Richard S. Hall
Mon, 01 Feb 2010 08:34:48 -0800
On 2/1/10 11:19, Charles Moulliard wrote:
Loic, There is an alternative to Apache Felix HTTP Service. You can use PAX Web osgi bundles to configure one or several jetty instances. Here is the doc : http://wiki.ops4j.org/display/paxweb/Advanced+Jetty+Configuration but What would you like to do with two separate HTTP instances (using a different port number) on your OSGI server ?
That, I don't know. I was just responding to what I interpreted the original question to mean. :-)
-> richard
Even if you run two separate instances of your HTTP service on Felix, programmation will be required to attach servlets/jsp pages, ... and so on to one instance instead of the other. Kind regards, Charles Moulliard Senior Enterprise Architect Apache Camel Committer ***************************** blog : http://cmoulliard.blogspot.com twitter : http://twitter.com/cmoulliard Linkedlin : http://www.linkedin.com/in/charlesmoulliard Apache Camel Group : http://www.linkedin.com/groups?home=&gid=2447439&trk=anet_ug_hm On Mon, Feb 1, 2010 at 5:02 PM, Richard S. Hall<he...@ungoverned.org>wrote:On 2/1/10 10:15, Charles Moulliard wrote:Hi Loďc, You can change the port number. It is explained here : http://felix.apache.org/site/apache-felix-http-service.html Section : Configuration Properties The service can both be configured using OSGi environment properties and using Configuration Admin. The service PID for this service is "org.apache.felix.http". If you use both methods, Configuration Admin takes precedence. The following properties can be used (some legacy property names still exist but are not documented here on purpose): - org.osgi.service.http.port - The port used for servlets and resources available via HTTP. The default is 80. - org.osgi.service.http.port.secure - The port used for servlets and resources available via HTTPS. The default is 443.That changes the port, but how precisely to you get two differently configured services? You cannot configure the same PID twice for two different services, right? I am not a user of the HTTP Service (or Config Admin for that matter), but unless there is some sort of managed service factory involved, there will only be one instance of the service, correct? -> richard Kind regards,Charles Moulliard Senior Enterprise Architect Apache Camel Committer ***************************** blog : http://cmoulliard.blogspot.com twitter : http://twitter.com/cmoulliard Linkedlin : http://www.linkedin.com/in/charlesmoulliard Apache Camel Group : http://www.linkedin.com/groups?home=&gid=2447439&trk=anet_ug_hm On Mon, Feb 1, 2010 at 4:11 PM, Loďc Cotonea<l.coto...@gmail.com> wrote:Hi everybody, My web application is using an http service that listen on a network port. This port is reserved to frontend communication. However, I would know if there is a way to open a second http service on another network port to serve some backend http requests? Thanks Loďc--------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@felix.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@felix.apache.org
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