Dear All,
I am trying to use Tomcat over SSL. I have followed the HOWTO: SSL in hte
Tomcat Docs, i.e. downloaded the three needed jar files, created a
./keystore file and specified its location in the web.xml file. I have also
uncommented the SSL Connector section in the web.xml file. Now when I r
hi!
you may start tomcat with:
-Djavax.net.debug=all
or with:
-Djavax.net.debug=ssl
then you can 'see' whats going on during ssl handshake!
Yakov Belov wrote:
Dear All,
I am trying to use Tomcat over SSL. I have followed the HOWTO: SSL in hte
Tomcat Docs, i.e. downloaded the three needed jar
Thanks, but I don't use a command line to run Tomcat (everything is started
via the web)- where exactly do I type this parameters in?
- Original Message -
From: "list" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Tomcat Users List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 7:08 PM
Subject: Re: SSL wi
Dear Sir/Madam,
We have received your e-mail and shall respond to you shortly.
Regards
ICICI Bank
NRI Services Centre
Dear Sir/Madam,
We have received your e-mail and shall respond to you shortly.
Regards
ICICI Bank
NRI Services Centre
Dear Sir/Madam,
We have received your e-mail and shall respond to you shortly.
Regards
ICICI Bank
NRI Services Centre
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Hello,
>
> Is it possible to configure Tomcat (4.1.x) in such a way that a request
can be
> redirected automatically from HTTPS to HTTP port?
>
> Let's assume that a Website has two separate (non-overlapping) sets
Dear Sir/Madam,
We have received your e-mail and shall respond to you shortly.
Regards
ICICI Bank
NRI Services Centre
What do the regular Tomcat logs say?
John
-Original Message-
From: Yakov Belov [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 3:13 AM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: SSL with Tomcat
Thanks, but I don't use a command line to run Tomcat (everything is started
via the web
Sounds like your Apache DSO file was compiled against an earlier version of
Apache. That has nothing to do with Tomcat.
John
-Original Message-
From: Jerry Birchler [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 1:59 AM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: RE: PHP servlet
I
Dear Sir/Madam,
We have received your e-mail and shall respond to you shortly.
Regards
ICICI Bank
NRI Services Centre
Hi All
I have written a web application which has main
servlet class.
We have a form which has basic authentication. When
the user cancels the authentication form shown to him
in the browser, We want to capture the 401 error and
dispaly it in a our own custom error page. but we are
unable to do t
Is it possible to STOP this auto-reply on the mailing list???
Thanks
Arnaud
> -Message d'origine-
> De : NRI Cell [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Envoyé : mardi 28 janvier 2003 12:06
> À : Tomcat Users List
> Objet : {ICICICARE#002-040-330}SSL with Tomcat
>
>
> Dear Sir/Madam,
>
> We h
Hi,
Can i extend the SingleSignOn class, and specify my class in the
server.xml file. I tried it and got an exception, 'ManagedBean not found
for MySSO'. If i can extend and specify then how should i do it.
Thanks
Shanmugam.PL
shanmugampl wrote:
Yeah, I accept that SSO is for authenticati
Hi all,
I have several Apache servers on different machines each hosting 2
virtual domains (e.g. www.production.mydomain.com & www.development.mydomain.com)
I have a single Tomcat v4 instance running on another machine which also
hosts both these virtual domains. I have defined a Warp connector
Hi
I'm using IIS to serve the top level html pages from a web application that
runs under Tomcat 3.2. The first page (default.htm) in the top level
directory (http://domain/applicationname is displayed and prompts for userid
and password and passes this data to a servlet
/domain/applicationname/s
John writes:
> There's no need to mirror content in two directories, nor is there
> any need to point Tomcat at Apache's content root. You can just
> make Apache's doc root the same as Tomcat's Context root and the
> issue goes away. Or, just put your JSP and servlets in Tomcat's doc
> root and
Henning wrote:
> I had and have the same problem - and didn't find a solution yet. A
> more or less good workaround I discussed with (or better was a
> suggestion by) Mike Bachrynowski (who is also member on the list)
> could be to completely mirror the apache docroot to the tomcat
> docroot. This
Hi !
I want to define some sort of global JNDI resource in my server.xml
configuration file. I know setting the crossContext="true" will enable
sharing but has certain security implications which I'm unaware of.
A. Is this possible
B. How to do it ?
Thanks,
Robin
- Tomcat newbie
--
To unsubsc
Peter Flynn typed the following on 11:58 28/01/2003 +
>> There's no need to mirror content in two directories, nor is there
>> any need to point Tomcat at Apache's content root. You can just
>> make Apache's doc root the same as Tomcat's Context root and the
>> issue goes away. Or, just put y
Henning writes:
> that sounds interesting to me, I don't need tomcat as http on port
> 8080, does anyone know how the idea can be realized?
I think this has been asked ad nauseam on the Cocoon list, and I think
I read that it wasn't advised because Tomcat was not designed to be
secure in the way
I think it's a context problem, but I don't know how to fix it.
I have this directory:
/Library/WebServer/Documents/clic-agent.com
Inside this directory, I have a mix of HTML and JSP files, and one WEB-INF
directory (with the default 'lib' and 'classes' directories). I DON'T have
a ROOT directo
[EMAIL PROTECTED] typed the following on 08:56 28/01/2003 +0100
>I want to store session information on filesystem so that it is possible
>for me to
>restart tomcat without loosing all sessioninformations.
First of all, you don't need to use PersistentManager to do this - the default
session manag
What exactly is your question? If you want Tomcat to be your HTTP server,
setup CoyoteConnector to listen on port 80 instead of 8080, restart Tomcat,
and call it good. What's the issue?
As far as a "replacement" goes, it's a given that Apache is going to be
better than Tomcat at serving static
Interesting. I'll have a play.
But that url string works with DBVisualizer (which is also jdbc based).
So maybe not, as I think this is correct for SYbase (I get the same
problem with mySql, even vut'n'paste examples give the same problem ?
The db driver (jconn2.jar) is in common/lib - wh
> I don't know how Tomcat would or would not scale as a replacement for
> Apache on a big site, but it would certainly be nice to have it run
> on port 80 as a replacement for Apache.
My suggestion for the FAQ:
QUESTION:
How can I make Tomcat serve at port 80 instead of 8080 on a UNIX system?
> -Original Message-
> From: Peter Flynn [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>
> > As far as I understood the mayor cause for all this is, that jk2
> > developers due to performance reasons don' t want to send back
> > requests (for images, .js, .css ...) to the apache and - what you
> > and Mike
OK, you told us the Host and the appBase, what do you have for Context and
docBase?
John
> -Original Message-
> From: Pascal Robert [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 7:37 AM
> To: Tomcat Users List
> Cc: Tom Holmes Jr.
> Subject: Re: JSP not forwarded to Tomca
We are running Apache (1.3.27) and Tomcat (3.3.1) on separate servers,
connecting them using mod_jk (1.2.2).
The system is lightly loaded - there are hardly any parallel requests. After
a few days operation Apache fails to communicate with Tomcat leaving errors
in the mod_jk log:
... [jk_conn
Yeah, I read that, here is the problem:
I want to run Tomcat from my local PC.
I want to load the *.classes from a network drive (for night backup
purposes) not my local drive.
(I've changed the class path in the catalina.bat, but I don't like this)
I want to run the *.jsp from a network drive (
Hey Kief,
thanks for your answer.
I try without my wrapper and get also the Exception.
I got:
D:\tomcat\bin>catalina run
Using CATALINA_BASE: ..
Using CATALINA_HOME: ..
Using CATALINA_TMPDIR: ..\temp
Using JAVA_HOME: d:\jdk1.3
Starting service kbhsrv03
Apache Tomcat/4.0.6
Starting se
Hi guys,
I'm new to tomcat/jakarta and have just installed it (v4.1.18 -
precompiled binaries from the site) on my Linux server.
I replaced every occurence of localhost with my servername (which is
resolvable) - and I have added a test-user with admin/manager roles.
When I login, I can access th
Ok, I got it to work with:
- workers.properties :
---
worker.list=test
worker.test.port=8009
worker.test.host=test.clic-agent.com
worker.test.type=ajp13
---
- httpd.conf:
---
ServerName test.clic-agent.com
JkMount /*.jsp test
JkMount /servlet/* test
---
- server.x
Do you have a file called admin.xml in $CATALINA_HOME/webapps?
John
> -Original Message-
> From: klavs klavsen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 9:07 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: tomcat/manager works - tomcat/admin = 404.
>
>
> Hi guys,
>
> I'm new
I have set a JNDI connection pool up in server.xml that works, however
if the database server goes down, it doesn't re-connect when it comes
back up.
Anyone using JNDI datasources that reconnect in case of a lost link to
the DB server?
Any examples? I'm using the I-net driver for Oracle.
Thanks
Yes
- Original Message -
From: "Turner, John" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'Tomcat Users List'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 12:41 PM
Subject: RE: tomcat/manager works - tomcat/admin = 404.
>
> Do you have a file called admin.xml in $CATALINA_HOME/webapps?
>
> John
>
>
Sorry, its not for you
- Original Message -
From: "Turner, John" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'Tomcat Users List'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 12:41 PM
Subject: RE: tomcat/manager works - tomcat/admin = 404.
>
> Do you have a file called admin.xml in $CATALINA_HOME/web
On Tue, 2003-01-28 at 15:41, Turner, John wrote:
>
> Do you have a file called admin.xml in $CATALINA_HOME/webapps?
>
output of ls -l /opt/jakarta/tomcat/webapps/
drwxr-xr-x3 root root 208 Jan 27 15:56 ROOT
-rw-r--r--1 root root 701 Jan 28 14:22 admin.xml
drwxr-
Check your timestamps. It's been changed. What has been changed in that
file? What are its contents?
John
> -Original Message-
> From: klavs klavsen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 9:56 AM
> To: Tomcat Users List
> Subject: RE: tomcat/manager works - tomca
Alternatively, if you can find an OS that implements process/file
capabilities, you should be able to grant the JVM the capability to bind to
ports below 1024.
The doco. for the 2.4 Linux kernels suggests this might be in there - anyone
know if it's sufficiently mainstream, and suitable for this s
Hi. I am currently running Tomcat 4.1.12 in a production environment. I
would like to upgrade to 4.1.18. Can anybody suggest the simplest,
fastest way to do it? I have made considerable changes to the
configuration files. I am not sure if there are any compatibility
issues.
Regards
Victor
Howdy,
Don't simply copy over the old installation. Do a clean installation of
4.1.18. Ensure the installation is OK by checking the servlet and JSP
examples, as well as the manager and admin webapps if you use them.
Then make your configuration file changes (do not copy over the
configuration fi
Does anybody know why I get this exception when I try to load one of my self written
classes within a servlet ?
Everything works fine with Tomcat 4.0.x .
Heiko
On Tue, 2003-01-28 at 15:59, Turner, John wrote:
>
> Check your timestamps. It's been changed. What has been changed in that
> file? What are its contents?
>
Sorry. Yes I changed the logfile to log to server.mydomain.dk_log..
instead of localhost. But that should change anything - and the prob
I also saw a discussion on tomcat-dev on how to use chroot to do it, as
well, but it didn't look easy.
John
> -Original Message-
> From: Daniel Brown [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 10:14 AM
> To: Tomcat Users List
> Subject: RE: Serving files from the Apache
Howdy,
Did you compile the servlet against a different version of the class
than the one on your classpath? Do you have multiple version of the
class you're trying to load on your classpath? Either of those may
cause this error.
Yoav Shapira
Millennium ChemInformatics
>-Original Message---
Copy the 4.1.18 jars from /common/lib and /server/lib to their
respective location in your current Tomcat installation. Optionally,
also copy the contents of /server/webapps/admin,
/server/webapps/manager, and /webapps if you want to upgrade these
applications as well although you'll want to be cau
Does that file get created? Admin.xml is no different than manager.xml. If
/manager is working, /admin should work as well. My guess is there is
something on the filesystem (permissions, etc) that is preventing Tomcat
from deploying the admin app, though I could easily be wrong.
John
> -O
How important is /bin/bootstrap.jar?
Dietmar
"David Boyer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> am 28.01.2003 16:27:31
Bitte antworten an "Tomcat Users List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
An:<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Kopie:
Thema: Re: Upgrading to new version of Tomcat
Copy the 4.1.18 jars from /common/lib and /serv
Hello!
You were very right. I had the setenv and setclasspath being called from Catalina.bat
but somehow the tomcat was not picking this up correctly. Perhaps because of XP? I
then went to control panel and set all the environment variables & classpath which
then picked up my property file
Hi
We have a number of web applications running under the same domain name, on
different ports. Each application runs under a separate Apache (1.3.14) and
Tomcat (4.0.6) instance. Due to functional requirements, these applications
call each other, opening up new browser windows to move the user fr
getParameter() is misspelled.
-Original Message-
From: Craig R. McClanahan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, January 27, 2003 8:57 PM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: getting java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError
On Mon, 27 Jan 2003, Davidson, Greg wrote:
> Date: Mon, 27 Jan 2003 1
As it contains StandardClassLoader and
ClassLoaderFactory I consider it quite
important in general. If the changes in
this jar between 4.1.18 and other versions
are important I don't know. I prefer clean
installs of the tomcat versions, so I never
had to bother. (We install the versions
in para
I am have been using the Jikes compiler for about a month. Recently, we
switched to the IBM JDK and jikes will not compile any pages. We get an
error like shown below...
StandardWrapperValve[jsp]: Servlet.service() for servlet jsp threw exception
org.apache.jasper.JasperException: Unable to comp
Can I use Slide to upload (through MS WebFolder) a web application war file from a PC
to the "webapps" folder on my Unix installation of Tomcat, and then use Manager App to
install the new web application?
Thanks, Mariateresa
Mariateresa Sabbatini
Developer
512.908.1125 voice
512.908.4450
Lajos wrote:
You can do:
JkMount /* ajp13
JkMount /*.jsp ajp13
where "ajp13" refers to the worker name in workers.properties. But if
you are doing that, why use Apache?
Because Apache may startup as root (because of port 80 or 443) while
tomcat runs as nobody
Pascal
--
To unsubscribe, e-
I've checked this several times but I have only one correct version of my class in the
classpath. I also checked different machines with the same result. Every time I switch
from 4.0.x to 4.1.x I get the Exception above.
Regards
Heiko
-Original Message-
From: Shapira, Yoav [mailto:[
We also use this setup so that we can run multiple instances of Tomcat
behind one Apache server - we just setup different virtual hosts in Apache.
I agree that Apache isn't doing much in this case, but it is helping us...
Matt
> -Original Message-
> From: Pascal Forget [mailto:[EMAIL PROT
Hi,
In Tomcat4, I can not get the right context of other webapp from my app. My
app is set as the doc root. For example I have configuration like
in server.xml. But the difference from in Tomcat3.2 is, when I user the
following statement in my servlet:
ServletContext sc =
this.getSe
On Tue, 2003-01-28 at 16:29, Turner, John wrote:
>
> Does that file get created? Admin.xml is no different than manager.xml. If
> /manager is working, /admin should work as well. My guess is there is
> something on the filesystem (permissions, etc) that is preventing Tomcat
> from deploying the
Yes, you can run it as a non-root user. That's what I do. Tomcat is pretty
self-contained.
Is there anything in the logs about the admin application? It's very
strange to me that /manager would work, but /admin would not. They are both
configured for auto-deploy.
What happens if you move the
Howdy,
Try not having elements in server.xml for either of your
contexts, and see what happens.
Yoav Shapira
Millennium ChemInformatics
>-Original Message-
>From: Peng Annie / FINLAND [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 10:44 AM
>To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
>Subjec
On Tue, 2003-01-28 at 17:06, Turner, John wrote:
>
> Yes, you can run it as a non-root user. That's what I do. Tomcat is pretty
> self-contained.
>
> Is there anything in the logs about the admin application? It's very
> strange to me that /manager would work, but /admin would not. They are b
Hello
I am trying to configure mod_jk to link Apache to Tomcat which I have done before with
TC 3 and 4.0. I am trying to do it with 4.1.18/Apache 1.3. There is no sample
workers.properties file with 4.1.18 - is this
deliberate ? Anyway, I made my own but I can't get my requests through !
The
Hello,
I may be a bit confused, but here goes anyway:
My understanding is that JK 'binds' tomcat to apache so that instead of
running a servlet or jsp via the Tomcat port "http://my-
host:8080/my-servlet" you can run it via apache directly "http://my-
host/my-servlet" - correct?
The question th
Check the logs...it is looking for "locahost", not "localhost". Note the
missing "l".
Here's the minimum required workers.properties file:
# BEGIN workers.properties
# Definition for Ajp13 worker
worker.list=ajp13
worker.ajp13.port=8009
worker.ajp13.host=localhost
worker.ajp13.type=ajp13
# END
Ah, now we are getting somewhere:
- Root Cause -
java.io.IOException: No such file or directory
at java.io.UnixFileSystem.createFileExclusively(Native Method)
at java.io.File.checkAndCreate(File.java:1313)
at java.io.File.createTempFile(File.java:1401)
at j
Quoting Bill Barker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> AFAIK, using absolute URLs is the only supported way to go. However, it
> would be easy enough to write a Filter that does the redirect for you:
>
> public class MyFilter implements Filter {
> public void init(FilterConfig conf) {}
> public void de
I aplogize if this has been addressed, previously. I've spent hours
searching for the Answer but have come up empty.
I am running Tomcat 4.1.18 on Redhat 8. I've followed the instructions at
jakarta.apache.org for installing/running SSL and everything is working as
expected, I can open an SSL conn
Can someone give the the URL where it explicitly says that Tomcat supports Java
RMI/HTTP tunneling (with callbacks) on Port 80?
Thanks,
Siegfried
-
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Mail Plus - Powerful. Affordable. Sign up now
Hi,
In case anyone is interested, I have solved my problem. I used the
JNDIRealm for Tomcat 4 found on this site
http://www.peacetech.com/java/files/apache/tomcat/ and added the following
2 lines to my code:
System.setProperty("javax.net.ssl.trustStore",
"D:/java/j2sdk1.4.0/jre/lib/security/cace
Hello,
I'm having problems with the ServletContext object. When I acquire the context, it
just gets the "path" to my webApp, right? The servlet will then know what webApp it's
under. Ok, so I tried to make it work with a servlet to forward to another page.
Now the servlet is mapped as /webApp/
>
>Check the logs...it is looking for "locahost", not "localhost". Note the
>missing "l".
>
Ouch. I had just spotted it after sending the email - I altered it to use my hostname
instead and realised that worked.
In my defence, the mistake is on the online documentation, although I should have r
You can just run Tomcat on port 80 if that's what you want.
Many people have many different reasons for using Apache:
- Apache doesn't run as root on port 80
- Apache has other capabilities (mod_rewrite, etc.)
- Apache is "better" at serving static content...for a heavy traffic site
this can mak
Thanks for the heads-up.
John
> -Original Message-
> From: Chris Faulkner [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 11:40 AM
> To: Tomcat Users List
> Subject: Re: RE: mod_jk config problems
>
>
> >
> >Check the logs...it is looking for "locahost", not
> "localhost
On Tue, 2003-01-28 at 17:24, Turner, John wrote:
>
> Ah, now we are getting somewhere:
>
> - Root Cause -
> java.io.IOException: No such file or directory
> at java.io.UnixFileSystem.createFileExclusively(Native Method)
> at java.io.File.checkAndCreate(File.java:1313)
>
I've done some more investigation. If I replace
'response.sendRedirect(response.encodeRedirectURL("../default.htm"))' with
'response.sendRedirect("../default.htm");' then everything works as
expected, so there is something about response.encodeRedirectURL() that I'm
not uderstanding. I've looked th
Hey folks, has anyone observed scenarios where Tomcat appears to ignore
the -Xmx param? We are running 4.1 as a service on Win 2000 Pro, and have
manually uninstalled/reinstalled the tomcat service as follows:
to uninstall:
-
tomcat.exe -uninstall "Apache Tomcat 4.1"
to install:
-
org.apache.catalina.startup.ContextConfig.tldScanJar(ContextConfig.java:930)
is equal to:
org/apache/catalina/startup/ContextConfig/tldScanJar(ContextConfig.java:930)
...but that class is probably in struts.jar...you'd probably need to
download the source distro and look there.
I'm hoping some
Howdy,
I've never had that problem, and I use (and test) -Xms and -Xmx with
every tomcat release. However, I only test the platforms I care about
-- Linux and Solaris -- and so I can't vouch for Windows...
Yoav Shapira
Millennium ChemInformatics
>-Original Message-
>From: Christian Cryd
Ryan Cornia wrote:
> Anyone using JNDI datasources that reconnect in case of a lost link to
> the DB server?
>
> Any examples? I'm using the I-net driver for Oracle
Interesting question. In fact I have the same problem, using DBCP and
PostgreSQL. I looked trough the Javadocs at
http://jakarta.ap
Howdy,
This would likely be an implementation detail, not specified by the JNDI
interface contract (at least at this point in time). In fact, an
implementation that does this would claim it as a competitive advantage.
I believe the Oracle JDBC driver and connection pool (ojdbc14.jar in the
Oracle
> -Original Message-
> From: Davidson, Greg [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 8:57 AM
> To: 'Tomcat Users List'
> Subject: RE: getting java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError
>
>
> Yeah, I read that, here is the problem:
>
> I want to run Tomcat from my local PC.
>
>
How did you find out it is ignoring -Xmx parameter. Initially when you
start up tomcat, it would allocate only the minimum heap that you set in
-Xms.
Hari
>-Original Message-
>From: Christian Cryder [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 11:49 AM
>To: Tomcat-User
>S
Howdy,
>> I want to load the *.classes from a network drive (for night backup
>> purposes) not my local drive.
>> (I've changed the class path in the catalina.bat, but I don't
>> like this)
I wouldn't like it either if I were you ;)
Besides posing a security risk (e.g. someone remapping the netw
What we are doing is running Tomcat as a service on a production server; we
specify both -Xmx and -Xms values. What we are seeing is that after several
days of use, Tomcat is well over the max, by a magnitude of 100+ MB. Our
experience has been that when we run it manually it seems to stay within t
Howdy,
As an aside, and this applies for windows as well as linux/solaris: -Xms
and -Xmx control the size of the JVM heap. That's not the total JVM
size. There are other spaces, e.g. the stack, symbol tables, and OS
process overhead, that contribute to the overall process size.
How much they c
> As an aside, and this applies for windows as well as linux/solaris: -Xms
> and -Xmx control the size of the JVM heap. That's not the total JVM
> size. There are other spaces, e.g. the stack, symbol tables, and OS
> process overhead, that contribute to the overall process size.
>
> How much they
Craig,
I guess I shouldn't be surprised that you are right on the money! I hadn't
noticed that I had an old bookmark for the second page that used an IP in
the address. So as you said the host header was the IP because that's what
the browser used and so getServerName returned the IP address. Once
I can not seem to find this in my books, can someone explain this?
What WAR file web.xml parameter can be used to pass application wide (not
just a single Servlet or JSP) configuration data to JSP/Servlet that also is
adjustable from Tomcat-Administrator control page, and what Java methods
(xxx.g
Howdy,
>Ok, so this _is_ what I'm basing it on (looking at MS's Task manager).
>BUT...it still doesn't seem reasonable that the actual memory used is
150
>MB
>> than the limit specified to the JVM. In other words, if I tell the
JVM
>"-Xmx512" and the OS Task Mgr is reporting that Tomcat is using 6
I keep getting the following error in my catalina.out file. This same
application starts up just fine when it has a context path of "/cct", but I
get the errors when I use path="".
Any ideas?
WARN [main] JDBCExceptionReporter.logExceptions(35) | SQL Error: 0,
SQLState: null
ERROR [main] JDBCExce
What is the driver that i have to use to connect to a AS400, for make
consults to a database DB2 that is in the AS400.
from a Tomcat 4.1 configured for default, running in a Mandrake linux 8.2.
I have the jt400.jar in $CATALINA_HOME=/common/lib/jt400.jar, some guys
toll us that this is the drivers
Howdy,
Context parameters are available to anything running within your context
as long as the server is up. You access them from a servlet (any method
in the servlet, not just init(), using
getServletContext().getInitParameter("paramName");
Context parameters are not typically tunable at runtime
Christian,
I'm not sure about this at all but I believe that all services show up in
registry. Did you check to see if the -Xms and -Xmx values are set there? I
think they should be set as JVM option values. If they do show up then I'd
guess that you've installed the service correctly.
But as I s
Can I use the tomcat just like a web sever without the
apache. I have runnig a tomcat 4.1.18 in a Mandrake
linux. Or I have to put the tomcat to work together
with apache.
thanks.
Fabian
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Yes, you can use Tomcat alone.
John
> -Original Message-
> From: x x [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 12:51 PM
> To: Tomcat Users List
> Subject: TOMCAT ALONE
>
>
> Can I use the tomcat just like a web sever without the
> apache. I have runnig a tomcat 4.1.
I am currently running Tomcat 3.3.1 on Windows 2000. I am running it from a
batch file. It is unable to run as a Service in Windows 2000. It continues
to stop frequently for no reason. I have to run the batch file to restart
Tomcat. Is there a bug or fix for this issue? Thank you for your help.
Ke
You have to JT400.jar file to make DB connections to the 400. The Driver
Class name you can use is com.ibm.as400.access.AS400JDBCDriver. Remember
that this driver is type 4 driver.
You need not make any changes to the as400. You can connect to the
database with your username and password.
Hari
on the same note i have some issues with mod_jk, i did
post a message on my problem but didnt show up, hope
someone can help me out, thanks in advance. I am
having a problem with stronghold(apache 1.3) and
tomcat 4.1.18 using the mod_jk module on solaris 8.
Here are the modification i did to folowi
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