Hi guys,
I was trying to find some tutorial on integrating Apache HTTPD 2 + Tomcat
6 but has no luck. All of them just don't work. I found 1 here
http://blog.taragana.com/index.php/archive/5-steps-to-integrate-tomcat-55-with-apache-20/
but doesn't work at all.
Anyone pls kindly give a
Plant More Tree wrote:
Hi guys,
I was trying to find some tutorial on integrating Apache HTTPD 2 + Tomcat
6 but has no luck. All of them just don't work. I found 1 here
http://blog.taragana.com/index.php/archive/5-steps-to-integrate-tomcat-55-with-apache-20/
but doesn't work at all.
Plant More Tree [EMAIL PROTECTED] kirjoitti:
Hi guys,
I was trying to find some tutorial on integrating Apache HTTPD 2 + Tomcat
6 but has no luck. All of them just don't work. I found 1 here
http://blog.taragana.com/index.php/archive/5-steps-to-integrate-tomcat-55-with-apache-20/
but
Could you provide some more detail on what you've tried? ... but it
doesn't work is not an effective request for help. Specifically we'd
like to see the ports tomcat is running on as well as relevant portions
of your apache config and the urls you have tried.
--David
Plant More Tree wrote:
From: Ken Bowen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: How to specify a default context?
Is there no other way, one which leaves the app with its
original name?
Place your webapp outside of the Host's appBase directory, and put
your Context element in conf/Catalina/[host]/ROOT.xml with a
Absolutely all correct, including the design flaws (partly due to the
learning curve, partly to the
process of pasting together non-web software which has such embedded
knowledge -- needs
to be overcome).
However, after my 3rd cup of coffee this morning, it occurrs to me that
what I'm after
From: Ken Bowen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: How to specify a default context?
Since I plan to use http://tuckey.org/urlrewrite/ to
rewrite URLs, and since / will rewrite to /myapp/,
then the request htpp://myhost/ will ending up causing
myapp to handle the request.
Yes, using
Hi,
one of my customers recently increased amount of memory they use, so
OOME are happening more often. Most of them however do no harm, since
just the request is aborted, but the container remains functional and
next request wents well (they have a throughput of 100MB per second
in young