thomas2004 schrieb:
> I have to some correction as follow:
>
>
>> Once you make sure that there is an Apache running, then you could try the
>>
> following :
>
>> enter the command :
>> telnet web-mycompany.com 80
>> GET / HTTP/1.0
>>
>
>
>> (the second line above, you have to en
>A more comfortable way to test your webserver from your commandline is with
the curl or wget command (every linux distribution has them, i prefer curl)
>So do for example:
>curl http://localhost
>or
>wget http://localhost
>on the machine where your apache is running.
When I entered "curl http:
On Thu, Sep 10, 2009 at 4:41 PM, André Warnier wrote:
>
> Once you make sure that there is an Apache running, then you could try the
> following :
> enter the command :
> telnet web-mycompany.com 80
> GET / HTTP/1.0
>
> (the second line above, you have to enter "blind", because there will be no
>
thomas2004 wrote:
Sorry for the late reply. I am from Germany. As you replied my question I was
out of office. :)
I am in Germany also, so that is a bad excuse. :-)
...
I tried both and got a long list such as following:
...
root 21625 1 0 Sep10 ?00:00:00 /usr/sbin/httpd
a
I have to some correction as follow:
>Once you make sure that there is an Apache running, then you could try the
following :
>enter the command :
>telnet web-mycompany.com 80
>GET / HTTP/1.0
>(the second line above, you have to enter "blind", because there will be no
echo; the third line is just
Sorry for the late reply. I am from Germany. As you replied my question I was
out of office. :)
Now return to your answer:
>Ok, let's start from there.
>First, let's see if Apache is running.
>When you enter the following command :
>netstat -pan | grep '\:80'
>it should at least show one line.
thomas2004 wrote:
...
That either means that the host "web-mycompany.com" is not running, or
that it is not listening on port 80.
It looks like you are not even getting as far as connecting to your Apache
webserver.
Could be. That's the reason I ask this question. :)
Where and how can I ch
>what version of Apache ?
It is httpd-2.0.46-46.2.ent
>Where is that Jboss server running ?
On RH-Linux on other machine.
>that has nothing to do with either Apache or Jboss.
You are right. This is configuration of the machine. I have to do this since
the machine will listen to this ip.
>That i
thomas2004 wrote:
I installed the Apache Http Web Server
what version of Apache ?
on RH-Linux and want to configure it
so that the incoming browsing will be forward to the application deployted
on Jboss.
Where is that Jboss server running ?
I do followings:
1. Set the ip-address in "/
Hi all,
I installed the Apache Http Web Server on RH-Linux and want to configure it
so that the incoming browsing will be forward to the application deployted
on Jboss. I do followings:
1. Set the ip-address in "/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0:xx"
2. Create a .conf file which looks as
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