Getting quite frustrated now.
Here's the line the installer is now running:
C:\Program Files\Our Local Services\tomcat\bin\tomcat7.exe //IS//Tomcat7
--DisplayName=Apache Tomcat 7 --JavaHome=C:\Program Files\Our Local
Services\tomcat\..\java-7-32bit\ --Install=C:\Program Files\Our Local
2013/4/10 James Green james.mk.gr...@gmail.com:
On 10 April 2013 12:47, Konstantin Kolinko knst.koli...@gmail.com wrote:
C:\Program Files\Our Local Services\tomcat\bin\tomcat7.
exe //IS//Tomcat7
--DisplayName=Apache Tomcat 7 --JavaHome=C:\Program Files\Our Local
A follow-up with the solution.
This works:
C:\Program Files\Our Local Services\tomcat\bin\tomcat7.exe //IS//Tomcat7
--DisplayName=Apache Tomcat 7 --JavaHome=C:\Program Files\Our Local
Services\tomcat\..\java-7-32bit --Install=C:\Program Files\Our Local
Services\tomcat\bin\tomcat7.exe
-Original Message-
From: Howard W. Smith, Jr. [mailto:smithh032...@gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 10, 2013 7:35 PM
To: Esmond Pitt
Cc: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: Tomcat access log reveals hack attempt: HEAD
/manager/html HTTP/1.0 404
On Wed, Apr 10, 2013 at 8:21 PM, Esmond
On Apr 11, 2013, at 1:09 AM, saumil shah wrote:
Hello All,
We are using Tomcat 6.0.35 for our production system with 64 bit JVM (1.6.33)
on Windows 2008 R2 SP1. Our physical memory is 24gb. Load is ~ 100 concurrent
sessions.
The Tomcat crashed again with OutOfMemoryError: Java heap space
Saumil,
On Thu, Apr 11, 2013 at 1:09 AM, saumil shah saumil...@hotmail.com wrote:
Hello All,
We are using Tomcat 6.0.35 for our production system with 64 bit JVM
(1.6.33) on Windows 2008 R2 SP1. Our physical memory is 24gb. Load is ~ 100
concurrent sessions.
The Tomcat crashed again with
Really, no one else can tell you what settings to use. The best we
can hope for is some accepted rules of thumb *as starting points* for
further tuning.
I'd suggest choosing a tool that lets you easily monitor the memory
pools, and checking it frequently as you adjust the pool sizes. If
your
On Thu, Apr 11, 2013 at 10:41 AM, Mark H. Wood mw...@iupui.edu wrote:
Really, no one else can tell you what settings to use. The best we
can hope for is some accepted rules of thumb *as starting points* for
further tuning.
+1 to Dan, Neven, and Mark's responses. Please consider-or-do
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Esmond,
On 4/10/13 8:21 PM, Esmond Pitt wrote:
We had lots of these and finally an attack last year on a Tomcat
where the manager password somehow hadn't been changed.
Note that the manager webapp has no default passwords, so I wonder
what you
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Jeffrey,
On 4/11/13 9:47 AM, Jeffrey Janner wrote:
-Original Message- From: Howard W. Smith, Jr.
[mailto:smithh032...@gmail.com] Sent: Wednesday, April 10, 2013
7:35 PM To: Esmond Pitt Cc: Tomcat Users List Subject: Re: Tomcat
access
On Thu, Apr 11, 2013 at 9:47 AM, Jeffrey Janner jeffrey.jan...@polydyne.com
wrote:
-Original Message-
From: Howard W. Smith, Jr. [mailto:smithh032...@gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 10, 2013 7:35 PM
To: Esmond Pitt
Cc: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: Tomcat access log
On Thu, Apr 11, 2013 at 4:39 PM, Christopher Schultz
ch...@christopherschultz.net wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Jeffrey,
On 4/11/13 9:47 AM, Jeffrey Janner wrote:
-Original Message- From: Howard W. Smith, Jr.
[mailto:smithh032...@gmail.com] Sent:
2013/4/12 Christopher Schultz ch...@christopherschultz.net:
The attacker installed a viral servlet application that killed the
server completely, we had to rebuild it.
I -- like most people I would guess -- don't run under a
SecurityManager, but doing so can significantly limit the damage
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Dan,
On 4/11/13 9:52 AM, Daniel Mikusa wrote:
On Apr 11, 2013, at 1:09 AM, saumil shah wrote:
Hello All, We are using Tomcat 6.0.35 for our production system
with 64 bit JVM (1.6.33) on Windows 2008 R2 SP1. Our physical
memory is 24gb. Load
you need to do take a look at the loaded JSF webapps and find outwho is
acquiring a resource and not closing the resource
who is acquiring large amounts of heap and not releasingbe aware any reference
to an any object in another class gives the class the right to be placed into
Enough already guys please.
EJP
-Original Message-
From: users-digest-h...@tomcat.apache.org
[mailto:users-digest-h...@tomcat.apache.org]
Sent: Thursday, 11 April 2013 11:48 PM
To: users@tomcat.apache.org
Subject: users Digest 11 Apr 2013 13:48:25 - Issue 11342
users Digest 11
You would have had to intentionally enable the default password.
I had clearly done that.
The attacker installed a viral servlet application that killed the
server completely, we had to rebuild it.
I -- like most people I would guess -- don't run under a SecurityManager,
but doing so can
On Thu, Apr 11, 2013 at 8:02 PM, Martin Gainty mgai...@hotmail.com wrote:
you need to do take a look at the loaded JSF webapps and find outwho is
acquiring a resource and not closing the resource
who is acquiring large amounts of heap and not releasingbe aware any
reference to an any object
Chris,
My apologies for late response; just realized earlier this afternoon that I
didn't respond.
On Thu, Apr 4, 2013 at 2:32 PM, Christopher Schultz
ch...@christopherschultz.net wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Howard,
On 4/3/13 4:15 PM, Howard W. Smith, Jr.
Hello All,
First of all ...Thank you so very much Daniel, Neven, Marc, Howard,
Christopher.appreciate all the help. Learnt a lot.
What I gather from the chain is that,
It would be prefered to make Min and Max heap size same . i.e. in my case
4096m vs Min as 1024m and max 4096m
From: saumil shah [mailto:saumil...@hotmail.com]
Subject: RE : Tomcat 6.0.35 Crashed again
It would be prefered to make Min and Max heap size same
Usually that is the case.
is -XX:+UseParallelGC recommended , since I have 8 core machine or would
there be penalty to that ?
You very
21 matches
Mail list logo