By "some configuration changes" I added in virtual hosting. That error message is gone. I'm not exactly sure what I did to get it to 'go away' but it did. The problem I am having is that my worker is not being found.
I have two properties files defined. One is workers.properties for use with the default virtual host, and one is test.workers.properties to use with my testing virtual host. I tried combining each into one workers.properties file but still get the same error message. The suffix is matched, but when it looks for the worker named testWorker it doesn't fin it: [Mon Jun 02 16:16:57 2003] [jk_worker.c (132)]: Into wc_get_worker_for_name testWorker [Mon Jun 02 16:16:57 2003] [jk_worker.c (136)]: wc_get_worker_for_name, done did not found a worker My test.workers.properties file looks like: worker.list = testWorker worker.testWorker.type = ajp13 worker.testWorker.host = test.mysite.com worker.testWorker.port = 8080 My test.workers.properties file looks like: worker.list = worker worker.worker.type = ajp13 worker.worker.host = www.mysite.com worker.worker.port = 8080 My server.xml, mod_jk.conf and httpd.conf both point to the appropriate worker properties file within each virtual host. I am in the process of going over all my config files to see if I missed anything, but it appears that everything is configured right. Mod_jk is doing its job - but for some reason it is not finding the definition of the named worker. Any suggestion? I can post my files if necessary. Thanks for taking a look! Denise -----Original Message----- From: John Turner [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, June 02, 2003 4:10 PM To: Tomcat Users List Subject: Re: Strange mod_jk error As far as I know, that error message is socket related, as in the socket is closed, or Apache thinks the socket is closed when it isn't. Its pretty old, from what I know, and should be fixed in recent incarnations of mod_jk. Then again, you are using Apache 1.3.23, so maybe that error still crops up. Verify that your workers.properties has the right port number, verify that it has the right host, and verify that you don't have any workers configured (like ajp12 or ajp14) that you don't need. Other than that, you'll have to explain further what you mean by "some configuration changes". ;) John On Mon, 2 Jun 2003 16:09:26 -0400, Denise Mangano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi all. > > I have not posted in some time as thanks to some great help from this > list my application was running smoothly. However, I needed to make > some configuration changes, and now my apps stopped working. Apache > (1.3.23) runs fine, and Tomcat (4.1.17) runs fine but the problem is > with mod_jk. > > I tried searching the archives for this one but had no luck. The > error I > am > getting in my mod_jk.log is: > > In jk_endpoint_t::service, Error sd = -1 > > And of course the error I am getting in my apache error log shows that > it > is > looking for the file in the apache web directory. So it appears that > mod_jk > is not working and the request is never being interpreted by the JkMount > statements. > > Does anyone have any idea what this means? I even tried restoring the > original server.xml file, but I still received the error. I can post > server.xml, httpd.conf, etc if you need to see it, but I thought first > I would send out the error message. > > Thanks for your help! > > Denise Mangano > Help Desk Analyst > Complus Data Innovations, Inc. > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > -- Using M2, Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/m2/ --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
