming)"
What am I going to do?! I'm running complicated PHP scripts on my development machine... is my hard disk going to die?
but seriously, the author is converting the value received from an integer column in mysql to... an integer:
$i=intval($i)+1;
--
What happened to
Can you say "huge honking security hole"?
The great news is there are viable replacements for this reference to Microsoft's operating system. Debian, BSD's, maybe some other Linux distro are more than capable of serving and Opera runs on all of them.
Another Opera summary that's mostly flamebait. That's disappointing because it's a good idea whose time has been very long in coming.
http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
Mileage always varies. I use Opera because if I open up 6 or 7 tabs of the pages I usually visit in Opera, it takes up 90 megs of RAM. If I open them in Firefox they take up around 750 megs. For others the results could probably be the exact opposite.
I will say that, as a long time Opera user, Opera 10 is turning into one of the best releases they've ever done. It outperforms Opera 9.x in any way that matters to me. Speed, memory usage, stability. 9.6 was starting to get on my nerves and I was beginning to use Chrome more and more. But 10 has been a dream.
1 (short ton / firkin) = 89.1432354 slugs / keg
I can set up 40GB+ of music to play via a decent-looking web interface for anyone I send a password and URL to
Nobody expects the RIAA inquisition!
This sig does not contain any SCO code.
Opera 10 is dramatically outshining everything they did in Opera 9.x. 9.x actually led me to try Chrome out more regularly because of performance and stability issues (at least on a modern computer). Opera 10 has been a dream.
On my older computers I don't really have another option. I run 500Mhz Celeron comps with 64-128MB RAM running Damn Small Linux regularly. Firefox barely runs with one tab on those systems while Opera is still quick with 4 or 5 tabs. The difference is night and day.
1 (short ton / firkin) = 89.1432354 slugs / keg
How long does it take someone unfamiliar with a each web server take to download the required software and serve the first page?
I bet Opera Unite beats the other solutions by a mile.
My priority for any browser is standards compliance.
Why? Because I expect browsers to do what the fuck they are told, and I expect to see the expected results from webdevs who are good enough to follow the rules and keep their sites clean.
My browser of choice is Chrome.
This is an Alpha or Beta. Opera 9.64 (final) is only 5.3MB large.
On my computer Firefox consumes way more memory than Opera - but it has so many extensions and plugins installed, that I'd be surprised if it didn't.
and most of my friends are in their 20s. Some of them never check their emails
I'm guessing none of your friends either work or are at college. Try telling your boss or University sysadmin that you don't want customer emails or system notices because you won't read them unless they are sent via mySpace . . . No job/Slap around the face will quickly ensue!
I don't know about memory usage. In my experience, Opera does better than any other browser there.
Does not compute.
Quick way to get 30% Funny 70% Troll: defend Opera browser on
These days, as far as standards compliance goes, you really can't get it wrong unless you go for IE. Between all Gecko-based browsers, all WebKit-based browsers, and Opera, they all support everything that matters. Aside from that, Opera is pretty well-known for implementing web standards early, and actively promoting them. They are one of initiators and major drivers of HTML5, for example.
One of the most fun things about Opera Unite is that it allows standard users to enable it and run websites from behind the corporate firewall. As long as Opera has been installed on a computer, a standard user doesn't need admin privileges to enable Unite. Most corporate firewalls won't block the traffic because the local version of opera will establish the session tunnel to the opera unite servers, through which all incoming web traffic will travel. More here: http://bit.ly/4gmpFv
I have to agree with the parent. In my mind, the biggest benefit is the ability to share information with myself, not everybody else. It just so happens that sharing/exchanging/communicating with others is one and the same.