I've not tried this, but don't you replace the workers in the in the
workers list in the workers.properties file with the "lb" worker, and then
add all of the workers you want load-balanced to the load-balancer list?


email me back if you don't understand my suggestion and I'll look into the
files a bit and give you a more exact answer.



On Tue, 20 Mar 2001, Amir Nuri wrote:

>
> All the examples and archive messages that I have seen so far talk about
> load balancing
> using either multiple JVM's or Multiple <Connector> Directives with
> different port numbers
> and corrosponding workers in the workers.properties file.
>
> But they all use different Mount Points for each worker !
>
> However my need is to Load Balance a *SINGLE MOUNT POINT*
> ( A single Virtual Apache Host corrosponding to a <Host> (context) in
> server.xml )
>
> i.e I want http://ww.mysite.com/*.jsp to be load balanced by 4 worker
> threads.
>
> I am currently using 4 JkMount Directives, and the server is up and running.
> i.e
> JkMount /*.jsp ajp13
> JkMount /*.jsp Xajp13
> JkMount /*.jsp Yajp13
> JkMount /*.jsp Zajp13
>
> Also if I name the workers ajp13a , ajp13b and ajp13c, apache does not start
> and gives me an error
> saying that it cannot find the workers file !!!
>
> Anyway, my question are :-
>
> 1. Is this the right way to have a single mount point load balanced ?
> 2. If so, is it a good idea to run the tomcat instances in the same JVM ? Or
> should I run multiple tomcat/JVM
>     instances on the same / different servers ?
>
>
>
>

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