Jeff,

To supplement Ulrich's answer a little:

>What advantage would Tomcat-in-Phoenix have over Tomcat on it's own? The
>contract with the user is still the servlet API, no?
>
(For me at least) One virtual machine.  Arguably a leaner memory and 
disk usage.

>In most environments I've worked in, people have firewalls blocking
>pretty much everything except port 80. IMHO, this accounts in no small
>part for the success of SOAP. Apache owns port 80; until Phoenix can
>talk AJP13, I can't use it (as much as I'd like to!).
>
Phoenix hosted apps could, ultimately do all server tasks, that we might 
normally use Linux for.

We could, in time, have a Phoenix HTTP firewall, delegating internally 
(without sockets) to a Phoenix loadbalancer, possibly delegaing 
in-Phoenix again to a Phoenix WebServer. That webserver serverapp hosts 
sites and Webapps OR delegates internally again to other phoenix server 
apps (like JAMES or FtpServer) without using the Servlet API.

If we get Catalina working fully inside Phoenix then, in direct answer 
to your quandry, we could have it listenening on AJP13 as normal.  The 
small trouble is that Catalina is mounted as a kludge at the moment.

Regards,

- Paul H


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