Re: [DOC] INSTALL.txt

2001-07-19 Thread guru

Neat!

It might be better to split INSTALLATION into two separate sections,
one for Windows, one for Unix.  HOWTOs work best with fewer
conditionals.

 - A

On Tue, Jul 17, 2001 at 08:23:10PM -0400, Rob S. wrote:
 Along the right line?  Used the formatting from the TC4 readme files.
 
 Needs some polish.
 
 - r




RE: [DOC] INSTALL.txt

2001-07-19 Thread Rob S.

Agreed... (re: Win/Unix sections).  Is a Mac section worth it?  I don't have
access to a Mac and haven't the slightest clue how they work =)

I also redid the default homepage (ROOT/index.html) but forgot to send a
copy home from work =(

- r

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Thursday, July 19, 2001 8:40 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: [DOC] INSTALL.txt


 Neat!

 It might be better to split INSTALLATION into two separate sections,
 one for Windows, one for Unix.  HOWTOs work best with fewer
 conditionals.

  - A

 On Tue, Jul 17, 2001 at 08:23:10PM -0400, Rob S. wrote:
  Along the right line?  Used the formatting from the TC4 readme files.
 
  Needs some polish.
 
  - r






RE: [DOC] INSTALL.txt

2001-07-19 Thread Craig R. McClanahan

I'm going to include this in the beta 6 release tonight, after a couple of
tweaks (and a mention of the new Windows-installer based version that Remy
has created).  Also, we'll need pointers to the RPMs that Henri so
graciously creates, and corresponding directions to install them.

MacOS X is, AFAIK, similar enough to the other Unixes that it doesn't need
a separate section.

Craig


On Thu, 19 Jul 2001, Rob S. wrote:

 Agreed... (re: Win/Unix sections).  Is a Mac section worth it?  I don't have
 access to a Mac and haven't the slightest clue how they work =)
 
 I also redid the default homepage (ROOT/index.html) but forgot to send a
 copy home from work =(
 
 - r
 
  -Original Message-
  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
  Sent: Thursday, July 19, 2001 8:40 PM
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Subject: Re: [DOC] INSTALL.txt
 
 
  Neat!
 
  It might be better to split INSTALLATION into two separate sections,
  one for Windows, one for Unix.  HOWTOs work best with fewer
  conditionals.
 
   - A
 
  On Tue, Jul 17, 2001 at 08:23:10PM -0400, Rob S. wrote:
   Along the right line?  Used the formatting from the TC4 readme files.
  
   Needs some polish.
  
   - r
 
 
 
 




Re: [DOC] INSTALL.txt

2001-07-19 Thread Pier P. Fumagalli

Rob S. at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Agreed... (re: Win/Unix sections).  Is a Mac section worth it?  I don't have
 access to a Mac and haven't the slightest clue how they work =)

Mac? Under OS/9 it doesn't work (only Java platform 1 over there)... OS/X is
basically a unix box, so, no worries there...

Pier




Re: [DOC] INSTALL.txt

2001-07-18 Thread Adam Fowler

Hi,

I'm gonna follow your doc to install tomcat 4 on mandrake tonight. I'll make 
change to it for *nix platforms and highlight them then e-mail you the 
revised copy 8o)

Adam.

 
Adam Fowler 
Help Desk Live Project 
Information Services 
University of Wales, Aberystwyth 
Web guy+author on the TomcatBook Project 
http://tomcatbook.sourceforge.net 
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 

On Wednesday 18 July 2001 00:23, you wrote:
 Along the right line?  Used the formatting from the TC4 readme files.

 Needs some polish.

 - r


Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1; name=INSTALL.txt
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
Content-Description: 




RE: [DOC] INSTALL.txt

2001-07-18 Thread Rob S.

Heyya Adam,

 I'm gonna follow your doc to install tomcat 4 on mandrake
 tonight. I'll make
 change to it for *nix platforms and highlight them then e-mail you the
 revised copy 8o)

Cool, thanks =)  Hopefully after that, one of the TC4 committers will check
it out and give it the 'ok' for inclusion.

As well, we've sort of petered out on the big DOC movement.  At this point,
I'm just going to write everything I feel like in plain readme form like the
release notes.  It'll be easy enough to convert to whatever we end up using.

- r




Re: [DOC] INSTALL.txt

2001-07-18 Thread Adam Fowler

Wow, that was quick 8o) Always a good thing with install instructions!

Here's the update INSTALL.txt

Adam.

 
Adam Fowler 
Help Desk Live Project 
Information Services 
University of Wales, Aberystwyth 
Web guy+author on the TomcatBook Project 
http://tomcatbook.sourceforge.net 
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 

On Wednesday 18 July 2001 21:58, you wrote:
 Hi,

 I'm gonna follow your doc to install tomcat 4 on mandrake tonight. I'll
 make change to it for *nix platforms and highlight them then e-mail you the
 revised copy 8o)

 Adam.

 
 Adam Fowler
 Help Desk Live Project
 Information Services
 University of Wales, Aberystwyth
 Web guy+author on the TomcatBook Project
 http://tomcatbook.sourceforge.net
 e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

 On Wednesday 18 July 2001 00:23, you wrote:
  Along the right line?  Used the formatting from the TC4 readme files.
 
  Needs some polish.
 
  - r

 
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1; name=INSTALL.txt
 Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
 Content-Description:
 

-- 



  Apache Tomcat Version 4.0 Beta 6
  
Install Guide
=

 cvs keyword thing 


INTRODUCTION:


Welcome!

This document explains how to perform a stand-alone installation of the
Tomcat 4.0 servlet container.  Once you're up and running, you will have
access to the more detailed documentation locally via Tomcat's default
home page, as well as administration and sample applications.

As well, the documentation is available locally at:

$CATALINA_HOME/webapps/docs/index.html

where $CATALINA_HOME is the root of the directory you extracted the Tomcat
files to.  The absolute latest version of the documentation is always
available online at the following URL:

http://jakarta.apache.org/tomcat/tomcat-4.0-doc/index.html

Because the documentation released with each version of Tomcat is the latest
as of that release, there is a good chance the online documentation will be
slightly updated.

NOTE: It is STRONGLY reccomended that you complete this minimal, stand-alone
installation before continuing on to more advanced topics.

===
DOWNLOADING:
===

In the rare occurence that you find yourself reading this file without
a copy of Tomcat 4 to install, you can obtain the latest version here

http://jakarta.apache.org/site/binindex.html

==
INSTALLING:
==

Fortunately, installing the Tomcat servlet container consists of a few,
easy steps: extract the archive, and set environment variables.

Of course, since Tomcat is written in Java, it is assumed that you have
install at least version 1.2 of the JDK.  You can download the JDK from
Sun at the following URL

http://java.sun.com/j2se/

1) Unpack the files

You've most likely completed this step already =)

Lets say that for installation (A), you're on a Windows machine and
you've unpacked the files to C:\tomcat

Or for installation (B) on a *nix machine, you've unpacked it to
/usr/local/tomcat

 
cd /var
(I thought TC should go in /var for most platforms???)
mv tomcat-download-file /var/

tar xzvf jakarta-tomcat-4.0-br.tar.gz
OR
unzip jakarta-tomcat-4.0-br.tar.Z
tar xvf jakarta-tomcat-4.0-br.tar


2) Set your environment variables

Tomcat 4 requires 2 environment variables: CATALINA_HOME and JAVA_HOME.
CATALINA_HOME should be set to the root of your Tomcat installation, and
JAVA_HOME should be set to the root of your JDK installation.

For the Win9X-series of operating systems, add the following lines to
your C:\AUTOEXEC.BAT file:

SET CATALINA_HOME=C:\tomcat
SET JAVA_HOME=C:\jdk1.3.1

In WinNT-based systems, you modify environment variables by first right-
clicking on the My Computer icon, and going to Properties.  In NT
you get to the properties by doing THIS, and in 2000, by doing THIS.

For *nix, is there any different for the different shells?  I'm no *nix
expert by any means =)


export CATALINA_HOME=/var/jakarta-tomcat-4.0-b5
export JAVA_HOME=/usr/java/jdk1.3

NB This should either be done in a systemV startup script or /etc/profile to
make it system wide. (Preferably startup script so its available on tomcat
start on boot if required)


3) Start it

To start the container, execute the script appropriate to your operating
system.  The startup and shutdown scripts are named appropriately, and
found in $CATALINA/bin.  For *nix, that will be the scripts ending with
the sh extension, and for Windows, bat.


cd 

[DOC] INSTALL.txt and Init Script...

2001-07-18 Thread Adam Fowler

Hey all,

I've updated my initialisation script. Installation details are in the file.

I also forgot to mention in my last post with regards to the nice INSTALL.txt 
8o) that a symbolic link should be made like:-

ln -s /var/jakarta-tomcat-4.0-b5/ /var/jakarta-tomcat

So to allow easy upgrades. This is also detailed in the tomcat script 
(attached)

Hope this helps.

Adam.


Adam Fowler
Help Desk Live Project
Information Services
University of Wales, Aberystwyth
Web guy+author on the TomcatBook Project
http://tomcatbook.sourceforge.net
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]


 tomcat systemV init script


[DOC] INSTALL.txt

2001-07-17 Thread Rob S.

Along the right line?  Used the formatting from the TC4 readme files.

Needs some polish.

- r


  Apache Tomcat Version 4.0 Beta 6
  
Install Guide
=

 cvs keyword thing 


INTRODUCTION:


Welcome!

This document explains how to perform a stand-alone installation of the
Tomcat 4.0 servlet container.  Once you're up and running, you will have
access to the more detailed documentation locally via Tomcat's default
home page, as well as administration and sample applications.

As well, the documentation is available locally at:

$CATALINA_HOME/webapps/docs/index.html

where $CATALINA_HOME is the root of the directory you extracted the Tomcat
files to.  The absolute latest version of the documentation is always
available online at the following URL:

http://jakarta.apache.org/tomcat/tomcat-4.0-doc/index.html

Because the documentation released with each version of Tomcat is the latest
as of that release, there is a good chance the online documentation will be
slightly updated.

NOTE: It is STRONGLY reccomended that you complete this minimal, stand-alone
installation before continuing on to more advanced topics.

===
DOWNLOADING:
===

In the rare occurence that you find yourself reading this file without
a copy of Tomcat 4 to install, you can obtain the latest version here

http://jakarta.apache.org/site/binindex.html

==
INSTALLING:
==

Fortunately, installing the Tomcat servlet container consists of a few,
easy steps: extract the archive, and set environment variables.

Of course, since Tomcat is written in Java, it is assumed that you have
install at least version 1.2 of the JDK.  You can download the JDK from
Sun at the following URL

http://java.sun.com/j2se/

1) Unpack the files

You've most likely completed this step already =)

Lets say that for installation (A), you're on a Windows machine and
you've unpacked the files to C:\tomcat

Or for installation (B) on a *nix machine, you've unpacked it to
/usr/local/tomcat

2) Set your environment variables

Tomcat 4 requires 2 environment variables: CATALINA_HOME and JAVA_HOME.
CATALINA_HOME should be set to the root of your Tomcat installation, and
JAVA_HOME should be set to the root of your JDK installation.

For the Win9X-series of operating systems, add the following lines to
your C:\AUTOEXEC.BAT file:

SET CATALINA_HOME=C:\tomcat
SET JAVA_HOME=C:\jdk1.3.1

In WinNT-based systems, you modify environment variables by first right-
clicking on the My Computer icon, and going to Properties.  In NT
you get to the properties by doing THIS, and in 2000, by doing THIS.

For *nix, is there any different for the different shells?  I'm no *nix
expert by any means =)

3) Start it

To start the container, execute the script appropriate to your operating
system.  The startup and shutdown scripts are named appropriately, and
found in $CATALINA/bin.  For *nix, that will be the scripts ending with
the sh extension, and for Windows, bat.

4) Test it

Fire up your web browser, and request

http://localhost:8080/

...and you should be presented with the default Tomcat homepage.

===
TROUBLESHOOTING:
===

There are only really 2 things that can go wrong during the stand-alone
install:

1) The most common hiccup is when another web server (or any process for that
   matter) has laid claim to port 8080.  This is the default HTTP port that
   Tomcat attempts to bind to at startup.  To change this, open the file:

   $CATALINA_HOME/conf/server.xml

   ...and search for '8080'.  Change it to a port that isn't in use.  Restart
   Tomcat and you're in business.  Be sure that you replace the 8080 in the
   URL you're using to access Tomcat.  For example, if you change the port
   to 1977, you would request http://localhost:1977/ with your browser.

2) An out of environment space error when running the batch files in
   Win9X/ME-based operating systems.

   Right-click on the STARTUP.BAT and SHUTDOWN.BAT files.  Click on
   Properties then on the Memory tab.  For the Initial environment field,
   enter in something like 4096.
   
   After you click apply, Windows will create shortcuts in the directory with
   which you can use to start and stop the container.