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Home/ Questions/Q 7969399
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 4, 20262026-06-04T07:13:53+00:00 2026-06-04T07:13:53+00:00

I’ve heard the term clustering used for application servers like GlassFish, as well as

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I’ve heard the term “clustering” used for application servers like GlassFish, as well as with Terracotta; and I’m trying to understand what the word clustering implies when used in conjunction with application servers, and when used in conjunction with Terracotta.

My understanding is:

If a GlassFish server is clustered, then it means we have multiple physical/virtual machines, each with their own JRE/JVM running separate instances of GlassFish. However, since they are clustered, they will all communicate through their admin server (“DAS”), and have the same apps deployed to all of them. They will effectively act (to the end user) as if they are a single app server – but now with load balancing, failover/redundancy and scalability added into the mix.

Terracotta is, essentially, a product that makes multiple JVMs, running on different physical/virtual machines, act as if they are a single JVM.

Thus, if my understanding is correct, the following are implied:

  • You cluster app servers when you want load balancing and failover tolerance
  • You use Terracotta when any particular JVM is too small to contain your application and you need more “horsepower”
  • Thus, technically, if you have a GlassFish cluster of, say, 5 server instances; each of those 5 instances could actually be an array/cluster of Terracotta instances; meaning each GlassFish server instance is actually a GlassFish instance living across the JVMs of multiple machines itself

If any of these assertions/assumptions are untrue, please correct me! If I have gone way off-base and clearly don’t understand clustering and/or the very purpose of Terracotta, please point me in the right direction!

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-04T07:13:54+00:00Added an answer on June 4, 2026 at 7:13 am

    Terracotta enables you to have a shared state across all your nodes (its stateful). Basically it creates a shared memory space between different JVM’s. This is useful when nodes in a cluster all need access to the same objects.

    If your application is stateless and you just need load balancing and fail over you can use a solution like JGroups. In this scenario each node just handles requests and has little idea about other nodes. Objects in memory are not shared across nodes and each JVM just runs on its own and has no idea about other JVM’s. This often works nicely for request / response type applications. A webserver serving content (without sessions) does this for example.

    Dealing with a stateless cluster is often simpler then dealing with a stateful cluster. This is because in a stateless cluster nodes know almost nothing about each other which results in less things that can go wrong.

    GlassFish sits a bit in the middle of the above concepts. Objects in memory within GlassFish are visible to all nodes. However the frontend (HTTP connectors) work stateless.

    So to answer your questions:

    1) Yes, those are the two most obvious reasons. However sometimes people only want failover or only want load balancing or sometimes both. Not all clustering solutions fix both of these problems.

    2) Yes. Altough technically speaking Terracotta only solves the shared memory part, not the CPU part. However by solving the memory part it automatically solves the CPU part since you can now just add JVM’s to the shared memory space.

    3) I don’t know if thats practically possible but as a thought experiment; Yes.

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