Thanks Steve. I have to keep both domains on on machine because that's all what I have. Hovewer, both domains are served by Apache at port 80. To Tomcat I can connect, see the pages and execute the examples at port 8080. Probably I will have to change the port declaration in the "server.xml" file in Tomcat (if I remember good, maybe was a .properties file, I will check tonight), in order to connect to the server at port 80, but my problem was to not have then the main index pages changed with Tomcat main page. I say this because right now, I can type: http://www.firstdomain.com:8080 http://www.seconddomain.com:8080 http://localhost:8080 and they all point to the Tomcat main page. Actually, which one will be the best choice: Tomcat or Jserv? I will be back tomorrow with more questions. Thanks again. Regards, Liviu "Steve B." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> on 05/26/2000 05:01:22 PM Please respond to "JetSpeed" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "JetSpeed" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> cc: (bcc: Liviu Jurjica/Inc/Celestica) Subject: Re: Install jetspeed, Hi everybody, I need help! Here is how I would answer your questions. I must admit that I have never setup more than one domain on a server, but perhaps I can be of some help. Inline responses... ----- Original Message ----- From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Thursday, May 25, 2000 12:53 PM Subject: Install jetspeed, Hi everybody, I need help! > > > Hi everybody, I need help! > this is the situation: > d:\Apache Group\Apache 1.3.13 > e:\JDK 1.3 > c:\NT 4.0 Server, SP 6.0 > d:\Apache Group\jakarta-tomcat (3.1) > d:\Apache Group\jetsped-1.1 > > Apache is serving 2 domains > www.firstdomain.com; residing under h:\firstdomain > www.seconddomain.com; residing under h:\seconddomain > both domains are set-up to be under same IP address (cheap but I do not spam nor > make extra change in the pocket, i just try to learn) > > so far, looks like Tomcat is running (no more error messages when :\>tomcat > start; also there are working: > www.firstdomain.com:8080 > www.seconddomain.com:8080 > localhost:8080 > and the links from the tomcat default index page, including the execution of the > jsp files from there ) > > How can I make jetspeed working in this environment? > Where do I have to move the /content directory, under d:\....\jakarta-tomcat, or > under h:\firstdomain and another copy under h:\seconddomain Either way. If you are connectint to your domains via the :8080 port, you are - in a way - not using Apache, so you put /content in <tomcat>\webapps\<root or whatever>\. (I say "in a way" because Jetspeed fetch's much info by URL, so you could, for example, have Tomcat serving up the framework, and Apache supplying static content) If you have setup Tomcat with Apache, you can place the /content folder in the root-directory of the Apache site. This would be the approach I would prefer. Especially since you may decide later to use Jserv instead of Tomcat. In fact, you could put the content folder anywhere that is accessible as a URL once you are comfortable with the .properties files. > Where can I actually find jdsk.jar, (as default in build.bat we have "...set It is downloaded from java.sun.com. It is included in the JSDK (Java Servlet Developers kit). I don't recall compatabilities with Jetspeed1.1(I try to keep up with the CVS), but jskd 2.2 is part of the Jakarta package - the file name is <jakarta-dir>\lib\servlet.jar. > JSDK=d:\java\lib\jsdk.jar...") If JSKD2.2 is compatible, this would = <jakarta-dir>\lib\servlet.jar > I can understand to change d:\java\lib with e:\JDK1.3\lib, according to my > setup, but I have no jsdk.jar there, or anywhere else; and I couldn't download > the file from SUN website. I also remember reading in the SUN's site FAQ a > posting which proposed to rename a servlet.jar into jsdk.jar (???) in order to > make Jetspeed work. Is this "servlet.jar" file shipped with Tomcat, or is this a > file which supposingly has to be downloaded from Sun.com. Do I need to have > actually installed Jserv and Tomcat? ...or ant, or anything else? > Also, is there a method to check if Tomcat is really working as it's supposed to http://localhost:8080 should bring up the Tomcat home page. Verify that the links to servlets and JSP examples work. (This is how I learned that you needed to include the JDK tools.jar n your classpath to get JSP pages to work) > > How can I integrate tomcat-jetspeed into the 2 domains configuration? this is > basically the idea where all started from, I was looking to get dynamic content > into the web pages. I must admit, I have not set up Apache myself for more than 1 domain, but my guess is that once you get jetpspeed working on 1 domain, it will be simple enough to setup the 2nd. > > Appreciate any response. Please do not take into consideration my english, I was > told already I have "an accent". > Thanks. > > > > > -- > -------------------------------------------------------------- > Please read the FAQ! <http://java.apache.org/faq/> > To subscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > To unsubscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Archives and Other: <http://java.apache.org/main/mail.html> > Problems?: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- -------------------------------------------------------------- Please read the FAQ! <http://java.apache.org/faq/> To subscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Archives and Other: <http://java.apache.org/main/mail.html> Problems?: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- -------------------------------------------------------------- Please read the FAQ! <http://java.apache.org/faq/> To subscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Archives and Other: <http://java.apache.org/main/mail.html> Problems?: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
