Edoardo Causarano wrote:
The host appbase attribute specifies the directory where the wars
(exploded or left intact) are stored and is not a documentroot in the
apache httpd sense. The latter would be the ROOT.war webapp to which
root relative paths unmatched by any other war prefix resolve.
Nope. No such attribute in the .
Would any default value take effect then? If so what is it? Anything
nearby 2016?
Thanks,
Santosh.
Mark Thomas wrote:
Santosh Puranshettiwar wrote:
Well, there's another problem.
HttpServletRequest.getParameter() is unable to parse the key-value pairs
in th
Thanks alot for your reply Martin.
Its just a simple setup. I am using Tomcat 4.1 listening on port 80 (OS:
Windows - if that matters). Its not coupled with Apache.
Why would the same data when sent from a browser would parse well while
not from a J2ME application? I'm baffled.
Santosh.
Mar
Hi,
I'm using tomcat for dev. My question is for a dev environment. I have
context defined in conf %TOMCAT_HOME%\conf\Catalina\localhost. Is there a
way to specify what's the web.xml tomcat should use ? I use tomcat for dev
but I target Weblogic for production and such feature would be quite
Evan J wrote:
> conf/enginename/vh.host.com/myapp.xml:
>
>docBase="/myapp"...>
Ahh. Light dawns. It wasn't clear (to me at least) that you were using
a context.xml file. I had assumed you were specifying the context
inside server.xml. Using the configuration above the path will be
Ok, that's what I had expected,
http://vh.host.com/someuri/eservlets/myservlet, but in reality, such
URL would produce HTTP 400 which has been puzzling me and I had
assumed I had some misunderstanding of something. But the weird thing
is http://vh.host.com/myapp/eservlets/myservlet works flawlessl
Evan J wrote:
> Yes, I understand that perfectly. What I am asking is what if we
> include a web application Context path, that is path="someuri"...>. Of course, JkMount /*/eservlet/* would relay all
> the request with mywebapp/eservlet/* from Apache to Tomcat -- I am
> aware of that. Now if we se
Yes, I understand that perfectly. What I am asking is what if we
include a web application Context path, that is . Of course, JkMount /*/eservlet/* would relay all
the request with mywebapp/eservlet/* from Apache to Tomcat -- I am
aware of that. Now if we set , what is
going to happen to our URI?
Hi,
If you are using Apache 2.0.x, then and then only mod_jk or mod_jk2 will
help you. If you are using Apache 2.2.x, use mod_proxy_ajp.
For mod_jk configuration, look at following two links:
(1) Simple configuration -
http://www.howtoforge.com/apache2_tomcat5_mod_jk_integration
(2) Advanc
I believe you will have to acquire the ServletInfo from the (Action)servlet
itself as in the example..
ServletInfo info = cyR.getRequestProcessor().servlet.getServletInfo();
In your Valve class:
public void invoke(request,response,valveContext) throws
IOException,ServletException
{
//main proce
Why are you mixing up Apache and Tomcat?
If you are speaking of AJP 'context' term
if you look at the doc you will see
JkMount [URL prefix] [Worker name]
/*where URL prefix is the context*/
JkMount /*/esrvlt/* worker1
Send all requests of whateverWebApp/eservlet/WhateverFileName to worker1 so in
Okay you are right. So how do I go about setting up the mod_jk to be the
connector between Tomcat and the Apache HTTP Server anyway?
Mark Thomas wrote:
Steve R Burrus wrote:
hi I have ocassionally gotten/obtained the Apache http server to
supposedly use with tomcat. I say "supposedly" beca
No you do not need Apache, unless your static content is MUCH greater
than your dynamic content - And even then, with a low volume site, it
really doesnt make any difference
Regards
Andrew
Nolan Johnson wrote:
I've got a webapp that's entirely dynamic. That is, all of the content is
produ
On Sam 19.08.2006 21:40, Alexander Lazic wrote:
I have seen a in 4.1.32
connectors/coyote/src/java/org/apache/coyote/RequestInfo.java which
have the infos but when i try to use this i get this error:
With help from Mark Thomas i have know a working CoyoteConnector, thanks
you Mark ;-).
But ko
Steve R Burrus wrote:
> hi I have ocassionally gotten/obtained the Apache http server to
> supposedly use with tomcat. I say "supposedly" because I have never been
> able to even start to connect the 2 servers thru the mod_jk2! Can
> someone please "walk me" through the whole procedure for doing th
Hello,
I'm using AspectJ capabilities on my web application on Eclipse. I want to
add logging functionality. Concretelly, I've created a ControllerServlet
that receive all user requests and I want write or log this user actions in
my log file. So, I've added a aspect that does it:
package com.
hi I have ocassionally gotten/obtained the Apache http server to
supposedly use with tomcat. I say "supposedly" because I have never been
able to even start to connect the 2 servers thru the mod_jk2! Can
someone please "walk me" through the whole procedure for doing this?
Much thanx to anyone w
Martin,
I have the documents and I'm aware the difinition of Context path and
from what you have posted, it says, "It is matched against the
requesting URI." Now, my question was having Context path set, what
would the appropriate URI in case that the system utilizes Apache and
jk_mod in which Jk
Some posted something about this but nobody posted something like a
solution :(
The problem:
Running heavy webApp that reads data form MySQL and outputs XML to a
XSL transformer, everything works fine at first. After a non-
definable time, even without any load to the webserver, it starts
faili
#path is the context path of the webapp which is matched against the requesting
URI to choose appropriate webapp to process (all paths must be unique)
#docBase maps the urlPath to physical docBase (which can either be absolute
path or relative to webapps)
#embedding context elements within serve
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