!
Regards,
Carl
-----Original Message-
From: Nate Rock [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 05 December 2005 05:11
To: Tomcat Users List; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: SSL InvalidKeystore Format?
I think the issue Scott is getting caught up on is the same issue I have
been having for the last we
I think the issue Scott is getting caught up on is the same issue I have
been having for the last week:
Using APR + SSL with anything but a self signed certificate isn't
clearly defined as of yet.
Scott, my recommendation to you at this point is to uninstall tomcat,
and then reinstall it making s
-XX:+AggressiveHeap usage for JVM?
This email is pointed almost directly for Carl Oliver, since he seems to
be someone who knows his virtual memory settings, but I figure Joe Reger
might get something out of it too ;)
Evidently this setting by iteself "instructs the JVM to push memory use
to the
Hey Damon,
Whe you start up tomcat using the jmxrmote params the default is
have SSL enabled and to force authentication. If you want to connect to
it quickly, you have to explicitly turn this OFF! Try
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote
-Dcom.sun.management.jm
Hey Chris,
What is the fileName of your keystore? Looks like you might be missing
the actual keystore's fileName in the keystoreFile attribute:
keystoreFile="c:/winnt/profiles/administrator/"
If your keystore is named "myKeystore", add it to the end of your URI in
the keystoreFile attrib
This is asked on the mailing list a bunch but in short, the theoretical
max you could use running windows 32 bit is 1800MB, but depending on
other programs loaded at startup (virus checkers, firewall software
etc.) I have see ranges from 1024MB-1500MB (MAX!). We typically used
1024MB Initial/1024MB
location I am still trying to trackdown).
-rOcK
-Original Message-
From: Dhaval Patel [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, December 01, 2005 8:48 PM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: SSL InvalidKeystore Format?
Hi Scott,
Good to hear that it works. Thank also go to Remy and Nat
et me
know.
-rOcK
-Original Message-
From: Nate Rock [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, December 01, 2005 3:29 PM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: RE: Upgrading Tomcat
The same architecture change that allows tomcat to serve static content
quickly (the APR native connector)
The same architecture change that allows tomcat to serve static content
quickly (the APR native connector) also allows Tomcat to use OpenSSL
instead of the JSSE for SSL which should improve performance.
I have been trying to get it configured using Tomcat 5.5.12 (native APR
connector) for the past
Special thanks to Remy for adding an example connector to the APR doc...
I saw the change go through the dev list last night ;)
Dhaval and Remy, between your two emails, I was actually able to get
Tomcat 5.5.12 to use SSL, however there is one last problem I am running
into...
Dhaval, you created
L PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, November 30, 2005 4:12 PM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: Tomcat 5.5.12- APR Connector - SSL configuration
On 11/30/05, Nate Rock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> All to no avail =(
Cool, but how about really reading *all* the APR documentat
How exactly is the Tomact Manager not working correctly? Does it not
come up at all? Give you an error? Etc. More information = good ;)
Also, are you using the normal Tomcat connector or the native APR
connector?
After I track down the HTTPS connector not working issue, I will be
regression test
Someone may have already posted this, but since I just joined the
mailing list, I figured it might help someone else if it hasn't already
been sent.
I am having trouble getting an HTTPS connection to my tomcat server
using the native APR connector under Tomcat 5.5.12.
I am familiar with how to s
Use the netstat command and it will show all network interfaces/ports
being used on a machine.
For more detailed options when using netstat, refer to the page below.
http://userpages.umbc.edu/~jack/ifsm498/netstat.html
-rOcK
-Original Message-
From: blueberry lake [mailto:[EMAIL PRO
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