|
Comments
|
Today's Top SOA Links
Editorial Adobe ColdFusion 8
Adobe released ColdFusion 8 on July 30. This release is a major milestone for the product
By: Simon Horwith
Oct. 10, 2007 04:45 PM
Exciting news for organizations and developers using ColdFusion: Adobe released ColdFusion 8 on July 30. This release is a major milestone for the product: it is the first full-version ColdFusion release by Adobe since the acquisition of Macromedia. With the release of CF 8, Adobe has shown their commitment to the product and their commitment to enabling ColdFusion developers to build better Web-enabled applications faster than with any other technology.
ColdFusion 8 has not only given developers many significant new tools for building Web applications - it has also given us a glimpse of things to come. Though difficult to nail down entirely, it's safe to say that two primary areas of focus for this version are integration with other technologies and developer/administrator efficiency. I'll discuss what these areas of focus and their associated features might mean for the future in reverse order. Since its inception, ColdFusion has always been relatively easy to learn and use and has always allowed developers to get results fast. The new features in CF 8, in typical ColdFusion fashion, keep with this approach as most are easy to implement by allowing a lot of the new features to be implemented with a single tag call. What was never easy before CF 8 is the ability to accurately and effectively monitor what's happening on the server at any given moment. With ColdFusion 8 this problem is a thing of the past. The server monitoring tools built into the CF Administrator in CF 8 allow monitoring of pretty-much all server activity. This includes use of persistent memory scopes (application and session), queries (which queries are being run and how long they took), and request-level information (which pages are taking longest to execute, which pages are being requested, etc.). All-in-all it's an invaluable tool for CF developers who care about application performance...even those who aren't running CF 8 in production yet (I strongly recommend testing/analyzing CF apps for performance on CF 8 even if they're running on prior versions of CF in production). ColdFusion Studio, the ColdFusion IDE owned by Allaire, had decent interactive debugging capabilities - as I mentioned earlier, the ColdFusion 8 server team has also added server functionality and developed a new plug-in for (CF)Eclipse so that finally, after four or five years without one, CF applications can be debugged in an interactive manner. What do these two things say about the future of ColdFusion? Well, nothing per se, but it shows an acknowledgment by the server team (and Adobe) of the validity and complexity of many of the applications that are out there in production. In other words, these features show a serious commitment to supporting and improving the use of ColdFusion for the development and deployment of advanced, enterprise applications. The introduction of CFC and application framework enhancements (including support for interfaces and CFC Serialization) also strongly reflect this commitment. I hazard to guess that in years and versions to come, the server team will continue to explore new features and tools that they feel will allow ColdFusion developers and organizations to more easily deploy mission-critical and enterprise applications. The product integration and support for other technologies in ColdFusion 8 is another clear sign of things to come. Most significantly are the following:
What will the future hold for ColdFusion? Nobody can know for sure, but this release has made two facts crystal clear:
Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1
Subscribe to the World's Most Powerful Newsletters
Subscribe to Our Rss Feeds & Get Your SYS-CON News Live!
|
SYS-CON Featured Whitepapers
Most Read This Week |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||