Tony Fountain wrote:
Hi,
Scenario: we purchased a product written in Java to integrate into our
reporting tool. Our setup is such that our web application is written
in .NET and hosted on a web farm using IIS (5 or 6 depending on the
environment). The product we purchased runs under Apache Tom
original
message without making a copy. Thank you.
- Original Message -
From: "Tony Fountain" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Tomcat Users List"
Sent: Wednesday, August 15, 2007 4:47 PM
Subject: RE: IIS redirect to Apache
Martin,
To clarify our setup, our site receive
Yes, this will be possible with the plugin. Be careful: a redirect is
something else (it sends the browser a new URL, to which it should
connect). A reverse proxy send the request forward to another servber
and returns the response to the browser in a way, such that the browser
will not notice
(fax)
-Original Message-
From: Martin Gainty [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, August 15, 2007 4:10 PM
To: Tony Fountain
Subject: Re: IIS redirect to Apache
Kinda O/T here...Which system is front-ending..e.g. which box will be
first to get the HTTP requests?
M--
This email m
PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, August 15, 2007 3:55 PM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: IIS redirect to Apache
Hi Tony,
the Tomcat project has a sub project called Tomcat Connectors or simply
JK. It produces web server plugins to connect the most important web
servers directly to Tomcat via a specia
Hi Tony,
the Tomcat project has a sub project called Tomcat Connectors or simply
JK. It produces web server plugins to connect the most important web
servers directly to Tomcat via a special protocol named AJP. Tomcat has
an incoming AJP connector built-in.
The Tomcat connectors include Apac
Hi,
Scenario: we purchased a product written in Java to integrate into our
reporting tool. Our setup is such that our web application is written
in .NET and hosted on a web farm using IIS (5 or 6 depending on the
environment). The product we purchased runs under Apache Tomcat/5.5.23
using 1.5.0_