Re: tomcat without apache logging security

2001-04-05 Thread sgoni


Thanks, it works fine like that :-)

 On Tuesday 03 April 2001 10:47, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  I would like to log all the queries to the database in logs/servlet.log.
 I
  put the verbosityLevel to DEBUG which didn't seem to have an effect on
 the
  logfile (it only logs the init calls). In server.xml, there are all
 these
  ContextInterceptors that I suspect to be helpful (?), but I have no idea
  how to use or modify them. If you have some explanation or suggestions
 or
  know some documentation "for dummies" I would be very grateful :-)
 What you need to do is use log statements in your Java code
 In your Java code, obtain the servlet context, and then write a log
 statement along the lines of:
 servletContext.log("Querying the database");
 Any logging you do using the servlet API's logging facility will end up in
 
 Tomcat's servlet log.
 Check the Javadoc for the servlet API for more info.
 -- 
 
 Ed Gomolka
 ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
 

-- 
GMX - Die Kommunikationsplattform im Internet.
http://www.gmx.net




Re: tomcat without apache logging security

2001-04-04 Thread Ed Gomolka

On Tuesday 03 April 2001 10:47, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 I would like to log all the queries to the database in logs/servlet.log. I
 put the verbosityLevel to DEBUG which didn't seem to have an effect on the
 logfile (it only logs the init calls). In server.xml, there are all these
 ContextInterceptors that I suspect to be helpful (?), but I have no idea
 how to use or modify them. If you have some explanation or suggestions or
 know some documentation "for dummies" I would be very grateful :-)
What you need to do is use log statements in your Java code
In your Java code, obtain the servlet context, and then write a log
statement along the lines of:
servletContext.log("Querying the database");
Any logging you do using the servlet API's logging facility will end up in 
Tomcat's servlet log.
Check the Javadoc for the servlet API for more info.
-- 

Ed Gomolka
([EMAIL PROTECTED])



Re: tomcat without apache logging security

2001-04-03 Thread Kevin Sangeelee

On Tue, 3 Apr 2001 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 The other thing is the security. I would like to restrict the access to ONE
 of the two servlets to a couple of IP addresses. Does Tomcat offer a
 possibility for that ? I saw that by modifying the tomcat.policy file I can do IP
 filtering, but that concerns all the servlets !?

You could compare the String result of request.getRemoteAddr() to the IP
addresses you want to restrict to on the doGet() or doPost() methods of
your servlet. The addresses could be specified in the servlet's properties
in web.xml

Kevin