RE: worker.tomcat_home etc in mod_jk's workers.properties
worker.tomcat_home is not used with the mod_jk connector. However, the IIS and Netscape connectors are mod_jk based and allow Tomcat to be run in-process. It is for the in-process worker that this setting is used. Cheers, Larry -Original Message- From: John Holman [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, January 24, 2002 5:24 PM To: Tomcat Users List Subject: worker.tomcat_home etc in mod_jk's workers.properties Can anyone explain the purpose of the worker.tomcat_home, worker.java_home and ps entries in mod_jk's workers.properties file? My understanding is that workers.properties is used only to configure the mod_jk webserver plugin, and I'm at a loss to see why that would need to know anything about Tomcat or Java. (Anything that Tomcat needs to know should surely be specified in the server.xml configuration file anyway). Indeed when mod_jk is deployed on a system without either Java or Tomcat installed (because these are running on a different host) these entries are meaningless - and things seem to work OK if you just miss them out. What am I missing? Thanks, John. -- To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Troubles with the list: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Troubles with the list: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: worker.tomcat_home etc in mod_jk's workers.properties
John Holman wrote: Can anyone explain the purpose of the worker.tomcat_home, worker.java_home and ps entries in mod_jk's workers.properties file? My understanding is that workers.properties is used only to configure the mod_jk webserver plugin, and I'm at a loss to see why that would need to know anything about Tomcat or Java. (Anything that Tomcat needs to know should surely be specified in the server.xml configuration file anyway). Indeed when mod_jk is deployed on a system without either Java or Tomcat installed (because these are running on a different host) these entries are meaningless - and things seem to work OK if you just miss them out. What am I missing? Nothing. I verified your assumptions and you are right. I created a worker.properties file which does not contain worker.tomcat_home or worker.java_home and I placed it under /usr/local/apache/conf. And it works. See: http://www.ubeans.com/tomcat Regards, Pascal -- To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Troubles with the list: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
worker.tomcat_home etc in mod_jk's workers.properties
Can anyone explain the purpose of the worker.tomcat_home, worker.java_home and ps entries in mod_jk's workers.properties file? My understanding is that workers.properties is used only to configure the mod_jk webserver plugin, and I'm at a loss to see why that would need to know anything about Tomcat or Java. (Anything that Tomcat needs to know should surely be specified in the server.xml configuration file anyway). Indeed when mod_jk is deployed on a system without either Java or Tomcat installed (because these are running on a different host) these entries are meaningless - and things seem to work OK if you just miss them out. What am I missing? Thanks, John. -- To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Troubles with the list: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]