On 19/07/2010 22:21, Tony Anecito wrote:
> Hi Pid
> 
> First off I get a little red x in the upper left hand corner of the web page.

Excellent technical description of the problem.  Is it the response
status 404 or a 500, I wonder?


> Yep I agree maybe an upgrade to the latest Tomcat and APR might accomplish 
> fixing the problem but silly me I like to understand an issue before I 
> upgrade.

I didn't say it would, but silly me I like to advise people to stay
current, to gain the benefit of bug and security fixes.


> APR==httpd at least that is what the Apache Web site says and the acronym I 
> put 
> up on the title page is about. The Apache Web server group disavow any 
> knowledge 
> of APR since they say the Tomcat Group developed to to replace Apache Web 
> Server.

It's been explained elsewhere in the thread that this is incorrect, but
I'm curious to know where you read that the HTTPD 'group' disavowed APR?


> What little info I could find seems to indicate APR uses the ROOT directory  
> under Webapps for html based apps.
> 
> I will probably go back to Apache Web server as a separate tier. I was trying 
> to 
> get better performance using APR + Tomcat and saw some but not enough to 
> justify 
> the advantages of a seperate tier.


I can't seem to see whether your original problem has actually been
resolved or not, did you manage to determine what was happening or not?


p


> Best Regards,
> -Tony
> 
> 
> 
> ----- Original Message ----
> From: Pid <p...@pidster.com>
> To: Tomcat Users List <users@tomcat.apache.org>
> Sent: Mon, July 19, 2010 3:05:41 PM
> Subject: Re: APR & Tomcat...
> 
> On 19/07/2010 19:44, Tony Anecito wrote:
>> Hi All,
>>
>> I have been having odd issues with APR & Tomcat (6.0.20) since I set it up a 
>> while ago. I am seeing:
> 
> Time for an upgrade.
> 
>> 1. Sometimes on the first try to get images from a page where the images are 
>> assigned a sub domain via a host tag I get a red x. Hitting refresh seems to 
>> retrieve the images. The images are in a subfolder off of the ROOT folder of 
>> tomcat.
> 
> Can you reproduce the problem?
> 
> What does the client actually see?
> 
> You can use a browser tool to find out, e.g. Firebug in Firefox.
> Fiddler, ieHttpHeaders in IE, the built-in developer tools in Safari/Chrome.
> 
> What does the server actually send?  You didn't state your OS (tsk) but
> there are tools available for most OS which will allow you to monitor
> network traffic at the server. (e.g. Wireshark).
> 
>> 2. I get a file not found off of another folder where the file is a jnlp 
>> file.
>>
>>
>> So is there any type of directory tag (allow, deny ect) I should be using 
>> for 
>> the sub folders off or ROOT? When I used Apache Web server I set those up 
>> but 
>> then I was not using a Host tag either. But for APR I did not set up any 
>> type 
>> directory tags.
> 
> No there isn't.  Tomcat != Apache HTTPD.
> 
> Security permissions are set in the "ROOT/WEB-INF/web.xml", as per the
> Servlet Spec.
> 
> 
> p
> 
>> If I need the directory tags where would I put them?
>>
>> Thanks,
>> -Tony
>>
>>
>>       
>>
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> 
> 
>       


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