A Mobile Web Server is software designed for modern-day smartphones to host personal web servers, through the use of open sourced software, such as, i-jetty, an open source software, based on jetty. I-jetty is an open source web container, serving Java-based web content such as, servlets and JSPs. Jetty is written in Java and its API is available as a set of JARs. Developers can instantiate a jetty container as an object, instantly adding network and web connectivity to a stand-alone Java app. Jetty is built for scalable performance allowing tens of thousands of HTTP connections and hundreds of thousands of simultaneous web socket connections. Jetty is optimized and known for creating small memory footprints, increasing scalability and performance.
Nokia one of the few cellphone companies brought Apache HTTP Server to their line of Nokia cellphones, running Symbian OS S60 mobile software platform. The S60 Mobile Web Server enables connectivity for HTTP traffic to a mobile device from the Internet.
The Mobile Web Server components include a gateway application that runs on a computer with Internet access and a connector application, that runs on the remote mobile device. The gateway and the connector applications with a valid DNS configuration can provide a mobile device with a global web address (URL). However, as of January 2010, the web server project has been discontinued by Nokia.
Examples
The Mobile Web Server application allows mobile devices a means for hosting personal web applications, including, web pages and server side control. The most commonly used HTTP servers and servlet containers currently available are Jetty, Tomcat, Glassfish and Resin.
Web Container Comparison
Features
- Personal information manager (PIM) Manage phone's address book
- Helix multimedia player
- Send SMS messages using a web browser
- Browse phone's calendar
- Browse camera phone's image gallery via computer
- View received and missed calls
- Get instant messages sent to your phone screen.
- Maintain a blog
- Share presence status
- Online chat
- Manage access rights
- Start mobile site from the web or Settings
- Share mobile site content via RSS feeds
See also
- Python for S60
- Apache Tomcat, alternative open source web server and servlet container
- ApacheBench, a program for measuring the performance of HTTP web servers
References
External links
- Official links
- Nokia Research - Mobile Web Server
- Nokia Wiki - Mobile Web Server
- Nokia Forum - Mobile Web Server Documentation
- SourceForge - Mobile Web Server
- All About Symbian - Previewing Nokia's Mobile Web Server