I remember trying that before, and it didn't work, or there was something about it that made me abandon, but it was so long ago, I have no idea. I will have to test that again.

--

Robert Garcia
President - BigHead Technology
VP Application Development - eventpix.com
13653 West Park Dr
Magalia, Ca 95954
ph: 530.645.4040 x222 fax: 530.645.4040
[EMAIL PROTECTED] - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://bighead.net/ - http://eventpix.com/

On Oct 30, 2007, at 9:38 PM, Robert Shubert wrote:

Another way to solve this is to simply load another system variable into Witango.ini. It isn’t really documented, and doesn’t always work as you might expect so don’t go crazy, but if you add a line to your Witango.ini stanza like “myservername=fred”, then @@system $myservername will resolve to “fred”. Simply set each server with its own value. Making edits to the ini file like this is persistent, I have done this for years.

Again, this is a very not-officially-recommended procedure. Caveat Emptor and all that.

Robert

From: Robert Garcia [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, October 30, 2007 10:59 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Witango-Talk: <@servername>

There is a much easier way to do this. In your witango.ini files on each server, give them a different listener address, so they only listen on that one ip. Then, to identify a server in your code, like in a comment in your html, is just use the var

<@var system$listenerAddress> and it will be that value, which is unique to each witango service, unless you have multiple services on one machine. If that is the case, then also use the listenerport.

--

Robert Garcia
President - BigHead Technology
VP Application Development - eventpix.com
13653 West Park Dr
Magalia, Ca 95954
ph: 530.645.4040 x222 fax: 530.645.4040
[EMAIL PROTECTED] - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://bighead.net/ - http://eventpix.com/

On Oct 30, 2007, at 7:18 PM, Fogelson, Steve wrote:


I want to be able to determine which service I am using (without “forcing” the service with the FORCE_SERVER_ARG_NAME argument) in a Load balancing environment. The docs indicate to use <@servername> to accomplish, so I am trying to change the Witango Definition to a different name on one of the services. The services are located on different servers.

I change the following from
[Witango Definitions]
Witango_Server_5.5=

[Witango_Server_5.5]
ABSOLUTEPATHPREFIX=
To
[Witango Definitions]
Witango_Server_5.5-1=

[Witango_Server_5.5-1]
ABSOLUTEPATHPREFIX=

When I re-start the service the Windows log file indicate “Application server not licensed.”

The following folders were also created
log.Witango_Server_5.5
variables.Witango_Server_5.5

What am I doing wrong?

Steve Fogelson
Internet Commerce Solutions

________________________________________________________________________
TO UNSUBSCRIBE: Go to http://www.witango.com/developer/maillist.taf

________________________________________________________________________
TO UNSUBSCRIBE: Go to http://www.witango.com/developer/maillist.taf
________________________________________________________________________
TO UNSUBSCRIBE: Go to http://www.witango.com/developer/maillist.taf


________________________________________________________________________
TO UNSUBSCRIBE: Go to http://www.witango.com/developer/maillist.taf

Reply via email to