Krishnan et al,

Actually, I have a similar problem:  Tomcat seems to need the port (8080) to
execute servlets or jsp.  (Hua Ge, this was your problem, right?)   The need
to explicitly indicate the port could become troublesome as we are porting
some applications from JServ to Tomcat.

Can I change this?  I would guess that I need to set something in httpd.conf
or tomcat.conf.  Or, er, maybe I need to change one of the xml configuration
files.  Or perhaps I should don ruby slippers, click my heals three times,
and chant "There's no servlet engine like Tomcat.  There's no servlet engine
like Tomcat."

Ideas?

Thanks!
Evan Owens

-----Original Message-----
From: Krishnan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, August 07, 2000 11:02 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: TOMCAT context mapping


Hi all,
I have installed apache 1.3.9 and tomcat 3.1. I am able to run the examples
stored under tomcat directory by both using the following url.

http://localhost/examples/servlet/helloWorld and
http://localhost:8080/examples/servlet/helloWorld

Now, i created a new context called "kicha" and added that in the server.xml
file. Similarly, i created one folder called web-inf and created one file
called web.xml file. Now, i am able to run my jsp and servlet by typing the
following url.

http://localhost:8080/kicha/servlet/helloWorld  . But when i try the
following url
http://localhost/kicha/servlet/helloWorld , i am getting error for both jsp
and servlets that "The requested URL /kicha/helloWorld.jsp was not found on
this server".
Tomcat is able to run my program, where is apache is not able to do that.
Can you please tell me that where i am going wrong.

thanks
krishnan

-----Original Message-----
From:   Xing guohong [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent:   Monday, July 10, 2000 12:05 PM
To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:             Re: TOMCAT context mapping

Hi,
    Question 1:
        By default, You should invoke it like that pattent:
http://server:port/your web application/servlet/your servlet . And you can
config your web application respective. Create a WEB.XML file under the
web-inf directory of the web applicateion and edit it yourself, refering to
TOMCAT_HOME\doc\appdev\deployment.html file.

    Question 3:
        Yes, you must set the TOMCAT_HOME environment variable. In Windows,
set it just like set other environment variables, such as path, classpath
and ... In Linux and unix, edit the profile file and add the enviroment
variable. And at the same time, you's better set the JAVA_HOME environment
variable, otherwise add the tools.jar to you classpath environment variable.

    Hope this hepls. Any puzzzzzzle on them,  contact me.


Xgh.

----- Original Message -----
From: "hua ge" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, July 03, 2000 8:37 PM
Subject: TOMCAT context mapping


> Hello ,
> Can anyone help me with either of my following questions?
> highly appreciate with any help.
>
> Question 1:  *** regarding context mapping*******
>
> I tried to run the examples come with Tomcat in the examples context ,
root
> context and test context (which are already mapped in the server.xml),
then
> I created another new context in the server.xml following the syntext of
> examples context and put one servlet in the Web-inf/classes folder under
the
> new context, but when I invoke this servlet, the browser show error 'page
> could not found'. Does someone know why? do I need do more configure other
> than the server.xml to map a new context?
>
>
> Qustion 2: **** regarding resourceBundle  ******
> one servlet example in the tomcat such as SessionExample.java , it's using
> resourceBundle to get bundle from LocalStrings.property file.
> the source code has one statement like :
> ResourceBundle rb = ResourceBundle.getBundle("LocalStrings");
> the example works fine in example context itself, but if I copy the
> SessionExample.class & the LocalStrings.property files to another context
> say the test context coming with Tomcat package, the program won't work. I
> double the problem could be at the resourceBundle.
> but I already copied the property file together with the servlet class.
>
> anyone know why?
>
>
> Question 3:  **** regarding tomcat install & set up *****
>
> after I download and install the jakarta-tomcat.zip file,
> I started the server by invoking the startup batch file,
> the server is up and I can run above examples as well,
> but when I try to shutdown the server by invoking shutdown batch file, I
got
> error on the command line ' bad file name or command', the server won't
> stop.
>
> Can someone give me a hint? I did not do any configure on the startup or
> shutdown batch file. do I need to? some instructions say ' set
> TOMCAT_HOME=.....', where should I set it? in the startup and shutdown
batch
> file?
>
> thanks

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