How do I get off this list? WO was a great product, but I have literally not run it for more than 15 years.
Suddenly, I am getting hit by updates on this list, and cannot easily filter it out of my inbox. Great to hear it is still getting used. ____________________________________________ Robert Snyder Enterprise Architect Penn State Information Technology Supporting Online Education and Outreach [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 814.865.0912 From: Paul Hoadley <[email protected]> Date: Sunday, December 7, 2025 at 2:17 AM To: [email protected] <[email protected]> Cc: Louis M Fisher III <[email protected]>, Theodore Petrosky <[email protected]> Subject: Re: Help setting up AWS Hi Mark, and I meant to reply to Ted who made a similar post a few days ago, On 7 Dec 2025, at 8:52 am, Louis M Fisher III via Webobjects-dev <[email protected]> wrote: I am following the directions on: https://wiki.wocommunity.org/xwiki/bin/view/documentation/Home/Deployment/Platforms/Installing%20a%20deployment%20environment%20on%20RedHat%2C%20CentOS%20or%20Amazon%20Linux/<https://wiki.wocommunity.org/xwiki/bin/view/documentation/Home/Deployment/Platforms/Installing%20a%20deployment%20environment%20on%20RedHat,%20CentOS%20or%20Amazon%20Linux/> There are a number of ways to do it, and it's always very hard to keep this stuff up to date. I note that the last modified date there is only a few years ago, but the history of that page dates back to 2013. It wouldn't be at all surprising if it has gone stale. The slightly flippant answer is: start with Simon McLean's wo-install.sh script back in 2010, and modify it heavily for your business needs over the next 15 years. That's what we did, and now it's barely recognisable, and highly dependent on resources we've got stashed in various places, and so on. I can actually pull the original script out of the repo, and I'll attach it below, but it's stale as well. I can't remember what AMI Simon was building against, but I highly recommend the latest Amazon Linux, which means you'll need to add a Java installation step. Simon was also compiling the Apache adaptor from source during install, which is unnecessary—you should download it from somewhere. Anyway, take a look at it and see how far you get. There will be some other resources missing which I should also be able to supply—tell me what you need. Finally, I will put it on my to-do list to pare down our internal approach to use only publicly-accessible resources and make it available. -- Paul Hoadley https://logicsquad.net/ https://www.linkedin.com/company/logic-squad/
