You could always try mod_proxy_ajp, which uses the mod_proxy framework,
but communicates via AJP. It's better at detection of silently
dropped AJP connections.

> On Feb 9, 2015, at 3:18 AM, Dr James Smith <j...@sanger.ac.uk> wrote:
> 
> 
> We used mod_jk for ages and have recently flipped back to mod_proxy for our 
> java/tomcat apps, we found that we had connectivity issues with mod_jk - if 
> the connection between apache/tomcat is severed then mod_jk did not always 
> work cleanly - and subsequent requests would just hang. mod_proxy didn't have 
> the problem.
> 
> The problem showed it self when we started segregating machines into virtual 
> firewall zones - so traffic between machines was controlled.
> 
> It does mean that we don't have as easy a load-balanced setup  - although we 
> do send the requests back through our front-end load balancers and this seems 
> effective.
> 
> James
> 
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