Alexander Beck-Ratzka wrote:
> On Wednesday, February 25th 2009 07:04:42 Martin Feller wrote:
>> You can run more than one container on one machine - i do it all the time.
>> AFAIK the installations just have to be located in different directories.
>>
>> Say, you have two gt installs: /opt/gt408 and /opt/gt421.
>> I personally then have ~/.bashrc408 and a ~/.bashrc421, setting up paths,
>> GLOBUS_LOCATION (and maybe CLASSPATH) for the different gt installs.
>> Corresponding to each bashrc file i have an alias which sources the
>> appropriate bashrc file:
>> alias 408='cp ~/.bashrc408 ~/.bashrc && source ~/.bashrc'
>> alias 421='cp ~/.bashrc421 ~/.bashrc && source ~/.bashrc'
>>
>> Switching context you can easily start different containers, they have to
>> listen on different ports though.
>>
>> Not sure if this is the smartest way, but it works for me.
>>
> 
> I am not sure if this will work by putting globus 4.0 and 4.2 in different 
> directories. The wsgram service is creating a listening port, namely 8443. If 
> this is really a listening port, the second wsgram service won't come up, 
> because it will try to open the same listening port. This will lead to a 
> Unix / Linux system error.
> 
> Therefore I think you also need to change those ports in the configuration 
> files for the second container.
> 
> Cheers
> 
> Alexander


I think that's what i wanted to say by "they have to listen on different ports 
though"
Or do you mean something else here?

Martin

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