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Saurav,
On 10/11/17 8:56 AM, Saurav Sarkar wrote:
> I have got a basic question related to usage of Async servlet with
> tomcat NIO connector.
>
> I want to use Async servlet with Non Block I/O as per servlet spec
>
From: JAIN, ABHAY K (ATTSI) [mailto:aj2...@att.com]
Subject: Basic question about using modjk connector
Document for modjk installation refers to directories auto, jk,
catalina under conf which I don't find.
What documentation is that?
The real doc is here:
On 29/10/2010 11:49, alok kakani wrote:
Hi All,
I am working Business Objects 3.1(BOE) with tomcat being the application
server. I am new to the web application part, hence i had some doubts
We are trying to step up a BOE on 2 machines we will have tomcat
installed on both machines. We
Hi All,
I am working Business Objects 3.1(BOE) with tomcat being the application
server. I am new to the web application part, hence i had some doubts
We are trying to step up a BOE on 2 machines we will have tomcat
installed on both machines. We plan to use MS NLB for high availability.
For starting Tomcat in Eclipse, check this out:
http://www.eclipsetotale.com/tomcatPlugin.html
As for the other part, I'm not really sure at all. Good luck, though.
Zach
On Apr 16, 2010, at 3:07 AM, Rhino wrote:
I hope someone will take pity on me and help me with this very basic
question.
Can you remind me how to do that (or where to find documentation
describing it)?
FileUploadServlet is one that I wrote some time back and it has a
web.xml file associated with it. I'm pretty sure I created it myself
although I don't actually remember doing so at this point. Here are the
/mrel/jsr154/index2.html
But I sometimes like to reference something more quick and dirty, but
nicely done:
http://wiki.metawerx.net/wiki/Web.xml
-Original Message-
From: Rhino [mailto:rhi...@sympatico.ca]
Sent: Friday, April 16, 2010 7:25 AM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: Basic
2010/4/16 Rhino rhi...@sympatico.ca:
However, when I click on my servlets, like /FileUploadServlet for example, I
get this:
HTTP Status 404 - /FileUploadServlet/
The keyword here is welcome page. If your WAR file does not have
index.jsp or index.html, or some explicit mapping for its root
Konstantin Kolinko wrote:
2010/4/16 Rhino rhi...@sympatico.ca:
However, when I click on my servlets, like /FileUploadServlet for example, I
get this:
HTTP Status 404 - /FileUploadServlet/
The keyword here is welcome page. If your WAR file does not have
index.jsp or index.html,
Did you put an entry in your web.XML file?
Lance Campbell
Sent from my iPhone
On Apr 15, 2010, at 8:09 PM, Rhino rhi...@sympatico.ca wrote:
I hope someone will take pity on me and help me with this very basic
question. I was moderately fluent with servlets and Tomcat several
years ago but
Did you configure your servlets in your web.xml properly? Also...it sounds as
though you are deploying each servlet in its own app. Make sure you are
invoking the servlet through the proper app.
-Original message-
From: Rhino rhi...@sympatico.ca
To: tomcat-user
Justin Morgan - Logic Sector wrote:
Hi Tomcat users,
Maybe I'm not googling with the right keywords, but I can't seem to find
a simple answer to this...
I have a standard Tomcat 6.0.10 installation (no Apache httpd front end
or anything). All the contents of the webapps directory have
- Original Message -
From: Justin Morgan - Logic Sector [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: users@tomcat.apache.org
Sent: Wednesday, June 11, 2008 8:02 AM
Subject: Basic question on requiring a login
Hi Tomcat users,
Maybe I'm not googling with the right keywords, but I can't seem to find
a
From: albrecht andrzejewski [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
I think tomcat stand alone is
- easier to deploy.
And that's all.
There are also fewer things to fail, and a smaller learning curve for
your system administrators (if they don't already know Apache httpd and
the JK connector).
I think
Quoting Peter Crowther [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
What are you doing that doesn't just need a vanilla Tomcat?
Peter... I plan to have a box, and I just think about pro and cons...
I think tomcat stand alone is
- easier to deploy.
And that's all.
I think apache as a front end is a more flexible and
From: Tata, Jagadeesh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
I installed tomcat 6.0.13 on Solaris SPARC. Which is the
better (suited)
version of Apache and Apache connector for installed Tomcat?
If you don't already have Apache on the box, please ask yourself this
question first:
Why do I need Apache
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Jagadeesh,
Tata, Jagadeesh wrote:
I installed tomcat 6.0.13 on Solaris SPARC. Which is the better (suited)
version of Apache and Apache connector for installed Tomcat?
The version of Apache httpd you choose is up to you and depends more on
your
On 9/21/07, Christopher Schultz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
are you sure you even /need/ Apache httpd?
I concur with that, but...
The only supported Tomcat web server connector is mod_jk
There's mod_proxy_ajp and mod_proxy_http, eh?
--
Hassan Schroeder [EMAIL
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Hassan,
Hassan Schroeder wrote:
On 9/21/07, Christopher Schultz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The only supported Tomcat web server connector is mod_jk
There's mod_proxy_ajp and mod_proxy_http, eh?
Aah, forgive me. I tend to think of mod_proxy_ajp as
On 9/21/07, Christopher Schultz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I believe mod_proxy_ajp requires Apache httpd 2.2, right?
Yep. But it's definitely less work to set up, if you don't need to split
static and dynamic content.
--
Hassan Schroeder [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hello,
I thought the topic was relevant, and the people involved in this
discussion would know the answer. I did not know this is considered
hijacking a thread. I appologize for the inconvenience, and I will repost
in a new thread.
Khawaja
On 3/9/06, David Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
You could start by not hijack an existing thread. Please repost your
question in a new thread.
--David
Khawaja Shams wrote:
Hello,
If I am using BASIC authentication, how can I log users out? I tried
doing session.Invalidate, but as described above, it seems like the browser
is caching the
Kind of. With BASIC auth, the session from the server's perspective can
still go away. But as the browser caches the credentials, new session
creation is automatic. The end user experience depends on the data
stored in the session, webapp design, and where they were when they
abandon the
a request,
tomcat opens a new session? I'm pretty sure the answer is no.
Regards,
-Dennis Klotz
-Original Message-
From: David Smith [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, March 08, 2006 6:07 PM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: basic question regarding BASIC and FORMS logins
Dennis,
For just that webapp, you can always bump the session timeout to a very high
value.
That would just take a change to the web.xml, no change of authentication
method needed.
HTH - Richard
-Original Message-
From: Klotz Jr, Dennis [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, March
An idea I've also seen floated is to have javascript keep refreshing a
small transparent image every so often. I've never tried it, but it
shows up frequently as a solution in google. Benefit is you have
indefinite session life without a lot of dead session clutter.
--David
Richard Mixon
Hello,
If I am using BASIC authentication, how can I log users out? I tried
doing session.Invalidate, but as described above, it seems like the browser
is caching the credentials. I would like my app users to be able to log
out. I would sincerely appreciate any guidance.
Khawaja
On 3/8/06,
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