No.

/usr/local/webserver/webapps/MyApp

Jerry

Ben Souther wrote:

Are the files in a particular user's directory?
I.E: /home/someUser



On Tuesday 06 January 2004 09:28 pm, you wrote:


The linux equivalent of shared files is to make them world readable,
which the webapp directory and all files in it are:  drwxr-xr-x

Still doesn't work.

Jerry

FRANCOIS Dufour wrote:


FOR MEE I AD TO SHARE FILES THAT I WANT TO BEE ACESS FROM THE WEB
VIA:8080
IF I DONT SHARE THE FILE IT COMME OUT THE RESOURCE IS NOT AVAILABLE
COULD IT BEE
THIS ON YOUR PLATFORM TOO WONDERING ON OS=XP ITS LIKE THAT



[EMAIL PROTECTED]
crazy-wilys webmaster



From: Daniel Gibby <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: "Tomcat Users List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Tomcat Users List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: webapp works through Apache, not Tomcat directly
Date: Tue, 06 Jan 2004 12:55:34 -0800

Maybe you are using a symbolic link and tomcat 4 doesn't follow them
by default because of performance.

Daniel Gibby

Jerry Ford wrote:


I have a webapp deployed in Tomcat 4.1.27 which I am able to reach
through Apache 1/3/27 (via mod_jk; sorry, didn't build it myself,
obtained it as a binary and don't know version---how can I tell?)
but cannot reach it by going directly to Tomcat.

Tomcat is configured to listen directly on port 8080 and through
mod_jk on port 8009 and in fact I can reach and execute the example
servlets by going to either http://localhost:8080/examples/servlets
or http://localhost/examples servlets.

I can reach my webapp by going to http://localhost/MyApp.

But when I try to reach http://localhost:8080/MyApp, Tomcat reports
resource not available.

The only difference (that I can recall) is that the examples are in
their default location, $TOMCAT_HOME/webapps/examples, while my app
has been moved to /usr/local/webserver/webapps/MyApp.

The context to MyApp in server.xml is identical to the examples
context except for path and name:

<Context path="/MyApp" docBase="/usr/local/webserver/webapps/MyApp"
debug="0"
    reloadable="true" crossContext="true">

    <Logger className="org.apache.catalina.logger.FileLogger"
            prefix="localhost_MyApp_log." suffix=".txt"
            timestamp="true" />

</Context>

Nothing is written to the MyApp log when I try to access the app
through port 8080 (or when I successfully access it through Apache,
either, for that matter).

All are running under Linux (RedHat 9.0).

Any suggestions about what's wrong?

While this condition might otherwise be acceptable (I don't really
want to use port 8080), it appears to be interfering with the
setting and reading of cookies---I can set them on one page but
cannot read them from another, even though Mozilla's cookie manager
shows them to be (apparently correctly) configured.

Thanks.

Jerry


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