RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

2003-01-07 Thread Vivek Singh

Yes I think I did that too but still I get those page not found on the
default port 80/examples/jsp directory.
 In my previous mail I have attached the files could you pl. check them
for the corrections you guys have told me.


BTW: I unsubscribed yesterday after getting Jan's email as my inbox was
overwhelmed by so many emails. I have subscribed again and hope I will
get the solution today.:-)

~Vivek

-Original Message-
From: Turner, John [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 7:04 PM
To: 'Tomcat Users List'
Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80


Did you include a LoadModule line in Apache's config to load mod_jk?
You
cannot use JK commands in httpd.conf unless you load a module that
understands them.

Perhaps you might want to take a step back, tell us more specifically
what
you want to do, and perhaps consider setting up a test environment that
is
not on a production server so that you can understand how to integrate
Tomcat with Apache without interfering with your colleague's use of your
bugzilla installation.

John

 -Original Message-
 From: Vivek Singh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 6:43 AM
 To: 'Tomcat Users List'
 Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
 
 
 John,
   I don't  remember doing any of these JkMount 
 directives, I
 did not find any reference to this in your website, so there you go
 :-)
 
And I had created a mod_jk.conf file in the path you had told and
 included it at the end of httpd.conf, It had some 
 autogenerated stuff in
 it put in my tomcat when I checked it later on..
 
 After that when I tried restarting apache it gave me this 
 error too
 and did not come up.
 
  Invalid command 'JkWorkersFile', perhaps mis-spelled or defined by a
 module not
 included in the server configuration
 
  Then I echoed blanks in the file and Apache restared pretty well and
 tomcat did not listen on 80.
 
  So let me give a try adding all this...
 
 ~vivek
 
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Turner, John [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
 Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 4:48 PM
 To: ''Tomcat Users List' '
 Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
 
  
 If you're saying that Apache's httpd.conf has no JkMount 
 directives for
 JK,
 then yes, your setup will never work.
 
 If you've setup auto-generation according to my HOWTO, you can check
 your
 Apache config prior to a restart as specified in my HOWTO, with:
 
 /path/to/apache/bin/apachectl configtest
 
 provided you have an Include statement that includes mod_jk.conf.  
 
 If you do have an Include statement, then you can simply 
 restart Apache
 nicely with:
 
 /path/to/apache/bin/apachectl graceful
 
 This will cause Apache to refuse new connection requests, 
 wait until all
 current connection requests are closed, and then reread 
 httpd.conf.  It
 all
 happens in a second or two, it is highly doubtful that anyone 
 would even
 notice.
 
 John
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Vivek Singh
 To: 'Tomcat Users List'
 Sent: 1/6/03 6:04 AM
 Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
 
 Won't stop it!! 
  My team members will kill me if I stop it. I believe one of 
 the reasons
 why Tomcat cannot communicate with Apache is that I have no 
 virtual host
 thing going.  I might be wrong
 
   What do you think?
 
   ~Vivek
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Donie Kelly [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
 Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 4:19 PM
 To: 'Tomcat Users List'
 Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
 
 When you say you can't stop it do you mean won't stop it? or you are
 unable to stop it?
 
 Donie
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Vivek Singh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: 06 January 2003 10:52
 To: 'Tomcat Users List'
 Subject: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
 
 Hi,
 
  I did exactly as in the John Turner's website, Apache
 1.3.27 with mod_jk and tomcat 4.1.18. To sum up here is what is
 happening
 
   1. I already have a Bugzilla running on my server at port80. Can't
 stop it
   2. At port 8080 I can see Tomcat listening. I need it on 80 ( Apache
 is running here)
 
 
 Can anyone help me?
 
 
   Thanks a lot in Advance and thanks John mail for Host Container
 clarifications
 
 
 ~Vivek
 
   
 
 
 
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RE: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80 John-Turner/Jan-Michael/seemanto/Donie/Anyone....

2003-01-07 Thread Vivek Singh

Hi Guys,

  Here is what is happening now with very precise info. I think
I was dealing at a very high level so far. . I am running apache 1.3.19
+ tomcat 4.1.18 and modjk 1.2.1 
I have given the URL down from where I got the entire .so module,no
building was done just a copy from Jakarta web site to the apache module
directory.

Now this is the picture on the linux server.

http://192.168.132.34 is a test page from apache. 
http://192.168.132.34/bugzilla is a perl-CGI application sitting on port
80. 
http://192.168.132.34:8080 tomcat's page
http://192.168.132.34:8080/examples/jsp/index.html shows me JSP samples.

They execute very well

http://192.168.132.34:8080/examples/servlets/index.html shows me
servelets they execute very well.


PAGE NOT FOUND ERRORS for http://192.168.132.34/examples/jsp/index.html
http://192.168.132.34/examples/servlets/index.htm;


Pl. Look for-
   comments.

  I am attaching all the configs file as mentioned by Jan/John. The
mod_jk.conf file is always empty after I deleted the contents,since I
assumed that it would be autogenrated. But it never did.

 I edited the contents of server.xml and insered workers.properties from
John's website, Just retyping the URL again..

http://www.johnturner.com/howto/apache2-tomcat4110-jk-howto.html

Thanks Again.

  Hope to hear a LOT!!
   ~Vivek

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 9:44 PM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

Hi there,
Hi vivek,

John Turner's suggestion is right on. Try setting it up on a 
development box first. This will save you and your colleagues a lot of 
headaches later on. Besides it is good practice. But here are some 
pointers.


 I have shifted the Bugzilla MySQL DB on a different box and 
 ghosted the server too
so I damn well have a contingency plan. Haven't I.
Let's not worry about it anymore If anything goes crazy I will ghost
it again. 
--

1. Log in as root or su to it
su - 

-
   one of the reasons why I write to user groups :-)
--

2. Search for perl
which perl or whereis perl
This should return /usr/bin/perl or /usr/local/bin/perl

--
/usr/bin/perl
--

3. Check the version
/path/to/perl -V
Note this version

--
  5.6.0
--

4. Search for apachectl
cd / ; find . -local -name 'apachectl' -print
This might take a while but should list where apachectl is located

-
 I had apache 1.3.27 from redhat and unluckily rpm does not install bin
directory  anywhere. SO I use servie httpd restart,stop,start and etc to
reread httpd.conf. 

But wait I did find this file in one of the oracle 9i home
./home/oracle/product/9.0.1/Apache/Apache/bin/apachectl on the
same machine, yeah the big box runs almost everything.
   oracle 9i uses this for it's web applications on this server. So I
ran this file with configtest,it said Syntax OK. I did a more on it as
well and it uses 'bash' as the interpreter. (( I see where the perl
thing came from :-)


4a. Search for workers.properties
cd / ; find . -local -name 'workers.properties' -print
Note this location as this is what you'll put in JkWorkersFile later on

-
/usr/local/jakarta-tomcat-4.1.18/conf/jk/workers.properties
  I typed everything from John Turner's site accordingly, changed the
path of module as far as I know it well.
   I had to create this directory jk after after I learned I require it 
 BTW: -local gave invalid predicate on my linux RH 7.1 
-

5. Run apachectl configtest
/path/to/apachectl configtest
It should return 'Syntax OK' if everything is okay. If it returns 'not 
found' check to make sure that the first line of apachectl is your perl 
binary


 IT did OK
---

more apachectl
#!/path/to/perl  -- should match step 2


   no that's sh  in oracle's apache(not on the port 80)



6. Check to make sure that you have the Tomcat connectors installed and 
search for mod_jk.so (JK1 I think) this should be in
$APACHE_HOME/libexec


---
I did not make this module but downloaded it from
Jakarta.apache.org. It was readymade as I did not find any src or binary
to build it. 
  Here is the link from which I got it. I simply copied it to the
/etc/httpd/modules where other apache modules are.
http://jakarta.apache.org/builds/jakarta-tomcat-connectors/jk/release/v1
.2.1/bin/linux/i386/ I downloaded mod_jk-1.3-eapi.so

as per the instruction on this page. 


7. There should be a couple of lines in your httpd conf along the 
following
LoadModule libexec/mod_jk.so
... [snip] ...
AddModule mod_jk.so


 I also did add these line in httpd.conf, I added the Addmodule
line after reading point 7, but it was mod_jk.c not .so
-

Read more on these directives on the apache website httpd.apache.org

8. Check apache's config

RE: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80 John-Turner/Jan-Michael/seemanto/Donie/Anyone....

2003-01-07 Thread Vivek Singh
Hi ,
   I just noticed that when I try opening the server XML file I
get this error. 

End tag 'Host' does not match the start tag 'Engine'. Line 388, Position
9 
 

  /Host
^

   Any feedback!!

 Regards
~Vivek

-Original Message-
From: Vivek Singh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 07, 2003 2:56 PM
To: 'Tomcat Users List'
Subject: RE: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
John-Turner/Jan-Michael/seemanto/Donie/Anyone


Hi Guys,

  Here is what is happening now with very precise info. I think
I was dealing at a very high level so far. . I am running apache 1.3.19
+ tomcat 4.1.18 and modjk 1.2.1 
I have given the URL down from where I got the entire .so module,no
building was done just a copy from Jakarta web site to the apache module
directory.

Now this is the picture on the linux server.

http://192.168.132.34 is a test page from apache. 
http://192.168.132.34/bugzilla is a perl-CGI application sitting on port
80. 
http://192.168.132.34:8080 tomcat's page
http://192.168.132.34:8080/examples/jsp/index.html shows me JSP samples.

They execute very well

http://192.168.132.34:8080/examples/servlets/index.html shows me
servelets they execute very well.


PAGE NOT FOUND ERRORS for http://192.168.132.34/examples/jsp/index.html
http://192.168.132.34/examples/servlets/index.htm;


Pl. Look for-
   comments.

  I am attaching all the configs file as mentioned by Jan/John. The
mod_jk.conf file is always empty after I deleted the contents,since I
assumed that it would be autogenrated. But it never did.

 I edited the contents of server.xml and insered workers.properties from
John's website, Just retyping the URL again..

http://www.johnturner.com/howto/apache2-tomcat4110-jk-howto.html

Thanks Again.

  Hope to hear a LOT!!
   ~Vivek

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 9:44 PM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

Hi there,
Hi vivek,

John Turner's suggestion is right on. Try setting it up on a 
development box first. This will save you and your colleagues a lot of 
headaches later on. Besides it is good practice. But here are some 
pointers.


 I have shifted the Bugzilla MySQL DB on a different box and 
 ghosted the server too
so I damn well have a contingency plan. Haven't I.
Let's not worry about it anymore If anything goes crazy I will ghost
it again. 
--

1. Log in as root or su to it
su - 

-
   one of the reasons why I write to user groups :-)
--

2. Search for perl
which perl or whereis perl
This should return /usr/bin/perl or /usr/local/bin/perl

--
/usr/bin/perl
--

3. Check the version
/path/to/perl -V
Note this version

--
  5.6.0
--

4. Search for apachectl
cd / ; find . -local -name 'apachectl' -print
This might take a while but should list where apachectl is located

-
 I had apache 1.3.27 from redhat and unluckily rpm does not install bin
directory  anywhere. SO I use servie httpd restart,stop,start and etc to
reread httpd.conf. 

But wait I did find this file in one of the oracle 9i home
./home/oracle/product/9.0.1/Apache/Apache/bin/apachectl on the
same machine, yeah the big box runs almost everything.
   oracle 9i uses this for it's web applications on this server. So I
ran this file with configtest,it said Syntax OK. I did a more on it as
well and it uses 'bash' as the interpreter. (( I see where the perl
thing came from :-)


4a. Search for workers.properties
cd / ; find . -local -name 'workers.properties' -print
Note this location as this is what you'll put in JkWorkersFile later on

-
/usr/local/jakarta-tomcat-4.1.18/conf/jk/workers.properties
  I typed everything from John Turner's site accordingly, changed the
path of module as far as I know it well.
   I had to create this directory jk after after I learned I require it 
 BTW: -local gave invalid predicate on my linux RH 7.1 
-

5. Run apachectl configtest
/path/to/apachectl configtest
It should return 'Syntax OK' if everything is okay. If it returns 'not 
found' check to make sure that the first line of apachectl is your perl 
binary


 IT did OK
---

more apachectl
#!/path/to/perl  -- should match step 2


   no that's sh  in oracle's apache(not on the port 80)



6. Check to make sure that you have the Tomcat connectors installed and 
search for mod_jk.so (JK1 I think) this should be in
$APACHE_HOME/libexec


---
I did not make this module but downloaded it from
Jakarta.apache.org. It was readymade as I did not find any src or binary
to build it. 
  Here is the link from which I got it. I simply copied it to the
/etc/httpd/modules where other apache modules are.
http://jakarta.apache.org/builds/jakarta-tomcat-connectors/jk/release/v1
.2.1/bin/linux/i386

RE: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80 John/Jan-Michael/seemanto/Donie/....

2003-01-07 Thread Vivek Singh
Hi Guys,

  Here is what is happening now with very precise info. I think
I was dealing at a very high level so far.
. I am running apache 1.3.19 + tomcat 4.1.18 and modjk 1.2.1 
I have given the URL down from where I got the entire .so module,no
building was done just a copy from Jakarta web site to the apache module
directory.

Now this is the picture on the linux server.

http://192.168.132.34 is a test page from apache.
http://192.168.132.34/bugzilla is a perl-CGI application sitting on port
80.
http://192.168.132.34:8080 tomcat's page
http://192.168.132.34:8080/examples/jsp/index.html shows me JSP samples.
They execute very well

http://192.168.132.34:8080/examples/servlets/index.html shows me
servelets they execute very well.


PAGE NOT FOUND ERRORS for
http://192.168.132.34/examples/jsp/index.html
http://192.168.132.34/examples/servlets/index.htm;


Pl. Look for-
   comments.

  I am attaching all the configs file as mentioned by Jan/John. The
mod_jk.conf file is always empty after I deleted the contents,since I
assumed that it would be autogenrated. But it never did.

 I edited the contents of server.xml and insered workers.properties from
John's website, Just retyping the URL again..

http://www.johnturner.com/howto/apache2-tomcat4110-jk-howto.html

Thanks Again.

  Hope to hear a LOT!!
   ~Vivek

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 9:44 PM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

Hi there,
Hi vivek,

John Turner's suggestion is right on. Try setting it up on a 
development box first. This will save you and your colleagues a lot of 
headaches later on. Besides it is good practice. But here are some 
pointers.

 I have shifted the Bugzilla MySQL DB on a different box and
ghosted the server too
.
so I damn well have a contingency plan. Haven't I.
Let's not worry about it anymore If anything goes crazy I will ghost
it again. 
--

1. Log in as root or su to it
su - 

-
   one of the reasons why I write to user groups :-)
--

2. Search for perl
which perl or whereis perl
This should return /usr/bin/perl or /usr/local/bin/perl

--
/usr/bin/perl
--

3. Check the version
/path/to/perl -V
Note this version

--
  5.6.0
--

4. Search for apachectl
cd / ; find . -local -name 'apachectl' -print
This might take a while but should list where apachectl is located

-
 I had apache 1.3.27 from redhat and unluckily rpm does not install bin
directory  anywhere. SO I use servie httpd restart,stop,start and etc to
reread httpd.conf. 

But wait I did find this file in one of the oracle 9i home
./home/oracle/product/9.0.1/Apache/Apache/bin/apachectl on the
same machine, yeah the big box runs almost everything.
   oracle 9i uses this for it's web applications on this server. So I
ran this file with configtest,it said Syntax OK. I did a more on it as
well and it uses 'bash' as the interpreter. (( I see where the perl
thing came from :-)


4a. Search for workers.properties
cd / ; find . -local -name 'workers.properties' -print
Note this location as this is what you'll put in JkWorkersFile later on

-
/usr/local/jakarta-tomcat-4.1.18/conf/jk/workers.properties
  I typed everything from John Turner's site accordingly, changed the
path of module as far as I know it well.
   I had to create this directory jk after after I learned I require it 
 BTW: -local gave invalid predicate on my linux RH 7.1 
-

5. Run apachectl configtest
/path/to/apachectl configtest
It should return 'Syntax OK' if everything is okay. If it returns 'not 
found' check to make sure that the first line of apachectl is your perl 
binary


 IT did OK
---

more apachectl
#!/path/to/perl  -- should match step 2


   no that's sh  in oracle's apache(not on the port 80)



6. Check to make sure that you have the Tomcat connectors installed and 
search for mod_jk.so (JK1 I think) this should be in
$APACHE_HOME/libexec


---
I did not make this module but downloaded it from
Jakarta.apache.org. It was readymade as I did not find any src or binary
to build it. 
  Here is the link from which I got it. I simply copied it to the
/etc/httpd/modules where other apache modules are.
http://jakarta.apache.org/builds/jakarta-tomcat-connectors/jk/release/v1
.2.1/bin/linux/i386/ I downloaded mod_jk-1.3-eapi.so

as per the instruction on this page. 


7. There should be a couple of lines in your httpd conf along the 
following
LoadModule libexec/mod_jk.so
... [snip] ...
AddModule mod_jk.so


 I also did add these line in httpd.conf, I added the Addmodule
line after reading point 7, but it was mod_jk.c not .so
-

Read more on these directives on the apache website httpd.apache.org

8. Check apache's config

RE: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80 John-Turner/Jan-Michael/seemanto/Donie/Anyone....

2003-01-07 Thread Turner, John
 
Yeah, your server.xml file is screwed up, which is why you aren't getting
anything in mod_jk.conf, which is why Apache doesn't have any JK directives,
which is why Apache doesn't understand what to do with JSP and servlet URLs.

Fix your server.xml, sounds like you have a tag out of place or you have a
tag terminated incorrectly.  If everything is fixed, you WILL ALWAYS get
content in mod_jk.conf.  If you don't, if mod_jk.conf is empty, there is
something seriously wrong on the Tomcat side in server.xml.

You can always just add the JK directives to httpd.conf directly, there is a
link to a mod_jk.conf file on my site that has what you need or will at
least provide a guideline.

John

-Original Message-
From: Vivek Singh
To: 'Tomcat Users List'; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 1/7/03 4:35 AM
Subject: RE: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
John-Turner/Jan-Michael/seemanto/Donie/Anyone

Hi ,
   I just noticed that when I try opening the server XML file I
get this error. 

End tag 'Host' does not match the start tag 'Engine'. Line 388, Position
9 
 

  /Host
^

   Any feedback!!

 Regards
~Vivek

-Original Message-
From: Vivek Singh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 07, 2003 2:56 PM
To: 'Tomcat Users List'
Subject: RE: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
John-Turner/Jan-Michael/seemanto/Donie/Anyone


Hi Guys,

  Here is what is happening now with very precise info. I think
I was dealing at a very high level so far. . I am running apache 1.3.19
+ tomcat 4.1.18 and modjk 1.2.1 
I have given the URL down from where I got the entire .so module,no
building was done just a copy from Jakarta web site to the apache module
directory.

Now this is the picture on the linux server.

http://192.168.132.34 is a test page from apache. 
http://192.168.132.34/bugzilla is a perl-CGI application sitting on port
80. 
http://192.168.132.34:8080 tomcat's page
http://192.168.132.34:8080/examples/jsp/index.html shows me JSP samples.

They execute very well

http://192.168.132.34:8080/examples/servlets/index.html shows me
servelets they execute very well.


PAGE NOT FOUND ERRORS for http://192.168.132.34/examples/jsp/index.html
http://192.168.132.34/examples/servlets/index.htm;


Pl. Look for-
   comments.

  I am attaching all the configs file as mentioned by Jan/John. The
mod_jk.conf file is always empty after I deleted the contents,since I
assumed that it would be autogenrated. But it never did.

 I edited the contents of server.xml and insered workers.properties from
John's website, Just retyping the URL again..

http://www.johnturner.com/howto/apache2-tomcat4110-jk-howto.html

Thanks Again.

  Hope to hear a LOT!!
   ~Vivek

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 9:44 PM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

Hi there,
Hi vivek,

John Turner's suggestion is right on. Try setting it up on a 
development box first. This will save you and your colleagues a lot of 
headaches later on. Besides it is good practice. But here are some 
pointers.


 I have shifted the Bugzilla MySQL DB on a different box and 
 ghosted the server too
so I damn well have a contingency plan. Haven't I.
Let's not worry about it anymore If anything goes crazy I will ghost
it again. 
--

1. Log in as root or su to it
su - 

-
   one of the reasons why I write to user groups :-)
--

2. Search for perl
which perl or whereis perl
This should return /usr/bin/perl or /usr/local/bin/perl

--
/usr/bin/perl
--

3. Check the version
/path/to/perl -V
Note this version

--
  5.6.0
--

4. Search for apachectl
cd / ; find . -local -name 'apachectl' -print
This might take a while but should list where apachectl is located

-
 I had apache 1.3.27 from redhat and unluckily rpm does not install bin
directory  anywhere. SO I use servie httpd restart,stop,start and etc to
reread httpd.conf. 

But wait I did find this file in one of the oracle 9i home
./home/oracle/product/9.0.1/Apache/Apache/bin/apachectl on the
same machine, yeah the big box runs almost everything.
   oracle 9i uses this for it's web applications on this server. So I
ran this file with configtest,it said Syntax OK. I did a more on it as
well and it uses 'bash' as the interpreter. (( I see where the perl
thing came from :-)


4a. Search for workers.properties
cd / ; find . -local -name 'workers.properties' -print
Note this location as this is what you'll put in JkWorkersFile later on

-
/usr/local/jakarta-tomcat-4.1.18/conf/jk/workers.properties
  I typed everything from John Turner's site accordingly, changed the
path of module as far as I know it well.
   I had to create this directory jk after after I learned I require it 
 BTW: -local gave invalid predicate on my linux RH 7.1

RE: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80 John-Turner/Jan-Michael/seemanto/Donie/Anyone....

2003-01-07 Thread Vivek Singh
Hi John,
  
  Can you just point where the mistake is? The other change was
understood pretty well.
  Actually, I am new to XML!


 !-- Define the default virtual host --
 Host name=192.168.132.34 debug=0 appBase=webapps
  unpackWARs=true autoDeploy=true/
 Listener className=org.apache.ajp.tomcat4.config.ApacheConfig
append=true
forwardAll=false modJk=/usr/lib/apache/mod_jk.so
   workersConfig=/usr/local/tomcat/conf/jk/workers.properties /


  !-- Normally, users must authenticate themselves to each web app
   individually.  Uncomment the following entry if you would like
   a user to be authenticated the first time they encounter a



-Original Message-
From: Turner, John [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 07, 2003 4:49 PM
To: ''Tomcat Users List' '
Subject: RE: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
John-Turner/Jan-Michael/seemanto/Donie/Anyone

 
Yeah, your server.xml file is screwed up, which is why you aren't
getting
anything in mod_jk.conf, which is why Apache doesn't have any JK
directives,
which is why Apache doesn't understand what to do with JSP and servlet
URLs.

Fix your server.xml, sounds like you have a tag out of place or you have
a
tag terminated incorrectly.  If everything is fixed, you WILL ALWAYS get
content in mod_jk.conf.  If you don't, if mod_jk.conf is empty, there is
something seriously wrong on the Tomcat side in server.xml.

You can always just add the JK directives to httpd.conf directly, there
is a
link to a mod_jk.conf file on my site that has what you need or will at
least provide a guideline.

John

-Original Message-
From: Vivek Singh
To: 'Tomcat Users List'; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 1/7/03 4:35 AM
Subject: RE: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
John-Turner/Jan-Michael/seemanto/Donie/Anyone

Hi ,
   I just noticed that when I try opening the server XML file I
get this error. 

End tag 'Host' does not match the start tag 'Engine'. Line 388, Position
9 
 

  /Host
^

   Any feedback!!

 Regards
~Vivek

-Original Message-
From: Vivek Singh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 07, 2003 2:56 PM
To: 'Tomcat Users List'
Subject: RE: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
John-Turner/Jan-Michael/seemanto/Donie/Anyone


Hi Guys,

  Here is what is happening now with very precise info. I think
I was dealing at a very high level so far. . I am running apache 1.3.19
+ tomcat 4.1.18 and modjk 1.2.1 
I have given the URL down from where I got the entire .so module,no
building was done just a copy from Jakarta web site to the apache module
directory.

Now this is the picture on the linux server.

http://192.168.132.34 is a test page from apache. 
http://192.168.132.34/bugzilla is a perl-CGI application sitting on port
80. 
http://192.168.132.34:8080 tomcat's page
http://192.168.132.34:8080/examples/jsp/index.html shows me JSP samples.

They execute very well

http://192.168.132.34:8080/examples/servlets/index.html shows me
servelets they execute very well.


PAGE NOT FOUND ERRORS for http://192.168.132.34/examples/jsp/index.html
http://192.168.132.34/examples/servlets/index.htm;


Pl. Look for-
   comments.

  I am attaching all the configs file as mentioned by Jan/John. The
mod_jk.conf file is always empty after I deleted the contents,since I
assumed that it would be autogenrated. But it never did.

 I edited the contents of server.xml and insered workers.properties from
John's website, Just retyping the URL again..

http://www.johnturner.com/howto/apache2-tomcat4110-jk-howto.html

Thanks Again.

  Hope to hear a LOT!!
   ~Vivek

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 9:44 PM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

Hi there,
Hi vivek,

John Turner's suggestion is right on. Try setting it up on a 
development box first. This will save you and your colleagues a lot of 
headaches later on. Besides it is good practice. But here are some 
pointers.


 I have shifted the Bugzilla MySQL DB on a different box and 
 ghosted the server too
so I damn well have a contingency plan. Haven't I.
Let's not worry about it anymore If anything goes crazy I will ghost
it again. 
--

1. Log in as root or su to it
su - 

-
   one of the reasons why I write to user groups :-)
--

2. Search for perl
which perl or whereis perl
This should return /usr/bin/perl or /usr/local/bin/perl

--
/usr/bin/perl
--

3. Check the version
/path/to/perl -V
Note this version

--
  5.6.0
--

4. Search for apachectl
cd / ; find . -local -name 'apachectl' -print
This might take a while but should list where apachectl is located

-
 I had apache 1.3.27 from redhat and unluckily rpm does not install bin
directory  anywhere. SO I use servie httpd restart,stop,start and etc to
reread

RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

2003-01-06 Thread Donie Kelly
When you say you can't stop it do you mean won't stop it? or you are
unable to stop it?

Donie


-Original Message-
From: Vivek Singh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 06 January 2003 10:52
To: 'Tomcat Users List'
Subject: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

Hi,

 I did exactly as in the John Turner's website, Apache
1.3.27 with mod_jk and tomcat 4.1.18. To sum up here is what is
happening

  1. I already have a Bugzilla running on my server at port80. Can't
stop it
  2. At port 8080 I can see Tomcat listening. I need it on 80 ( Apache
is running here)


Can anyone help me?


  Thanks a lot in Advance and thanks John mail for Host Container
clarifications


~Vivek

  



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RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

2003-01-06 Thread Vivek Singh
Won't stop it!! 
 My team members will kill me if I stop it. I believe one of the reasons
why Tomcat cannot communicate with Apache is that I have no virtual host
thing going.  I might be wrong

  What do you think?

  ~Vivek

-Original Message-
From: Donie Kelly [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 4:19 PM
To: 'Tomcat Users List'
Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

When you say you can't stop it do you mean won't stop it? or you are
unable to stop it?

Donie


-Original Message-
From: Vivek Singh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 06 January 2003 10:52
To: 'Tomcat Users List'
Subject: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

Hi,

 I did exactly as in the John Turner's website, Apache
1.3.27 with mod_jk and tomcat 4.1.18. To sum up here is what is
happening

  1. I already have a Bugzilla running on my server at port80. Can't
stop it
  2. At port 8080 I can see Tomcat listening. I need it on 80 ( Apache
is running here)


Can anyone help me?


  Thanks a lot in Advance and thanks John mail for Host Container
clarifications


~Vivek

  



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'privileged' and 'confidential' and intended for use only by the individual
 or entity to which it is addressed. You are notified that any use, copying 
or dissemination of the information contained in the E-MAIL in any manner 
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RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

2003-01-06 Thread Turner, John
 
If you're saying that Apache's httpd.conf has no JkMount directives for JK,
then yes, your setup will never work.

If you've setup auto-generation according to my HOWTO, you can check your
Apache config prior to a restart as specified in my HOWTO, with:

/path/to/apache/bin/apachectl configtest

provided you have an Include statement that includes mod_jk.conf.  

If you do have an Include statement, then you can simply restart Apache
nicely with:

/path/to/apache/bin/apachectl graceful

This will cause Apache to refuse new connection requests, wait until all
current connection requests are closed, and then reread httpd.conf.  It all
happens in a second or two, it is highly doubtful that anyone would even
notice.

John

-Original Message-
From: Vivek Singh
To: 'Tomcat Users List'
Sent: 1/6/03 6:04 AM
Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

Won't stop it!! 
 My team members will kill me if I stop it. I believe one of the reasons
why Tomcat cannot communicate with Apache is that I have no virtual host
thing going.  I might be wrong

  What do you think?

  ~Vivek

-Original Message-
From: Donie Kelly [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 4:19 PM
To: 'Tomcat Users List'
Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

When you say you can't stop it do you mean won't stop it? or you are
unable to stop it?

Donie


-Original Message-
From: Vivek Singh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 06 January 2003 10:52
To: 'Tomcat Users List'
Subject: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

Hi,

 I did exactly as in the John Turner's website, Apache
1.3.27 with mod_jk and tomcat 4.1.18. To sum up here is what is
happening

  1. I already have a Bugzilla running on my server at port80. Can't
stop it
  2. At port 8080 I can see Tomcat listening. I need it on 80 ( Apache
is running here)


Can anyone help me?


  Thanks a lot in Advance and thanks John mail for Host Container
clarifications


~Vivek

  



--
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mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail:
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 Wipro_Disclaimer.txt  ATT128036.txt 

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RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

2003-01-06 Thread Vivek Singh
John,
  I don't  remember doing any of these JkMount directives, I
did not find any reference to this in your website, so there you go
:-)

   And I had created a mod_jk.conf file in the path you had told and
included it at the end of httpd.conf, It had some autogenerated stuff in
it put in my tomcat when I checked it later on..

After that when I tried restarting apache it gave me this error too
and did not come up.

 Invalid command 'JkWorkersFile', perhaps mis-spelled or defined by a
module not
included in the server configuration

 Then I echoed blanks in the file and Apache restared pretty well and
tomcat did not listen on 80.

 So let me give a try adding all this...

~vivek



-Original Message-
From: Turner, John [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 4:48 PM
To: ''Tomcat Users List' '
Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

 
If you're saying that Apache's httpd.conf has no JkMount directives for
JK,
then yes, your setup will never work.

If you've setup auto-generation according to my HOWTO, you can check
your
Apache config prior to a restart as specified in my HOWTO, with:

/path/to/apache/bin/apachectl configtest

provided you have an Include statement that includes mod_jk.conf.  

If you do have an Include statement, then you can simply restart Apache
nicely with:

/path/to/apache/bin/apachectl graceful

This will cause Apache to refuse new connection requests, wait until all
current connection requests are closed, and then reread httpd.conf.  It
all
happens in a second or two, it is highly doubtful that anyone would even
notice.

John

-Original Message-
From: Vivek Singh
To: 'Tomcat Users List'
Sent: 1/6/03 6:04 AM
Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

Won't stop it!! 
 My team members will kill me if I stop it. I believe one of the reasons
why Tomcat cannot communicate with Apache is that I have no virtual host
thing going.  I might be wrong

  What do you think?

  ~Vivek

-Original Message-
From: Donie Kelly [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 4:19 PM
To: 'Tomcat Users List'
Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

When you say you can't stop it do you mean won't stop it? or you are
unable to stop it?

Donie


-Original Message-
From: Vivek Singh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 06 January 2003 10:52
To: 'Tomcat Users List'
Subject: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

Hi,

 I did exactly as in the John Turner's website, Apache
1.3.27 with mod_jk and tomcat 4.1.18. To sum up here is what is
happening

  1. I already have a Bugzilla running on my server at port80. Can't
stop it
  2. At port 8080 I can see Tomcat listening. I need it on 80 ( Apache
is running here)


Can anyone help me?


  Thanks a lot in Advance and thanks John mail for Host Container
clarifications


~Vivek

  



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'privileged' and 'confidential' and intended for use only by the individual
 or entity to which it is addressed. You are notified that any use, copying 
or dissemination of the information contained in the E-MAIL in any manner 
whatsoever is strictly prohibited.

***


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RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

2003-01-06 Thread Vivek Singh
I can't figure out where is this apachectl. I have no idea about JkMount
too.
Here is the current status

   1. I have a Bugzilla at port 80.
   2. I have a tomcat at port 8080.

Can someone help me.

~Vivek


-Original Message-
From: Turner, John [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 4:48 PM
To: ''Tomcat Users List' '
Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

 
If you're saying that Apache's httpd.conf has no JkMount directives for
JK,
then yes, your setup will never work.

If you've setup auto-generation according to my HOWTO, you can check
your
Apache config prior to a restart as specified in my HOWTO, with:

/path/to/apache/bin/apachectl configtest

provided you have an Include statement that includes mod_jk.conf.  

If you do have an Include statement, then you can simply restart Apache
nicely with:

/path/to/apache/bin/apachectl graceful

This will cause Apache to refuse new connection requests, wait until all
current connection requests are closed, and then reread httpd.conf.  It
all
happens in a second or two, it is highly doubtful that anyone would even
notice.

John

-Original Message-
From: Vivek Singh
To: 'Tomcat Users List'
Sent: 1/6/03 6:04 AM
Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

Won't stop it!! 
 My team members will kill me if I stop it. I believe one of the reasons
why Tomcat cannot communicate with Apache is that I have no virtual host
thing going.  I might be wrong

  What do you think?

  ~Vivek

-Original Message-
From: Donie Kelly [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 4:19 PM
To: 'Tomcat Users List'
Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

When you say you can't stop it do you mean won't stop it? or you are
unable to stop it?

Donie


-Original Message-
From: Vivek Singh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 06 January 2003 10:52
To: 'Tomcat Users List'
Subject: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

Hi,

 I did exactly as in the John Turner's website, Apache
1.3.27 with mod_jk and tomcat 4.1.18. To sum up here is what is
happening

  1. I already have a Bugzilla running on my server at port80. Can't
stop it
  2. At port 8080 I can see Tomcat listening. I need it on 80 ( Apache
is running here)


Can anyone help me?


  Thanks a lot in Advance and thanks John mail for Host Container
clarifications


~Vivek

  



--
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mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail:
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 Wipro_Disclaimer.txt  ATT128036.txt 

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 Information contained in this E-MAIL being proprietary to Wipro Limited is 
'privileged' 
and 'confidential' and intended for use only by the individual or entity to which it 
is 
addressed. You are notified that any use, copying or dissemination of the information 
contained in the E-MAIL in any manner whatsoever is strictly prohibited.







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RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

2003-01-06 Thread Turner, John

Please understand that we are operating in the dark.  In one of your
previous posts, and in your private email to me off-list, you indicated that
you followed my HOWTO exactly.

If that is true, then you have:

1. tomcat set on 8080, with a JK-compatible connector listening on 8009, and
ApacheConfig Listeners in server.xml that cause a file called mod_jk.conf to
be created in $CATALINA_HOME/conf/auto.  This file has statements in it that
look like this:

JkMount /some-url/* ajp13

2. a workers.properties file created as specified in my HOWTO and located in
$CATALINA_HOME/conf/jk

3. an Include directive in Apache's httpd.conf that specifies
/path/to/tomcat/conf/auto/mod_jk.conf.

If any/all of the above are not true, then you have to describe to us
exactly what you do have, and exactly what you did different than my HOWTO.

Please also specify:  Apache version, Tomcat version, OS platform, and
where/how you got mod_jk.so.  Please post your workers.properties file, too.
Please also tell us what URL you want to access (some.host.com/myApp or
whatever) so that we can check that against your configuration.

To answer your questions, apachectl is a binary file in Apache's bin
directory.  If you don't have it, you are either running Windows or you have
a really old version of Apache, which might be causing problems.

JkMount is a directive to mod_jk that tells Apache to send a particular URL
to Tomcat for resolution.  If you don't have JkMount anywhere, nothing will
ever get to Tomcat.

John

 -Original Message-
 From: Vivek Singh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 6:55 AM
 To: 'Tomcat Users List'
 Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
 
 
 I can't figure out where is this apachectl. I have no idea 
 about JkMount
 too.
 Here is the current status
 
1. I have a Bugzilla at port 80.
2. I have a tomcat at port 8080.
 
 Can someone help me.
 
 ~Vivek
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Turner, John [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
 Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 4:48 PM
 To: ''Tomcat Users List' '
 Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
 
  
 If you're saying that Apache's httpd.conf has no JkMount 
 directives for
 JK,
 then yes, your setup will never work.
 
 If you've setup auto-generation according to my HOWTO, you can check
 your
 Apache config prior to a restart as specified in my HOWTO, with:
 
 /path/to/apache/bin/apachectl configtest
 
 provided you have an Include statement that includes mod_jk.conf.  
 
 If you do have an Include statement, then you can simply 
 restart Apache
 nicely with:
 
 /path/to/apache/bin/apachectl graceful
 
 This will cause Apache to refuse new connection requests, 
 wait until all
 current connection requests are closed, and then reread 
 httpd.conf.  It
 all
 happens in a second or two, it is highly doubtful that anyone 
 would even
 notice.
 
 John
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Vivek Singh
 To: 'Tomcat Users List'
 Sent: 1/6/03 6:04 AM
 Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
 
 Won't stop it!! 
  My team members will kill me if I stop it. I believe one of 
 the reasons
 why Tomcat cannot communicate with Apache is that I have no 
 virtual host
 thing going.  I might be wrong
 
   What do you think?
 
   ~Vivek
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Donie Kelly [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
 Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 4:19 PM
 To: 'Tomcat Users List'
 Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
 
 When you say you can't stop it do you mean won't stop it? or you are
 unable to stop it?
 
 Donie
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Vivek Singh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: 06 January 2003 10:52
 To: 'Tomcat Users List'
 Subject: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
 
 Hi,
 
  I did exactly as in the John Turner's website, Apache
 1.3.27 with mod_jk and tomcat 4.1.18. To sum up here is what is
 happening
 
   1. I already have a Bugzilla running on my server at port80. Can't
 stop it
   2. At port 8080 I can see Tomcat listening. I need it on 80 ( Apache
 is running here)
 
 
 Can anyone help me?
 
 
   Thanks a lot in Advance and thanks John mail for Host Container
 clarifications
 
 
 ~Vivek
 
   
 
 
 
 --
 To unsubscribe, e-mail:
 mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 For additional commands, e-mail:
 mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
  Wipro_Disclaimer.txt  ATT128036.txt 
 
 --
 To unsubscribe, e-mail:
 mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 For additional commands, e-mail:
 mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 

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RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

2003-01-06 Thread Turner, John

Did you include a LoadModule line in Apache's config to load mod_jk?  You
cannot use JK commands in httpd.conf unless you load a module that
understands them.

Perhaps you might want to take a step back, tell us more specifically what
you want to do, and perhaps consider setting up a test environment that is
not on a production server so that you can understand how to integrate
Tomcat with Apache without interfering with your colleague's use of your
bugzilla installation.

John

 -Original Message-
 From: Vivek Singh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 6:43 AM
 To: 'Tomcat Users List'
 Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
 
 
 John,
   I don't  remember doing any of these JkMount 
 directives, I
 did not find any reference to this in your website, so there you go
 :-)
 
And I had created a mod_jk.conf file in the path you had told and
 included it at the end of httpd.conf, It had some 
 autogenerated stuff in
 it put in my tomcat when I checked it later on..
 
 After that when I tried restarting apache it gave me this 
 error too
 and did not come up.
 
  Invalid command 'JkWorkersFile', perhaps mis-spelled or defined by a
 module not
 included in the server configuration
 
  Then I echoed blanks in the file and Apache restared pretty well and
 tomcat did not listen on 80.
 
  So let me give a try adding all this...
 
 ~vivek
 
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Turner, John [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
 Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 4:48 PM
 To: ''Tomcat Users List' '
 Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
 
  
 If you're saying that Apache's httpd.conf has no JkMount 
 directives for
 JK,
 then yes, your setup will never work.
 
 If you've setup auto-generation according to my HOWTO, you can check
 your
 Apache config prior to a restart as specified in my HOWTO, with:
 
 /path/to/apache/bin/apachectl configtest
 
 provided you have an Include statement that includes mod_jk.conf.  
 
 If you do have an Include statement, then you can simply 
 restart Apache
 nicely with:
 
 /path/to/apache/bin/apachectl graceful
 
 This will cause Apache to refuse new connection requests, 
 wait until all
 current connection requests are closed, and then reread 
 httpd.conf.  It
 all
 happens in a second or two, it is highly doubtful that anyone 
 would even
 notice.
 
 John
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Vivek Singh
 To: 'Tomcat Users List'
 Sent: 1/6/03 6:04 AM
 Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
 
 Won't stop it!! 
  My team members will kill me if I stop it. I believe one of 
 the reasons
 why Tomcat cannot communicate with Apache is that I have no 
 virtual host
 thing going.  I might be wrong
 
   What do you think?
 
   ~Vivek
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Donie Kelly [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
 Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 4:19 PM
 To: 'Tomcat Users List'
 Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
 
 When you say you can't stop it do you mean won't stop it? or you are
 unable to stop it?
 
 Donie
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Vivek Singh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: 06 January 2003 10:52
 To: 'Tomcat Users List'
 Subject: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
 
 Hi,
 
  I did exactly as in the John Turner's website, Apache
 1.3.27 with mod_jk and tomcat 4.1.18. To sum up here is what is
 happening
 
   1. I already have a Bugzilla running on my server at port80. Can't
 stop it
   2. At port 8080 I can see Tomcat listening. I need it on 80 ( Apache
 is running here)
 
 
 Can anyone help me?
 
 
   Thanks a lot in Advance and thanks John mail for Host Container
 clarifications
 
 
 ~Vivek
 
   
 
 
 
 --
 To unsubscribe, e-mail:
 mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 For additional commands, e-mail:
 mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
  Wipro_Disclaimer.txt  ATT128036.txt 
 
 --
 To unsubscribe, e-mail:
 mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 For additional commands, e-mail:
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Re: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

2003-01-06 Thread jmong
Hi there,
Hi vivek,

John Turner's suggestion is right on. Try setting it up on a 
development box first. This will save you and your colleagues a lot of 
headaches later on. Besides it is good practice. But here are some 
pointers.

1. Log in as root or su to it
su - 

2. Search for perl
which perl or whereis perl
This should return /usr/bin/perl or /usr/local/bin/perl

3. Check the version
/path/to/perl -V
Note this version

4. Search for apachectl
cd / ; find . -local -name 'apachectl' -print
This might take a while but should list where apachectl is located

4a. Search for workers.properties
cd / ; find . -local -name 'workers.properties' -print
Note this location as this is what you'll put in JkWorkersFile later on

5. Run apachectl configtest
/path/to/apachectl configtest
It should return 'Syntax OK' if everything is okay. If it returns 'not 
found' check to make sure that the first line of apachectl is your perl 
binary

more apachectl
#!/path/to/perl  -- should match step 2

6. Check to make sure that you have the Tomcat connectors installed and 
search for mod_jk.so (JK1 I think) this should be in
$APACHE_HOME/libexec

7. There should be a couple of lines in your httpd conf along the 
following
LoadModule libexec/mod_jk.so
... [snip] ...
AddModule mod_jk.so

Read more on these directives on the apache website httpd.apache.org

8. Check apache's config and Restart apache
/path/to/apachectl configtest
/path/to/apachectl graceful

9. If this doesn't return an error, proceed with John's suggestions 
below.

As a side note, to configure tomcat to respond to 80 with apache you 
have to set up JKMount points and redirect jsp requests to tomcat 
(that's what the mod_jk.so is for)

Something like this in httpd.conf

JKWorkersFile '/path/to/workers.properties'
JKLogLevel debug

JKMount /examples/*.jsp tomcat1
JKMount /examples/servlet/*.jsp tomcat1 

Make sure that the tomcat1 worker exists in workers.properties where 
you'll have to declare the worker and set some properties

I'm basing this off of tomcat 3.x it might have changed for 4.x

Try running a search off google also for tomcat mod_jk tutorial or 
just visit jakarta.apache.org

Hope that helps.

Jan-Michael




- Original Message -
From: Turner, John [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Monday, January 6, 2003 5:33 am
Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

 
 Did you include a LoadModule line in Apache's config to load 
 mod_jk?  You
 cannot use JK commands in httpd.conf unless you load a module that
 understands them.
 
 Perhaps you might want to take a step back, tell us more 
 specifically what
 you want to do, and perhaps consider setting up a test environment 
 that is
 not on a production server so that you can understand how to integrate
 Tomcat with Apache without interfering with your colleague's use 
 of your
 bugzilla installation.
 
 John
 
  -Original Message-
  From: Vivek Singh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
  Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 6:43 AM
  To: 'Tomcat Users List'
  Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
  
  
  John,
I don't  remember doing any of these JkMount 
  directives, I
  did not find any reference to this in your website, so there you go
  :-)
  
 And I had created a mod_jk.conf file in the path you had told and
  included it at the end of httpd.conf, It had some 
  autogenerated stuff in
  it put in my tomcat when I checked it later on..
  
  After that when I tried restarting apache it gave me this 
  error too
  and did not come up.
  
   Invalid command 'JkWorkersFile', perhaps mis-spelled or defined 
 by a
  module not
  included in the server configuration
  
   Then I echoed blanks in the file and Apache restared pretty 
 well and
  tomcat did not listen on 80.
  
   So let me give a try adding all this...
  
  ~vivek
  
  
  
  -Original Message-
  From: Turner, John [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
  Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 4:48 PM
  To: ''Tomcat Users List' '
  Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
  
   
  If you're saying that Apache's httpd.conf has no JkMount 
  directives for
  JK,
  then yes, your setup will never work.
  
  If you've setup auto-generation according to my HOWTO, you can check
  your
  Apache config prior to a restart as specified in my HOWTO, with:
  
  /path/t 
  provided you have an Include statement that includes 
 mod_jk.conf.  
  
  If you do have an Include statement, then you can simply 
  restart Apache
  nicely with:
  
  /path/t 
  This will cause Apache to refuse new connection requests, 
  wait until all
  current connection requests are closed, and then reread 
  httpd.conf.  It
  all
  happens in a second or two, it is highly doubtful that anyone 
  would even
  notice.
  
  John
  
  -Original Message-
  From: Vivek Singh
  To: 'Tomcat Users List'
  Sent: 1/6/03 6:04 AM
  Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
  
  Won't stop it!! 
   My team members will kill me if I stop it. I believe one of 
  the reasons
  why

RE: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80

2003-01-06 Thread Turner, John

Nice list.

John


 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 11:14 AM
 To: Tomcat Users List
 Subject: Re: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
 
 
 Hi there,
 Hi vivek,
 
 John Turner's suggestion is right on. Try setting it up on a 
 development box first. This will save you and your colleagues 
 a lot of 
 headaches later on. Besides it is good practice. But here are some 
 pointers.
 
 1. Log in as root or su to it
 su - 
 
 2. Search for perl
 which perl or whereis perl
 This should return /usr/bin/perl or /usr/local/bin/perl
 
 3. Check the version
 /path/to/perl -V
 Note this version
 
 4. Search for apachectl
 cd / ; find . -local -name 'apachectl' -print
 This might take a while but should list where apachectl is located
 
 4a. Search for workers.properties
 cd / ; find . -local -name 'workers.properties' -print
 Note this location as this is what you'll put in 
 JkWorkersFile later on
 
 5. Run apachectl configtest
 /path/to/apachectl configtest
 It should return 'Syntax OK' if everything is okay. If it 
 returns 'not 
 found' check to make sure that the first line of apachectl is 
 your perl 
 binary
 
 more apachectl
 #!/path/to/perl  -- should match step 2
 
 6. Check to make sure that you have the Tomcat connectors 
 installed and 
 search for mod_jk.so (JK1 I think) this should be in
 $APACHE_HOME/libexec
 
 7. There should be a couple of lines in your httpd conf along the 
 following
 LoadModule libexec/mod_jk.so
 ... [snip] ...
 AddModule mod_jk.so
 
 Read more on these directives on the apache website httpd.apache.org
 
 8. Check apache's config and Restart apache
 /path/to/apachectl configtest
 /path/to/apachectl graceful
 
 9. If this doesn't return an error, proceed with John's suggestions 
 below.
 
 As a side note, to configure tomcat to respond to 80 with apache you 
 have to set up JKMount points and redirect jsp requests to tomcat 
 (that's what the mod_jk.so is for)
 
 Something like this in httpd.conf
 
 JKWorkersFile '/path/to/workers.properties'
 JKLogLevel debug
 
 JKMount /examples/*.jsp tomcat1
 JKMount /examples/servlet/*.jsp tomcat1 
 
 Make sure that the tomcat1 worker exists in 
 workers.properties where 
 you'll have to declare the worker and set some properties
 
 I'm basing this off of tomcat 3.x it might have changed for 4.x
 
 Try running a search off google also for tomcat mod_jk tutorial or 
 just visit jakarta.apache.org
 
 Hope that helps.
 
 Jan-Michael
 
 
 
 
 - Original Message -
 From: Turner, John [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Date: Monday, January 6, 2003 5:33 am
 Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
 
  
  Did you include a LoadModule line in Apache's config to load 
  mod_jk?  You
  cannot use JK commands in httpd.conf unless you load a module that
  understands them.
  
  Perhaps you might want to take a step back, tell us more 
  specifically what
  you want to do, and perhaps consider setting up a test environment 
  that is
  not on a production server so that you can understand how 
 to integrate
  Tomcat with Apache without interfering with your colleague's use 
  of your
  bugzilla installation.
  
  John
  
   -Original Message-
   From: Vivek Singh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
   Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 6:43 AM
   To: 'Tomcat Users List'
   Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
   
   
   John,
 I don't  remember doing any of these JkMount 
   directives, I
   did not find any reference to this in your website, so 
 there you go
   :-)
   
  And I had created a mod_jk.conf file in the path you 
 had told and
   included it at the end of httpd.conf, It had some 
   autogenerated stuff in
   it put in my tomcat when I checked it later on..
   
   After that when I tried restarting apache it gave me this 
   error too
   and did not come up.
   
Invalid command 'JkWorkersFile', perhaps mis-spelled or defined 
  by a
   module not
   included in the server configuration
   
Then I echoed blanks in the file and Apache restared pretty 
  well and
   tomcat did not listen on 80.
   
So let me give a try adding all this...
   
   ~vivek
   
   
   
   -Original Message-
   From: Turner, John [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
   Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 4:48 PM
   To: ''Tomcat Users List' '
   Subject: RE: TOMCAT Not listening on 80
   

   If you're saying that Apache's httpd.conf has no JkMount 
   directives for
   JK,
   then yes, your setup will never work.
   
   If you've setup auto-generation according to my HOWTO, 
 you can check
   your
   Apache config prior to a restart as specified in my HOWTO, with:
   
   /path/t 
   provided you have an Include statement that includes 
  mod_jk.conf.  
   
   If you do have an Include statement, then you can simply 
   restart Apache
   nicely with:
   
   /path/t 
   This will cause Apache to refuse new connection requests, 
   wait until all
   current connection