Re: tomcat 3.2.4
http://jakarta.apache.org/tomcat/tomcat-3.2-doc/index.html should be 3.2.4. Glen Steve Souza wrote: Hi folks, I'm new to the list, so I apologize in advance for any faux pas I may commit here! The question is simple - we'd like to get the 3.2.4 release of Tomcat, but do not see a download link on the Apache site. Is it archived somewhere? I know it's old, but we haven't moved to the new architecture yet. Many many thanks! Regards, Steve - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: tomcat 3.2.4
http://archive.apache.org/dist/jakarta/tomcat-3/archive/v3.2.4/ -Original Message- From: Steve Souza [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, October 11, 2005 3:18 PM To: Tomcat Users List Subject: tomcat 3.2.4 Hi folks, The question is simple - we'd like to get the 3.2.4 release of Tomcat, but do not see a download link on the Apache site. Is it archived somewhere? I know - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: Tomcat 3.2.4 behind a proxy
Hello, You may want to upgrade to a 4.1.x or 5.0.x version of Tomcat. I'm having issues with certain keep-alives in 4.1.27, but other than that the reverse proxy setup I have seems to work well. Good Luck! Brian Peterson -Original Message- From: Armenio Pinto [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, August 26, 2003 3:30 AM To: 'Tomcat Users List' Subject: RE: Tomcat 3.2.4 behind a proxy Hi there, I'm replying because I haven't received any answers yet. Is the list working correctly (I received the e-mail, so...)? Is the question confusion in any way? I really need to solve this problem, because currently I can't make Tomcat available to the users. Thanks in advance, Arménio Pinto -Original Message- From: Armenio Pinto [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: segunda-feira, 25 de Agosto de 2003 16:41 To: 'Tomcat Users List' Subject: Tomcat 3.2.4 behind a proxy Hi there, I'm current using Tomcat 3.2.4 in a private network, and want to give access to external clients through an Apache server configured as proxy. The problem is that Tomcat is changing request addresses... I know how to solve this problem in Apache (simply turn UseCanonicalName off), but how can I do it in Tomcat? For example: if the proxy address to Tomcat is www.test.pt/tomcat, it seems that Tomcat changes it to www.othersidetest.pt:8080. Thanks in advance, Arménio Pinto - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: Tomcat 3.2.4 behind a proxy
Hi there, I'm replying because I haven't received any answers yet. Is the list working correctly (I received the e-mail, so...)? Is the question confusion in any way? I really need to solve this problem, because currently I can't make Tomcat available to the users. Thanks in advance, Arménio Pinto -Original Message- From: Armenio Pinto [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: segunda-feira, 25 de Agosto de 2003 16:41 To: 'Tomcat Users List' Subject: Tomcat 3.2.4 behind a proxy Hi there, I'm current using Tomcat 3.2.4 in a private network, and want to give access to external clients through an Apache server configured as proxy. The problem is that Tomcat is changing request addresses... I know how to solve this problem in Apache (simply turn UseCanonicalName off), but how can I do it in Tomcat? For example: if the proxy address to Tomcat is www.test.pt/tomcat, it seems that Tomcat changes it to www.othersidetest.pt:8080. Thanks in advance, Arménio Pinto - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: Tomcat 3.2.4 slow with Jdk1.4 and SSL
I forgot to mention that my server works behind apache which is doing all the encryption, so at least my performance problem is definitely caused at the client side, i.e. within the java-code using the https implementation from jdk1.4. But even my tomcat alone is very fast. In my test environment I can access the server both on port 443 (then apache will handle the encryption, leaving tomcat nothing to do but answer the request unencrypted over ajp) and on 8443 (then tomcat will do the encryption, probably with the help of the jdk1.4 components that were a part of JSSE prior to jdk1.4). There is no notable difference in speed between the two requests, not even if I close the browser to enforce a new ssl-handshake for each request. But thanks for the suggestions anyway, Bill. I downloaded PureTLS and the required packages for use on the client side. Unfortunately, there is no https protocol handler (at least none that I found so far) that could provide a replacement for the sun implementation. I'm looking for something to specify in the following two statements to use PureTLS instead of the functionality provided by jdk1.4: System.setProperty(java.protocol.handler.pkgs, com.sun.net.ssl.internal.www.protocol); -- here Security.addProvider( new com.sun.net.ssl.internal.ssl.Provider()); -- and here Do you (or does anyone) know of something like this for PureTLS? And Wolfgang (you're right by the way assuming that I'm from germany, but I hope our problem has nothing to do with that ;-), can you confirm that the problem is on the client side in the java code? How is the performance of your tomcat when you access the same resources with a browser? The forum-postings you quoted seem to imply that the low performance could have been a problem of jdk's prior to 1.4 as well which simply did not show (at least from within applets running inside IE) because IE used it's own ssl/https-implementation when used with jdk1.3 (and earlier) and jdk1.4's if used with that version. greetings Andreas Mohrig -Original Message- From: Bill Barker [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, September 11, 2002 7:29 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Tomcat 3.2.4 slow with Jdk1.4 and SSL I think that you are out of luck with 3.2.x. With 3.3.1 and 4.1.10 you can use PureTLS (http://www.rtfm.com/puretls). (With 4.0.4, you need to use the CoyoteConnector plugin to enable it). I've heard good reports about using it with client-certs, but haven't tried it myself. Unfortunately, the documentation is still a little weak. :( The best place is the 3.3.1 documentation http://jakarta.apache.org/tomcat/tomcat-3.3-doc/tomcat-ssl-howto.html. The translation to the 4.x CoyoteConnector is pretty straight-forward (the SSL attributes are on the Factory), but AFAIK, nobody has actually written it up yet. Wolfgang Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]... I realize you are also a German resident and remember the download of JSSE were differing for non-US citizens. I assume we are victims of a hidden key escrow or Echelon's information gathering efforts :-) But, all joking(?) aside: This seems to be a known jdk1.4 issue. There are some related postings at the developer connection forums, e.g. http://forum.java.sun.com/thread.jsp?forum=2thread=239231) It ends up in the recommendation to use a commercial product but also states that SUN's implementation were one of the better implementations ... So, did anybody succeed in using a third party JSSE that works with tomcat and sufficient performance? Any suggestions ? Thanks in advance, Wolfgang -Original Message- From: Andreas Mohrig [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, September 10, 2002 2:20 PM To: 'Tomcat Users List' Subject: RE: Tomcat 3.2.4 slow with Jdk1.4 and SSL I'm using Tomcat 4.0.4 with Jdk1.4 (on both Linux-Server and Windows NT client) and worrying about a quite similar problem. The server is extremely fast (I'd say the answer takes some milliseconds) when I access it with a browser (e.g. MS IE 5.0), but it takes about 20 seconds (!) when I try a request using java code like this: URL url = new URL(https://myserver/myresource;); URLConnection con = url.openConnection(); BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(con.getInputStream())); StringBuffer resultbuffer = new StringBuffer(); String result = reader.readLine(); while (result!=null) { resultbuffer.append(result); resultbuffer.append(\n); result = reader.readLine(); } reader.close(); This is true for subsequent requests as well. The content consists of about 100 bytes which should be no problem. So: yes, I'm experiencing a heavy performance problem. I can't say if it is a performance decrease, though, since I did not test with older Jdk's and jsse (p
Re: Tomcat 3.2.4 slow with Jdk1.4 and SSL
Andreas Mohrig [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message 70DD0724686ED611ACC70050228A1ECA06DC5E@SRV_1">news:70DD0724686ED611ACC70050228A1ECA06DC5E@SRV_1... I forgot to mention that my server works behind apache which is doing all the encryption, so at least my performance problem is definitely caused at the client side, i.e. within the java-code using the https implementation from jdk1.4. But even my tomcat alone is very fast. In my test environment I can access the server both on port 443 (then apache will handle the encryption, leaving tomcat nothing to do but answer the request unencrypted over ajp) and on 8443 (then tomcat will do the encryption, probably with the help of the jdk1.4 components that were a part of JSSE prior to jdk1.4). There is no notable difference in speed between the two requests, not even if I close the browser to enforce a new ssl-handshake for each request. But thanks for the suggestions anyway, Bill. I downloaded PureTLS and the required packages for use on the client side. Unfortunately, there is no https protocol handler (at least none that I found so far) that could provide a replacement for the sun implementation. I'm looking for something to specify in the following two statements to use PureTLS instead of the functionality provided by jdk1.4: System.setProperty(java.protocol.handler.pkgs, com.sun.net.ssl.internal.www.protocol); -- here Security.addProvider( new com.sun.net.ssl.internal.ssl.Provider()); -- and here Do you (or does anyone) know of something like this for PureTLS? I, personally, don't know (or, rather, don't feel like digging through the source code to find out :). But sending to the PureTLS mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] may help. Subscription address: [EMAIL PROTECTED]. Links are based on documentation from http://www.rtfm.com/puretls/. I'm not personally involved with the PureTLS project, so I'm not accepting any responsibility for broken links. ;-) And Wolfgang (you're right by the way assuming that I'm from germany, but I hope our problem has nothing to do with that ;-), can you confirm that the problem is on the client side in the java code? How is the performance of your tomcat when you access the same resources with a browser? The forum-postings you quoted seem to imply that the low performance could have been a problem of jdk's prior to 1.4 as well which simply did not show (at least from within applets running inside IE) because IE used it's own ssl/https-implementation when used with jdk1.3 (and earlier) and jdk1.4's if used with that version. greetings Andreas Mohrig -Original Message- From: Bill Barker [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, September 11, 2002 7:29 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Tomcat 3.2.4 slow with Jdk1.4 and SSL I think that you are out of luck with 3.2.x. With 3.3.1 and 4.1.10 you can use PureTLS (http://www.rtfm.com/puretls). (With 4.0.4, you need to use the CoyoteConnector plugin to enable it). I've heard good reports about using it with client-certs, but haven't tried it myself. Unfortunately, the documentation is still a little weak. :( The best place is the 3.3.1 documentation http://jakarta.apache.org/tomcat/tomcat-3.3-doc/tomcat-ssl-howto.html. The translation to the 4.x CoyoteConnector is pretty straight-forward (the SSL attributes are on the Factory), but AFAIK, nobody has actually written it up yet. Wolfgang Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]... I realize you are also a German resident and remember the download of JSSE were differing for non-US citizens. I assume we are victims of a hidden key escrow or Echelon's information gathering efforts :-) But, all joking(?) aside: This seems to be a known jdk1.4 issue. There are some related postings at the developer connection forums, e.g. http://forum.java.sun.com/thread.jsp?forum=2thread=239231) It ends up in the recommendation to use a commercial product but also states that SUN's implementation were one of the better implementations ... So, did anybody succeed in using a third party JSSE that works with tomcat and sufficient performance? Any suggestions ? Thanks in advance, Wolfgang -Original Message- From: Andreas Mohrig [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, September 10, 2002 2:20 PM To: 'Tomcat Users List' Subject: RE: Tomcat 3.2.4 slow with Jdk1.4 and SSL I'm using Tomcat 4.0.4 with Jdk1.4 (on both Linux-Server and Windows NT client) and worrying about a quite similar problem. The server is extremely fast (I'd say the answer takes some milliseconds) when I access it with a browser (e.g. MS IE 5.0), but it takes about 20 seconds (!) when I try a request using java code like this: URL url = new URL(https://myserver/myresource;); URLConnection con = ur
RE: Tomcat 3.2.4 slow with Jdk1.4 and SSL
I'm using Tomcat 4.0.4 with Jdk1.4 (on both Linux-Server and Windows NT client) and worrying about a quite similar problem. The server is extremely fast (I'd say the answer takes some milliseconds) when I access it with a browser (e.g. MS IE 5.0), but it takes about 20 seconds (!) when I try a request using java code like this: URL url = new URL(https://myserver/myresource;); URLConnection con = url.openConnection(); BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(con.getInputStream())); StringBuffer resultbuffer = new StringBuffer(); String result = reader.readLine(); while (result!=null) { resultbuffer.append(result); resultbuffer.append(\n); result = reader.readLine(); } reader.close(); This is true for subsequent requests as well. The content consists of about 100 bytes which should be no problem. So: yes, I'm experiencing a heavy performance problem. I can't say if it is a performance decrease, though, since I did not test with older Jdk's and jsse (perhaps I should...). Any solutions, hints or suggestions would be very welcome! greetings Andreas Mohrig -Original Message- From: Wolfgang Stein [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, September 10, 2002 12:15 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Tomcat 3.2.4 slow with Jdk1.4 and SSL Migrating from Jdk1.3 to Jdk1.4 we encountered a significant performance decrease on SSL-communications (server certs) between Applets and Tomcat 3.2.4. Did anybody experience similar performance losses ? Does this happen because of a low SSL implementation in jdk1.4 ? Did anybody successfully provide a faster implementation? We used jdk1.4 on client and server-side. Thanks in advance, Wolfgang -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: Tomcat 3.2.4 slow with Jdk1.4 and SSL
I realize you are also a German resident and remember the download of JSSE were differing for non-US citizens. I assume we are victims of a hidden key escrow or Echelon's information gathering efforts :-) But, all joking(?) aside: This seems to be a known jdk1.4 issue. There are some related postings at the developer connection forums, e.g. http://forum.java.sun.com/thread.jsp?forum=2thread=239231) It ends up in the recommendation to use a commercial product but also states that SUN's implementation were one of the better implementations ... So, did anybody succeed in using a third party JSSE that works with tomcat and sufficient performance? Any suggestions ? Thanks in advance, Wolfgang -Original Message- From: Andreas Mohrig [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, September 10, 2002 2:20 PM To: 'Tomcat Users List' Subject: RE: Tomcat 3.2.4 slow with Jdk1.4 and SSL I'm using Tomcat 4.0.4 with Jdk1.4 (on both Linux-Server and Windows NT client) and worrying about a quite similar problem. The server is extremely fast (I'd say the answer takes some milliseconds) when I access it with a browser (e.g. MS IE 5.0), but it takes about 20 seconds (!) when I try a request using java code like this: URL url = new URL(https://myserver/myresource;); URLConnection con = url.openConnection(); BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(con.getInputStream())); StringBuffer resultbuffer = new StringBuffer(); String result = reader.readLine(); while (result!=null) { resultbuffer.append(result); resultbuffer.append(\n); result = reader.readLine(); } reader.close(); This is true for subsequent requests as well. The content consists of about 100 bytes which should be no problem. So: yes, I'm experiencing a heavy performance problem. I can't say if it is a performance decrease, though, since I did not test with older Jdk's and jsse (perhaps I should...). Any solutions, hints or suggestions would be very welcome! greetings Andreas Mohrig -Original Message- From: Wolfgang Stein [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, September 10, 2002 12:15 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Tomcat 3.2.4 slow with Jdk1.4 and SSL Migrating from Jdk1.3 to Jdk1.4 we encountered a significant performance decrease on SSL-communications (server certs) between Applets and Tomcat 3.2.4. Did anybody experience similar performance losses ? Does this happen because of a low SSL implementation in jdk1.4 ? Did anybody successfully provide a faster implementation? We used jdk1.4 on client and server-side. Thanks in advance, Wolfgang -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Tomcat 3.2.4 slow with Jdk1.4 and SSL
I think that you are out of luck with 3.2.x. With 3.3.1 and 4.1.10 you can use PureTLS (http://www.rtfm.com/puretls). (With 4.0.4, you need to use the CoyoteConnector plugin to enable it). I've heard good reports about using it with client-certs, but haven't tried it myself. Unfortunately, the documentation is still a little weak. :( The best place is the 3.3.1 documentation http://jakarta.apache.org/tomcat/tomcat-3.3-doc/tomcat-ssl-howto.html. The translation to the 4.x CoyoteConnector is pretty straight-forward (the SSL attributes are on the Factory), but AFAIK, nobody has actually written it up yet. Wolfgang Stein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]... I realize you are also a German resident and remember the download of JSSE were differing for non-US citizens. I assume we are victims of a hidden key escrow or Echelon's information gathering efforts :-) But, all joking(?) aside: This seems to be a known jdk1.4 issue. There are some related postings at the developer connection forums, e.g. http://forum.java.sun.com/thread.jsp?forum=2thread=239231) It ends up in the recommendation to use a commercial product but also states that SUN's implementation were one of the better implementations ... So, did anybody succeed in using a third party JSSE that works with tomcat and sufficient performance? Any suggestions ? Thanks in advance, Wolfgang -Original Message- From: Andreas Mohrig [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, September 10, 2002 2:20 PM To: 'Tomcat Users List' Subject: RE: Tomcat 3.2.4 slow with Jdk1.4 and SSL I'm using Tomcat 4.0.4 with Jdk1.4 (on both Linux-Server and Windows NT client) and worrying about a quite similar problem. The server is extremely fast (I'd say the answer takes some milliseconds) when I access it with a browser (e.g. MS IE 5.0), but it takes about 20 seconds (!) when I try a request using java code like this: URL url = new URL(https://myserver/myresource;); URLConnection con = url.openConnection(); BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(con.getInputStream())); StringBuffer resultbuffer = new StringBuffer(); String result = reader.readLine(); while (result!=null) { resultbuffer.append(result); resultbuffer.append(\n); result = reader.readLine(); } reader.close(); This is true for subsequent requests as well. The content consists of about 100 bytes which should be no problem. So: yes, I'm experiencing a heavy performance problem. I can't say if it is a performance decrease, though, since I did not test with older Jdk's and jsse (perhaps I should...). Any solutions, hints or suggestions would be very welcome! greetings Andreas Mohrig -Original Message- From: Wolfgang Stein [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, September 10, 2002 12:15 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Tomcat 3.2.4 slow with Jdk1.4 and SSL Migrating from Jdk1.3 to Jdk1.4 we encountered a significant performance decrease on SSL-communications (server certs) between Applets and Tomcat 3.2.4. Did anybody experience similar performance losses ? Does this happen because of a low SSL implementation in jdk1.4 ? Did anybody successfully provide a faster implementation? We used jdk1.4 on client and server-side. Thanks in advance, Wolfgang -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: Tomcat 3.2.4 and Apache 2.0.35 question
Did you compile mod_jk on your own machine, or did you get a binary from somewhere? I have had this problem when I don't compile mod_jk on my own. Good Luck, I know it's frustrating... Brandon -Original Message- From: Stuart Morse [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, April 16, 2002 11:47 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Tomcat 3.2.4 and Apache 2.0.35 question Hi All, I have successfully had Apache and Tomcat working together on Windows 98 and FreeBSD using mod_jserv. I'm trying to do the same thing on NT 4.0 Workstation using mod_jk. I have added the line: Include c:/Program Files/Tomcat/conf/mod_jk.conf-auto at the end of my httpd.conf file and have placed the mod_jk.dll file from the Apache site in the modules directory under the Apache home directory. I have defined the environment variables JAVA_HOME and TOMCAT_HOME. Both Apache and Tomcat operate fine in stand-alone mode, but when I include the line above in httpd.conf a dialog is displayed when I try and start Apache saying: The requested operation has failed! I can't find an error message anywhere that would give me a clue about what went wrong. Even when I provide an empty mod_jk.conf-auto file I get the same message. Any ideas? Regards, Stuart -- To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Troubles with the list: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Troubles with the list: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Tomcat 3.2.4, Java 1.3.1, linux, and process usage
They are not really seperate processes. They are threads off of a running process. Linux just shows them as process. Use this command here ( ps -faux | grep java )and you can see who is the parent and who is the child. As far as the memory usage, all of these threads are sharing this 14% of memory, so each one is not using that amount seperately. Brandon Cruz wrote: I am using the configuration above, and whenever someone accesses a jsp page, it seems that several processes are created. I am not an expert with linux, but it seems that multiple processes are created, which are each taking up the exact same amount of memory (around 14%). Is this normal, and does it mean that 3 processes taking 14% are using up 42% of my memory every time someone accesses a jsp on my machine? Thanks in advance for any information! Brandon -- To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Troubles with the list: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- Denny Chambers Quantum Corporation, Inc. Network Attached Storage Division Java Linux Engineer Phone: 251-478-5730 Cell: 251-605-3446 IM: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Troubles with the list: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Tomcat 3.2.4, Java 1.3.1, linux, and process usage
If your OS has it have a try with pstree its very illustrative on this ... Denny Chambers wrote: They are not really seperate processes. They are threads off of a running process. Linux just shows them as process. Use this command here ( ps -faux | grep java )and you can see who is the parent and who is the child. As far as the memory usage, all of these threads are sharing this 14% of memory, so each one is not using that amount seperately. Brandon Cruz wrote: I am using the configuration above, and whenever someone accesses a jsp page, it seems that several processes are created. I am not an expert with linux, but it seems that multiple processes are created, which are each taking up the exact same amount of memory (around 14%). Is this normal, and does it mean that 3 processes taking 14% are using up 42% of my memory every time someone accesses a jsp on my machine? Thanks in advance for any information! Brandon -- To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Troubles with the list: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- Denny Chambers Quantum Corporation, Inc. Network Attached Storage Division Java Linux Engineer Phone: 251-478-5730 Cell: 251-605-3446 IM: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Troubles with the list: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Troubles with the list: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: Tomcat 3.2.4 can't access url with a space in it?
Try inserting a + character for the space Donie -Original Message- From: Brandon Cruz [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: 18 January 2002 20:36 To: Tomcat Users List Subject: Tomcat 3.2.4 can't access url with a space in it? I am using tomcat 3.2.4 standalone. Does anyone know why it can't access a url if one of the folders has a space in it? Isn't it supposed to automatically fill in that space so that the correct path can be found? Brandon -- To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Troubles with the list: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Troubles with the list: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: Tomcat 3.2.4 can't access url with a space in it?
I can't try to recreate the url. I don't have knowledge of where and when a url will have a space in it. It is something that the client creates without my knowledge. -Original Message- From: Donie Kelly [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, January 18, 2002 1:37 PM To: 'Tomcat Users List' Subject: RE: Tomcat 3.2.4 can't access url with a space in it? Try inserting a + character for the space Donie -Original Message- From: Brandon Cruz [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: 18 January 2002 20:36 To: Tomcat Users List Subject: Tomcat 3.2.4 can't access url with a space in it? I am using tomcat 3.2.4 standalone. Does anyone know why it can't access a url if one of the folders has a space in it? Isn't it supposed to automatically fill in that space so that the correct path can be found? Brandon -- To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Troubles with the list: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Troubles with the list: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Troubles with the list: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Tomcat 3.2.4 xml parsing of web.xml
Ever since I switched from 3.2.3 to 3.2.4, I notice a lot of the following types of messages in the log output onscreen: = Warning: validation was turned on but an org.xml.sax.ErrorHandler was not set, which is probably not what is desired. Parser will use a default ErrorHandler to print the first 10 errors. Please call the 'setErrorHandler' method to fix this. Error: URI=null Line=22: Element servlet-mapping does not allow url-pattern here. Error: URI=null Line=24: Element servlet-mapping requires additional elements. Error: URI=null Line=26: Element web-app does not allow servlet here. Error: URI=null Line=31: Element servlet-mapping does not allow url-pattern here. Error: URI=null Line=33: Element servlet-mapping requires additional elements. Error: URI=null Line=35: Element web-app does not allow servlet here. Error: URI=null Line=40: Element servlet-mapping does not allow url-pattern here. Error: URI=null Line=42: Element servlet-mapping requires additional elements. Error: URI=null Line=44: Element web-app does not allow servlet here. Error: URI=null Line=49: Element servlet-mapping does not allow url-pattern here. = Does this mean my web.xml is out of whack, or is maybe something else wrong? Everything seems to work ok as per what I have in the web.xml. Thanks, Jeff __ Do You Yahoo!? Send FREE video emails in Yahoo! Mail! http://promo.yahoo.com/videomail/ -- To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Troubles with the list: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: Tomcat 3.2.4 xml parsing of web.xml
One of the changes in Tomcat 3.2.4 was that JAXP 1.0.1 was replaced with JAXP 1.1, i.e. parser.jar was upgraded to crimson.jar. It would appear that crimson.jar is validating by default, something that Tomcat 3.2.3 and earlier never did. It is now telling you that there are previously unreported errors in your web.xml. The sequence of elements shown in the DTD must be followed. For example: all servlet elements must come before any servlet-mapping elements. Cheers, Larry -Original Message- From: Jeff Corliss [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, January 18, 2002 3:37 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Tomcat 3.2.4 xml parsing of web.xml Ever since I switched from 3.2.3 to 3.2.4, I notice a lot of the following types of messages in the log output onscreen: = Warning: validation was turned on but an org.xml.sax.ErrorHandler was not set, which is probably not what is desired. Parser will use a default ErrorHandler to print the first 10 errors. Please call the 'setErrorHandler' method to fix this. Error: URI=null Line=22: Element servlet-mapping does not allow url-pattern here. Error: URI=null Line=24: Element servlet-mapping requires additional elements. Error: URI=null Line=26: Element web-app does not allow servlet here. Error: URI=null Line=31: Element servlet-mapping does not allow url-pattern here. Error: URI=null Line=33: Element servlet-mapping requires additional elements. Error: URI=null Line=35: Element web-app does not allow servlet here. Error: URI=null Line=40: Element servlet-mapping does not allow url-pattern here. Error: URI=null Line=42: Element servlet-mapping requires additional elements. Error: URI=null Line=44: Element web-app does not allow servlet here. Error: URI=null Line=49: Element servlet-mapping does not allow url-pattern here. = Does this mean my web.xml is out of whack, or is maybe something else wrong? Everything seems to work ok as per what I have in the web.xml. Thanks, Jeff __ Do You Yahoo!? Send FREE video emails in Yahoo! Mail! http://promo.yahoo.com/videomail/ -- To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Troubles with the list: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Troubles with the list: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]