Hi First of all: sory for the rather lengthy post, but I think it is better to provide all info that I think is relevant at once.
Now for my problem: I'm installing a Web server machine and I've encountered a rather weird problem: I can access the "standard" Tomcat examples through Apache (using mod_jk2), but when I try to access my own web app, it fails (No Context configured to process this request) when passing through Apache. If I access it directly (using a temporary HttpConnector I defined in the server.xml), all is fine (that is to say: I can access my JSP pages). I thing I've got an error in my mod_jk2 config. I've tried Googeling and searching the Tomcat docs and the archives of this list, but after trying several hints I've found on the Net, I still can't access my web app :( The details: Hardware/Software versions ========================== - Sun Solaris 5.9 on SPARC (64 bit) - J2SDK 1.4.1 (pre-installed on the machine) - Custom compiled Apache 2.0.49 (using GCC 3.3.2) - GCC 3.3.2 - Custom compiled OpenSSL 0.9.7d (with GCC 3.3.2) - Tomcat 4.1.30 (binary release) - Custom compiled mod_jk2 2.0.4 (with GCC 3.3.2) All custom compiled software *is* 64-bit Installation and configuration ============================== I've installed Tomcat 4 and Apache 2. I then compiled mod_jk2 and OpenSSL 0.9.7d created self-signed SSL certificates for Apache. I defined an Alias to the Tomcat example directory in my Apache httpd.conf configuration file and I load mod_jk2: ----- 8< ----- httpd.conf fragment ----- 8< ----- Alias /examples "/path/to/tomcat/webapps/examples" <Directory "/path/to/tomcat/webapps/examples"> Options Indexes Multiviews AllowOverride None Order allow,deny Allow from all </Directory> <Location "/examples/WEB-INF/"> AllowOverride None Deny from all </Location> <IfModule !mod_jk2.c> LoadModule jk2_module mod_jk2.so </IfModule> ----- >8 ----- httpd.conf fragment ----- >8 ----- and I created a workers2.properties: ----- 8< ----- workers2.properties ----- 8< ----- [channel.socket:localhost:8009] debug=0 port=8009 host=127.0.0.1 tomcatId=localhost:8009 [ajp13:localhost:8009] channel=channel.socket:localhost:8009 [uri:/examples/*.jsp] worker=ajp13:localhost:8009 ----- >8 ----- workers2.properties ----- >8 ----- I started up Apache and Tomcat (the latter using /path/to/tomcat/bin/startup.sh). In the browser, I now have access to https://xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx/examples/ and everything works fine. I've then installed my web app under a separate directory /path/to/application. The web app uses a separate Tomcat instance and is started with a script like: ----- 8< ----- Tomcat instance startup script ----- 8< ----- export CATALINA_HOME=/path/to/tomcat export CATALINA_BASE=/path/to/application export JAVA_HOME=/usr/j2se export PATH=${PATH}:${JAVA_HOME}/bin/sparcv9 export CLASSPATH=${CATALINA_BASE/webapps/name/jsp/WEB-INF/classes case "$1" in start | reload) $CATALINA_HOME/bin/startup.sh ;; stop) $CATALINA_HOME/bin/shutdown.sh ;; esac ----- >8 ----- Tomcat instance startup script ----- >8 ----- The current server.xml defines two Connectors: an HttpConnector for direct acces on port 8180, and the JK2 connector, using port 8109: ----- 8< ----- server.xml fragment ----- 8< ----- <!-- mod_jk2 on port 8109 --> <Connector className="org.apache.coyote.tomcat4.CoyoteConnector" port="8109" minProcessors="5" maxProcessors="75" acceptCount="10" debug="0" protocolHandlerClassName="org.apache.jk.server.JkCoyoteHandler"/> <!-- Define an HttpConnector on port 8180 --> <Connector className="org.apache.catalina.connector.http.HttpConnector" port="8180" minProcessors="5" maxProcessors="75" enableLookups="true" redirectPort="8443" acceptCount="10" debug="0" connectionTimeout="60000"/> ----- >8 ----- server.xml fragment ----- >8 ----- And the context definition is ----- 8< ----- server.xml fragment ----- 8< ----- <Context path="/B2C" docBase="name/jsp" debug="0" reloadable="false" crossContext="true"> </Context> ----- >8 ----- server.xml fragment ----- >8 ----- I've defined the following Alias for Apache: ----- 8< ----- httpd.conf fragment ----- 8< ----- Alias /B2C "/path/to/application/webapps/name/jsp" <Directory "/path/to/application/webapps/name/jsp"> Options -Indexes </Directory> <Location "/B2C/WEB-INF/"> AllowOverride None Deny from all </Location> ----- >8 ----- httpd.conf fragment ----- >8 ----- and I've added the following lines to the workers2.properties: ----- 8< ----- workers2.properties fragment ----- 8< ----- [channel.socket:localhost:8109] debug=0 port=8109 host=127.0.0.1 tomcatId=localhost:8109 [ajp13:localhost:8109] channel=channel.socket:localhost:8109 [uri:/B2C/*.jsp] worker=ajp13:localhost:8109 ----- >8 ----- workers2.properties fragment ----- >8 ----- The /path/to/application/conf/jk2.properties file specifies ----- 8< ----- jk2.properties ----- 8< ----- channelSocket.port=8109 ----- >8 ----- jk2.properties ----- >8 ----- When I now start up the Tomcat instance for my application (using the script defined above) and I restart Apache, I can still access the Tomcat examples and I can access directly my application (on HTTP using port 8180). However, if I pass via mod_jk2, I get a "No context configured" error. What did I do wrong ? I suspect an error in my mod_jk2 config, since I can access the application on port 8180. Note that a similar setup, using mod_jk, *does* work for several of our projects already ! TIA Sven -- Sven Bovin, adjunct Projectleider Callata˙ & Wouters Financial Software P. De Dekenstraat 14 B-1040 Brussel --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]