I have Jrun installed to run under IIS, thanks for the helpful info,what I intend to do is use the Jrun server the same way you would use Asp with IIS etc.
Bert before I was typing in locahost:8100/index.jsp ----- Original Message ----- From: "charles arehart" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "JRun-Talk" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Friday, December 14, 2001 1:40 PM Subject: RE: Using Jrun like IIS > It's not clear from your note, Bert, if you are indeed running IIS--or if > you just wanted things to work as they can in IIS. Celeste's idea is one way > to go. > > Another is that if you do have IIS (or any other web server) installed, and > simply want to not have to provide the port on a URL (as well as get some > other performance gains from tighter web server/Jrun integration), you can > run the "connector wizard" available as a link at the top of the JMC. This > sets up whatever web server you want as an "external web server" for your > server. > > It's discussed in the Chapter 4 of the JRun Setup Guide manual, which you > can view online at: > > http://livedocs.allaire.com/jrun31docs/JRun_Setup_Guide/connectors.jsp > > The very first section is called "Understanding Jrun ports". > > A more general discussion of external web servers is in the earlier Chapter > 2 > > http://livedocs.allaire.com/jrun31docs/JRun_Setup_Guide/servconf.jsp > > Is this stuff perhaps what you were looking for? > > /charlie > > -----Original Message----- > From: Haseltine, Celeste [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Friday, December 14, 2001 12:53 PM > To: JRun-Talk > Subject: RE: Using Jrun like IIS > > > Bert, > > I'm not sure if I understand your question completely, but I think you are > asking to view your wwwroot root directory in the browser window when you > type in "//localhost" vs "//localhost:8100" on the URL. IF you did > configure JRUN to work with IIS on your machine, then do the following: > > 1. On Windows 2000, go to Settings -> Control Panel -> Internet Tools -> > Internet Services Manager > 2. Open up Internet Information Services, and go to Default Web site -> > "Your App Subdirectory Name" > 3. Right click on your applications subdirectory name, and select properties > 4. Go to Documents Tab, and select Enable Default Documents. > 5. Delete ALL documents in that window EXCEPT for index.jsp. If you do not > have an index.jsp, add it to the document selection window. > 6. Go to directory tab, and select the "The designated directory" . > 7. Click apply, and then restart your JRUN server. > 8. Go to IE or Netscape, and type http://localhost on the URL. You should > now see your wwwroot subdirectory. > > Keep in mind this ONLY works if you have configured JRUN to work with IIS, > and not as a stand alone server. > > Hope this helps!!!! > > Celeste > > > > If so, you can do this as follows: > -----Original Message----- > From: Bert [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Friday, December 14, 2001 11:10 AM > To: JRun-Talk > Subject: Using Jrun like IIS > > > ----- > > > > > I am new to J-run but can you use it like IIS for example your site is > localhost/mysite or a 169.34.222 then it will redirect to your www/root in > IIS. > > but in Jrun when I try to do this in the console it doesn't seem to work the > only way I get any files to work is by localhost:8100 and viewing the > directory. Is there a better way or something I am missing,I mean I want the > beans to work in the back ground and to be able to have a url just like with > Asp and IIS. > > > Bert > > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Get the mailserver that powers this list at http://www.coolfusion.com Archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/ Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/index.cfm?sidebar=lists
