ssage-
From: Yoav Shapira [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wed 6/18/2003 4:16 PM
To: Tomcat Users List; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc:
Subject: Re: Tomcat Standalone and Virtual Hosting
Howdy,
This partially depends on your OS. If you're on windows, you can just run
Wed 6/18/2003 4:16 PM
To: Tomcat Users List; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc:
Subject: Re: Tomcat Standalone and Virtual Hosting
Howdy,
This partially depends on your OS. If you're on windows, you can just run
tomcat on port 80. If
Howdy,
This partially depends on your OS. If you're on windows, you can just run
tomcat on port 80. If you're on unix, port 80 is privileged and you need to:
- Work around that, e.g. by using sudo or commons-launcher
- Put an Apache front-end to serve static content on port 80, and connect it to
> I have a web application deployed under Tomcat v4.1.18 (port 8080). Is it
> also possible to configure the Tomcat Standalone Service to
> support virtual
> hosting, but on port 80? If so, how is this accomplished? What is the
> "best practices" method for storing static web content in this si
I have a web application deployed under Tomcat v4.1.18 (port 8080). Is it
also possible to configure the Tomcat Standalone Service to support virtual
hosting, but on port 80? If so, how is this accomplished? What is the
"best practices" method for storing static web content in this situation?
Sh