We use a wildcard cert that we can put on any server, handy.
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dale.fraser.id.au http://dale.fraser.id.au
http://cfmldocs.com/ http://cfmldocs.com
http://learncf.com http://learncf.com
http://flexcf.com http://flexcf.com
From: cfaussie@googlegroups.com
I think you're stuck with what Dale is saying, or use keytool to import it
into the JDK.
Putting an exception into browsers is pretty straight forward.
Mark
On Tue, Jun 29, 2010 at 7:26 PM, MrBuzzy mrbu...@gmail.com wrote:
Dear Brains-trust,
I'd like to make a CFHTTP request over SSL to one
I could be wrong, but I seem to remember seeing something that you can add a
certificate as a 'trusted cert' on the coldfusion server that is doing the
cfhttp call, so maybe have a google for that too?
On Wed, Jun 30, 2010 at 10:19 AM, Mark Mandel mark.man...@gmail.com wrote:
I think you're
http://jxplorer.org/ has a fairly nifty GUI for importing certificates
into a truststore.
I would think that CF would use the truststore of the JRE/JDK that it
sits on. The truststore file that java uses is usually contained in a
file called cacerts. Open this up with JXplorer and you'll see a
Sorry to reopen an old thread, but I think it fits here.
I am going to try this on Eclipse Helios. What eclipse package do you
recommend putting CFB and/or FB4 into?
The Java, J2EE, or Classic download or something else?
On Jun 17, 6:20 pm, Andrew Scott andr...@andyscott.id.au wrote:
Steve,
Any, depends on what you will be developing with.
If you are doing pure CF and FB then the classic is fine.
-Original Message-
From: cfaussie@googlegroups.com [mailto:cfaus...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Andrew
Sent: Wednesday, 30 June 2010 12:15 PM
To: cfaussie
Subject: [cfaussie]
Given that Tomcat 7 is out, has got me wondering what would be the
better platform for CF deployments. What's your least hated favourite
server for running CF?
-- geoff
http://www.daemon.com.au/
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
cfaussie group.
To
Thanks.
I think at the moment I have 6 different installs of Eclipse. :-)
1. Java EE (my work stuff - has maven, spring ide and a whole lot of
other plugins that tend to get in the way of anything else)
2. Java Development (my personal playground, mainly so I can play
with the Google Plugin)
3.
IIS
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dale.fraser.id.au
http://cfmldocs.com
http://learncf.com
http://flexcf.com
-Original Message-
From: cfaussie@googlegroups.com [mailto:cfaus...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Geoff Bowers
Sent: Wednesday, 30 June 2010 12:21 PM
To: cfaussie
Subject:
Realistically I think for most of the scenarios people go with JRun actually
does the trick.
The only reason to deviate from that would probably be for integration reasons
with particular Java/JEE technologies that might not be that well supported on
JRun (due to its age) or due to customer
Besides that - I think JBoss is a very good Java platform to run pretty much
anything on. There's been speculation for long time if (and for what) Adobe
would abandon JRun as the default CF Java server. I personally think that
currently JBoss would be the best platform for such a step -
I think JBoss is over kill for most Railo people and are just using Tomcat
As I understand it, JBoss uses Tomcat as it serverlet
On 30 June 2010 10:56, Andrew am2...@gmail.com wrote:
Besides that - I think JBoss is a very good Java platform to run pretty
much anything on. There's been
LoL,
That's why I go with the J2EE version, so that I can dabble with all this in
one IDE. I personally have a separate install of Eclipse Helios with both
CFB FB4 installed as plugins, with mylyn and subversive to name a few of
the other plugins I use.
-Original Message-
From:
Cool I wasn't aware of that.
Sent from my mobile device.
On 30/06/2010, at 1:10 PM, AJ Mercer ajmer...@gmail.com wrote:
there is and experimental JBoss installer for windows
http://www.getrailo.org/index.cfm/download/jboss-web-installer/
On 30 June 2010 11:07, AJ Mercer
The Railo guys seemed to suggest things were heading towards Tomcat for larger
deployments during Monday night's presentation. They mentioned Resin and Jetty
for smaller deployments.
Robin
On 30/06/2010, at 12:21 PM, Geoff Bowers wrote:
Given that Tomcat 7
Back in the old days when I was solely a Java developer I always
thought of Tomcat was seen as a reference implementation rather than a
production ready server.
Has that view changed?
On Wed, 30 Jun 2010 13:54:38 +1000, Robin Hilliard
ro...@rocketboots.com.au wrote:
The Railo guys
It does, keep in mind that Adobe has a relationship with JBoss as well. For
instance all the turnkey installations for LC ES (2) run on JBoss.
Cheers
Kai
I think JBoss is over kill for most Railo people and are just using Tomcat
As I understand it, JBoss uses Tomcat as it serverlet
On 30
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