You would still use two separate server.xml files, such
as server1.xml and server2.xml.  If you wanted them
both to serve the same contexts, you could leave the:

    <ContextXmlReader config="conf/apps.xml" />

unchanged.  If you wanted to serve different contexts,
change server1.xml to be:

    <ContextXmlReader config="conf/apps1.xml" />

and server2.xml to be:

    <ContextXmlReader config="conf/apps2.xml" />.

The first version reads apps1.xml and all files matching
the pattern apps1-*.xml.  The second version reads
apps2.xml and all files matching the pattern apps2-*.xml.

Cheers,
Larry


> -----Original Message-----
> From: James Chuang [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Friday, December 14, 2001 8:32 PM
> To: Tomcat Users List
> Subject: Configureing multiple JVMs on Tomcat 3.3
> 
> 
> Under Tomcat 3.2.3, I had 2 serverXXX.xml  files, and I 
> started 2 instances
> of Tomcat, each with it's own serverXXX.XML file.  This 
> allowed each app to
> have it's own JVM.
> 
> Looking at 3.3's documentation, it seems the right way to 
> define contexts is
> to use app_XXX.XML file in the conf directory, and let tomcat 
> find them
> directly.
> 
> Question, does each context have it's own JVM?  If not, then 
> how should I
> create multiple JVMs?  It looks like I have to go back to putting the
> context definition in 2 separate server.XML files, then call them
> separately, and not use the APP-XXX.XML route, which seems to be the
> preferred route.
> 
> Thanks in advance.
> 
> jchuang
> 
> 
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