Problem with most of the information out there is that it deals with connecting
4.0.x with Apache, not 4.1.x. The Coyote JK2 connector is the preferred method
with 4.1.x (jk has be deprecated in favour of jk2).

Aside from Andrew Conrad's comments, there seems to be little documentation to be
found regarding the topic

    ...Paul


"Turner, John" wrote:

> There are really only 2 ways: AJP and WARP.  If you want apache to serve
> static content, than there is only 1 way at this time, as far as I know:
> AJP.
>
> You will want mod_jk as your connector.  You could try mod_jk2, but mod_jk
> seems to be the most stable right now.
>
> Depending on your choice of versions (you will want apache 2.0.39 if you are
> going with apache 2), this link might help:
> http://www.galatea.com/flashguides/index
>
> John Turner
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> http://www.aas.com
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Chris Ruegger [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Tuesday, July 16, 2002 9:07 AM
> To: Tomcat Users List
> Subject: Apache->Tomcat Howto?
>
> I want to set up an Apache web server on Red Hat Linux 7.2
> to handle static content and SSL, and forward servlet and JSP
> requests to Tomcat 4.0.
>
> It seems there are about 3 ways to do this:
> Http 1.1
> Warp
> AJP
>
> Which approach do most sites use? Can someoneone
> point me to the Howto's that describe how I need to configure
> Apache and Tomcat to make the Warp approach and
> the AJP approaches work?
>
> Thanks in advance
>
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