Derek,
You could go jk2 route - just that, in my view, you'd loose a great deal of flexibility.
This WILL in my view be relatively easy to fix. It is going to be something simple.
Here's some things to try:
1) Switch on (temporarily) rewrite logging. Setting of 3 should give you enough info to go on.
2) If you're on Unix, try using Lynx or some such to use the http://localhost:8080/ URL to see if it works correctly from within the server
3) Check that the rewrite logs are rewritingg to that particular URL
Hmm. Looking at what I wrote below, I missed [P,L] from the end of the line. It should be:
RewriteRule /cocoon215/soc(.*) http://localhost:8080/cocoon215/soc$1 [P,L]
P says proxy the request to this URL L says this is the last rule. Do not process any other rules.
Hope that is enough to get you going.
Regards, Upayavira
Derek Hohls wrote:
The admin tried this and we get the same results(problems)
Any other ideas?
Thanks Derek
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 2005/01/19 03:52:28 PM >>>
Instead of:
ProxyPass /cocoon215/soc http://localhost:8080/cocoon215/soc you should use:
RewriteRule /cocoon215/soc(.*) http://localhost:8080/cocoon215/soc$1
You should still use the ProxyPassReverse rule.
Try that.
Regards, Upayavira
Derek Hohls wrote:
YouUpayavira
Apparently that was tried as well .... the problem in that
case is that the :8080 is still retained in the response coming back from the ProxyPassReverse and so the site is then effectively not viewable from outside the local
network.
Any other ideas?
Derek
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 2005/01/19 11:55:18 AM >>>
Derek Hohls wrote:
I am working with Apache/Tomcat and Cocoon 2.1.5. I am trying to have a virtual host setup, so users fromCocoon will see the hostname as being the one supplied from Apache.
outside the organisation can access the site.
In the Apache httpd.conf file, the Unix admin has inserted (note that I have changed some actual parameters for security...) the following (NB: I have been told that the warp connnector option *cannot* be setup... we need to use a proxy rewrite)
<VirtualHost 0.0.0.0>
ServerAdmin [EMAIL PROTECTED] ServerName soc.myserver.com:80
DocumentRoot /usr/local/tomcat/webapps
RewriteEngine on
# If URL has cocoon215/soc(/) we don't rewrite, therefore Last rule
RewriteRule ^/cocoon215/soc/(.*) /cocoon215/soc/$1 [R,L]
RewriteRule ^/cocoon215/soc$ /cocoon215/soc [R,L]
# Else we must rewrite
#RewriteRule ^/$ /cocoon215/soc [R,L]
RewriteRule ^/(.*) /cocoon215/soc/$1 [R,L]
# We reverse proxy instead of Warp connector ProxyPass /cocoon215/soc http://localhost:8080/cocoon215/soc ProxyPassReverse /cocoon215/soc http://localhost:8080/cocoon215/soc </VirtualHost>
In my sitemap I have:
<map:match pattern="pageTest">
<map:generate src="docs/test.xml"/>
<map:transform src="stylesheets/doc/test-page2html.xsl">
<map:parameter name="use-request-parameters" value="true"/>
<map:parameter name="contextPath" value="{request:contextPath}"/>
<map:parameter name="servletPath" value="{request:servletPath}"/>
<map:parameter name="serverName" value="{request:serverName}"/>
<map:parameter name="serverPort" value="{request:serverPort}"/>
</map:transform> <map:serialize/> </map:match>
In the stylesheet (test-page2html.xsl) I have:
<xsl:param name="contextPath"/> <xsl:param name="servletPath"/> <xsl:param name="serverName"/> <xsl:param name="serverPort"/> ... <p>Context=<xsl:value-of select="$contextPath"/></p> <p>Servlet=<xsl:value-of select="$servletPath"/></p> <p>Server=<xsl:value-of select="$serverName"/></p> <p>Port=<xsl:value-of select="$serverPort"/></p>
But, whether I try http://myserver.com:8080/cocoon215/soc/pageTest or
http://soc.myserver.com/cocoon215/soc/pageTest
I have the same results:
Context=/cocoon215 Servlet=/soc/pageTest Server=myserver.com Port=8080
In order for the application to work properly, what do I need to do to get to this:
Context=/cocoon215 Servlet=/soc/pageTest Server=soc.myserver.com Port=[null]
Any ideas how?
have:
ProxyPass /cocoon215/soc http://localhost:8080/cocoon215/soc ProxyPassReverse /cocoon215/soc http://localhost:8080/cocoon215/soc
So Cocoon should see localhost. You could replace this with soc.myserver.com. If that points to an external IP address, add: 127.0.0.1 soc.myserver.com to your /etc/hosts file.
Make sense?
Regards, Upayavira
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