copy
> of each deployed webapp with its own web.xml.
>
> - Tony
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Jan Labanowski [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Thursday, September 13, 2001 2:07 PM
> To: Tony Vinayak
> Cc: Jan Labanowski; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: RE: Ge
-Original Message-
From: Jan Labanowski [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, September 13, 2001 2:07 PM
To: Tony Vinayak
Cc: Jan Labanowski; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Getting Tomcat's Port# in Servlet (using mod_jk)
I am not sure how your workers are done, but usually each worker
September 13, 2001 12:17 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Jan Labanowski;
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: Getting Tomcat's Port# in Servlet (using mod_jk)
>
>
> >From what I know, you cannot, but you can put the ports in the
> context parameters in web.xml and get these paramete
g it. Port# was the first thought as a
unique identifier; anything else I could use ??
regards,
Tony
-Original Message-
From: Jan Labanowski [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, September 13, 2001 12:17 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Jan Labanowski;
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Getting To
>From what I know, you cannot, but you can put the ports in the
context parameters in web.xml and get these parameters from within servlets
and JSP.
connectorPort
8007
which you can retrieve from a servlet by calling:
getServletContext().getInitParameter("connectorPort");
or
Co
Greetings,
Am using Tomcat 3.2 with mod_jk and Apache 1.3.20
In my servlet, doing request.getServerPort() tells me the port on which
Apache is listening (e.g. 80). How can I get to the Port on which Tomcat
connector (ajp13) is listening (e.g. 8007) ??
regards,
Tony