On Tue, Aug 22, 2017 at 10:55 PM, Emmanuel Bourg wrote:
> On 08/16/2017 09:24 AM, Leon Rosenberg wrote:
> > Debian has a long tradition of doing things in a very special way when it
> > comes to java. Long enough they shipped GnuJ as standard JVM with a
> debian
> >
On 08/16/2017 09:24 AM, Leon Rosenberg wrote:
> Debian has a long tradition of doing things in a very special way when it
> comes to java. Long enough they shipped GnuJ as standard JVM with a debian
> distribution, a piece of garbage that wasn't able to start simplest of java
> programs.
GCJ has
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Leon,
On 8/16/17 3:24 AM, Leon Rosenberg wrote:
> Debian has a long tradition of doing things in a very special way
> when it comes to java. Long enough they shipped GnuJ as standard
> JVM with a debian distribution, a piece of garbage that wasn't
On 17.08.2017 02:29, James H. H. Lampert wrote:
On 8/16/17, 11:43 AM, André Warnier (tomcat) wrote:
, , ,
So as a start, look at /etc/init.d/tomcat7 on your system, and check
what other files this calls/references. One important thing here, is
what the environment variable CATALINA_BASE ends up
That's what I tried to say... sorry I was maybe not specific enough...
Peter
> Am 17.08.2017 um 02:29 schrieb James H. H. Lampert :
>
>> On 8/16/17, 11:43 AM, André Warnier (tomcat) wrote:
>> , , ,
>> So as a start, look at /etc/init.d/tomcat7 on your system, and check
On 8/16/17, 11:43 AM, André Warnier (tomcat) wrote:
, , ,
So as a start, look at /etc/init.d/tomcat7 on your system, and check
what other files this calls/references. One important thing here, is
what the environment variable CATALINA_BASE ends up containing.
Ok. This is starting to look
On 16.08.2017 17:22, James H. H. Lampert wrote:
Uh, EXCUSE ME, my post was NOT a "ranting."
It was A REQUEST FOR TECHNICAL INFORMATION.
The unusual way Tomcat is organized if installed via an "apt-get" from Debian's
repository
is a given. I made OBSERVATIONS about it, by way of framing my
On 8/16/17, 10:13 AM, Konstantin Kolinko wrote:
I see that you mentioned that you are using Tomcat 7.
See [1] for how contexts are defined and [2] for attributes "appBase"
and "xmlBase" of a Host.
. . .
Thanks. I'll be looking into the links you sent me later today, and if I
have any
2017-08-16 18:22 GMT+03:00 James H. H. Lampert :
> Uh, EXCUSE ME, my post was NOT a "ranting."
>
> It was A REQUEST FOR TECHNICAL INFORMATION.
>
> The unusual way Tomcat is organized if installed via an "apt-get" from
> Debian's repository is a given. I made OBSERVATIONS
Uh, EXCUSE ME, my post was NOT a "ranting."
It was A REQUEST FOR TECHNICAL INFORMATION.
The unusual way Tomcat is organized if installed via an "apt-get" from
Debian's repository is a given. I made OBSERVATIONS about it, by way of
framing my question. While I could not manage to keep my
Yes, many distributions lay out Tomcat the same way as every other
daemon is installed in Unix (executables in /usr, volatile data in
/var, configuration in /etc) and the startup scripts set CATALINA_HOME
and CATALINA_BASE to make that happen. If you look in CATALINA_BASE,
you may find symlinks
Hi Andre et al,
I've dealt with a lot of different servers and OSes over the years, and my
'professional' advice to everyone maintaining a java/web application would
be to create a root level directory and install everything they rely on
there and maintain it themselves. This includes especially
This being a Tomcat list, and Tomcat being java, it is rather to be expected that many
people on this list would tend to have a rather Tomcat-specific, and rather Java-specific
view of the world. And the fact that most Linux distributions have their own way of
packaging software, and
Debian has a long tradition of doing things in a very special way when it
comes to java. Long enough they shipped GnuJ as standard JVM with a debian
distribution, a piece of garbage that wasn't able to start simplest of java
programs.
But there has been an as long tradition to reply to every
I'd assume the service that starts tomcat sets the bin-Dir, that contains a
setenv.sh, that has the CATALINA_HOME and BASE env-Varaibles, where you find
the context-Files that have a docbase.
I'd like to repeat the question: who did this setup?
Peter Kreuser
> Am 15.08.2017 um 23:45 schrieb
I think I've mentioned before that I have a Tomcat server on a Google
Compute Debian instance, that I installed with an "apt-get," rather than
from an Apache download.
I had to apt-get manager separately, which is odd to begin with.
And things ended up in unexpected places.
Some stuff (like
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