I guess like with any other software Tomcat uses defaults, if they are
not overwritten in conf-files like these .properties ones. 

If a software runs fine, without editing conf-files, the defaults fit by
"hasard", but running is not the same as running, when it comes to e.g.
security. Unfortunately 'man tomcat' didn't work. :-(

I started yesterday to run tomcat on a debian woody and I didn't get the
examples running yet, so I guess I have to configure something
somewhere.


cu,

Marco

Venkatesh Sangam wrote:
> 
> thanks Jan,
> Do I have any help on XML parsers online ??If u know any tell me ..
> I had one more doubt
> can anyone please tell me whats the use of the file tomcat.properties ..
> even If I delete that file ..tomcat runs fine ..
> can anyone give me any specific use of that ??
> thanks
> Venkatesh
> 
> From: "Pernica, Jan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: RE: Server.xml
> Date: Fri, 25 May 2001 06:42:41 +0200
> 
> You can use XML parsers to parse the file, then you can change it and store
> again.
> 
> On Thursday, May 24, 2001 10:30 PM, Venkatesh Sangam
> [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
>  > Hi,
>  >
>  > Can anyone please tell me how do I change the Port on which the Tomcat
>  > Server runs using Java program ..
>  > How do I modify server.xml using a Java program
>  >
>  > thnaks
>  > Venkatesh

Reply via email to