On Sat, May 28, 2011 at 00:27, abdelghni belfkih wrote:
> hi guys,
>
> I can't access to the manager/html cuz i don't know how create a user login.
>
> Plz help me.
>
[c'est dans la doc de base]
This is in the base documentation of Tomcat. And anyway, I strongly
recommend AGAINST the HTML versio
hi guys,
I can't access to the manager/html cuz i don't know how create a user login.
Plz help me.
--
Élève Ingénieur en TIC
Option : *Informatique, Réseaux et Systèmes*
Institut National des Postes et Télécommunication
Mobile : +212672673731
E-mail : blfkih.i...@gmail.com
> From: Eric Lorson
> To: users@tomcat.apache.org
> Cc:
> Sent: Friday, May 27, 2011 9:21 AM
> Subject: Piping tomcat logs to rsyslog
>
>
> For internal security reasons I need to prevent our tomcat logs from writing
> to the webserver local disk. We set up a rsyslog server and want to pipe th
For internal security reasons I need to prevent our tomcat logs from writing
to the webserver local disk. We set up a rsyslog server and want to pipe the
log data directly to rsyslog.
I am trying to work out how to configure tomcat to send all lpg data to
STDOUT or named pipe and have the rsyslo
Hi.
I believe that you are making the often-made confusion between "environment values" (or
variables), and HTTP headers content.
In particular, here :
Apache1 inserts the following variables into the requests it forwards to
Apache1 (I suppose you meant Apache2 here)
No. It does not do tha
Hi Martin,
the reverse proxy (gateway) in my case would be "apache1" me thinks. "apache2"
definitely does not use mod_proxy/ProxyPass. It is just loadbalancing two
tomcat
instances using "mod_jk".
My problem is (maybe I was not clear) that "apache2" does see the
X-Forwarded-For, X-Forwarded-
when your Apache2 is configured as reverse-proxy you are fowarding
IP,RequestedHost and Proxy-Server specifically:
When acting in a reverse-proxy mode (using the ProxyPass directive, for
example),
mod_proxy_http adds several request headers in
order to pass information to the origin ser
Il 27/05/2011 15.04, Filippo Machi ha scritto:
> @Filippo: Ciao! There are no "strange" or blank character on cookie
> value, it's just the JSESSIONID "as is". It's a value generated by
> Tomcat, isn't it?
>
> Ciao Diego,
> I meant, maybe there's ANOTHER cookie in the incoming request that contains
On Fri, May 27, 2011 at 12:26 PM, Diego Ruotolo wrote:
> Hi everybody !
>
> Thanks to all of you for your replies. Unfortunately (or fortunately) I
> spent the whole morning trying to reproduce the problem but everything
> works fine today!
>
> @Filippo: Ciao! There are no "strange" or blank chara
Hi,
sorry for the crosspost, but I am not sure where to ask. I am trying to
understand a weird problem accessing HTTP request headers from a jsf page.
The setup is as follows:
apache1 -> apache2 -> mod_jk -> tomcat
Apache1 is accessible from the Internet and forwards requests to my applicati
All,
I think that I have found a problem in the documentation for setting up
log4j.properties at
http://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-7.0-doc/logging.html#Using_Log4j. The same
text is on the tomcat 6.0 documentation. It specifies
log4j.appender.CATALINA.conversionPattern = %d [%t] %-5p %c- %m%n
When
Hi everybody !
Thanks to all of you for your replies. Unfortunately (or fortunately) I
spent the whole morning trying to reproduce the problem but everything
works fine today!
@Filippo: Ciao! There are no "strange" or blank character on cookie
value, it's just the JSESSIONID "as is". It's a value
On 25.05.2011 15:18, Christopher Schultz wrote:
> André,
>
> On 5/24/2011 7:13 PM, André Warnier wrote:
>> Christopher Schultz wrote:
>>> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
>>> Hash: SHA1
>>>
>>> Marc,
>>>
>>> On 5/24/2011 10:56 AM, Marc Boorshtein wrote:
I've setup a pretty generic httpd(2.2
Filippo Machi wrote:
On Fri, May 27, 2011 at 11:20 AM, André Warnier wrote:
Filippo Machi wrote:
we're using tomcat 7.0.12
Ok.
1) You have serverA running Tomcat, and Tomcat listens on port 8080.
The (network) IP address of serverA is :
85.214.x.x
(apart from the loopback
On Fri, May 27, 2011 at 11:20 AM, André Warnier wrote:
> Filippo Machi wrote:
>
>>
>> we're using tomcat 7.0.12
>>
>> Ok.
>
>
>> 1) You have serverA running Tomcat, and Tomcat listens on port 8080.
>>> The (network) IP address of serverA is :
>>>
>> 85.214.x.x
>>
>> (apart from the loo
Filippo Machi wrote:
we're using tomcat 7.0.12
Ok.
1) You have serverA running Tomcat, and Tomcat listens on port 8080.
The (network) IP address of serverA is :
85.214.x.x
(apart from the loopback address 127.0.0.1)
This Tomcat has some IP-based access Valve which :
we have
Hi,
we have a problem that some requests are missing on our application.
As far we can see, the requests are arrived at IIS but not at Tomcat.
Also we do not know if the request are processed by IIS but there were never
problems with our ASP.Net application which runs directly on IIS.
I also adde
Ciao!
Please read my comment inline..
On Fri, May 27, 2011 at 12:12 AM, Christopher Schultz <
ch...@christopherschultz.net> wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Filippo,
>
> On 5/26/2011 10:50 AM, Filippo Machi wrote:
> > One of our legacy (non java) server was used to put
Ciao Andrè,
thanks for your answer!
I really appreciate all the time you spend, thanks again.
Please find my inline answers..
On Thu, May 26, 2011 at 7:12 PM, André Warnier wrote:
> Hi.
>
> First, tell us what precise version of Tomcat you are using (x.y.z format).
>
we're using tomcat 7.0.12
On Fri, 27 May 2011 09:50:06 +0200, André Warnier wrote:
Searching the WWW, I am finding (too) many interpretations of the
output of "-verbose:gc" (or "-verbosegc", none of them starting from
exactly the format above.
I can kind of guess what the above means, but where can I find an
"authoritati
Pid wrote:
On 26/05/2011 21:50, André Warnier wrote:
André Warnier wrote:
Pid wrote:
On 26/05/2011 20:16, Caldarale, Charles R wrote:
From: André Warnier [mailto:a...@ice-sa.com] Subject: Monitoring
memory usage of JVM
I am thinking of a couple of command-line options for the JVM,
to dump for
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