Re: Apache and Tomcat port mapping

2002-11-27 Thread Paul Campbell
What I do is to use the Proxy Feature, I think a lot of others
use a mod_ but Proxy takes 2 lines in your httpd.conf

ProxyPass /equivhttp://insider:8080/equiv
ProxyPassReverse /equiv http://insider:8080/equiv

replace insider with the host that has your tomcat.
If it's on the same host, localhost will work.

xxx.mydomain.org/equiv is mapped internally to the tomcat (8080) on localhost


At 04:59 AM 11/27/02, you wrote:
>I have recently installed Tomcat 3.3.1 along with Apache.  The two are
>working well together, and I have no complaints except that my Apache
>pages all have the xxx.mydomain.org/ structure while my Tomcat pages are
>isolated and appear under the xxx.mydomain.org:8080/ structure.  Is
>there a way to get Tomcat to respond to port 80 requests or some other
>mechanism for removing the port number from appearing to users???


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Re: Apache and Tomcat port mapping

2002-11-27 Thread David Brown
Brian Dixon writes: 

I have recently installed Tomcat 3.3.1 along with Apache.  The two are
working well together, and I have no complaints except that my Apache
pages all have the xxx.mydomain.org/ structure while my Tomcat pages are
isolated and appear under the xxx.mydomain.org:8080/ structure.  Is
there a way to get Tomcat to respond to port 80 requests or some other
mechanism for removing the port number from appearing to users??? 

Thanks,
Brian 


Brian Dixon
Regenstrief Institute, Inc.
Indiana University Medical Center
1050 Wishard Blvd.
Indianapolis, IN 46202
(317) 630-8822
Web: www.regenstrief.org
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
"Human creativity multiplied by the computing power of super-recursive
devices and algorithms will cause the real revolution in information
technology and in our lives." - Mark Burgin 

 

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Hello Brian, the port 80 that apache uses is a tcp socket that apache 
"listens" to. the same w/ tomcat. apache has directives to define the ports 
it "listens" to for different schemes: (http, https). typically, apache does 
not display port "80" in the url because apache is a web or http static 
content server so the default port 80 is not required to be displayed. and, 
port 80 is a so-called priviledged port on 'nix systems (< 1023). when 
apache fires up it does so as "root" or the super-user allowing use of port 
80 but forks a new child process for the actual http request/resonse 
processing. also, when apache executes cgi-bin it can hide some of the url 
to execute cgi-programs by using apache alias or scriptalias directives. 
tomcat is not a static http web server but is a dynamic content servlet/jsp 
server (and other objects) and therefore needs to listen to the non-standard 
port of: "8080". this port can be redefined to be any non-priviledged port 
(> 1023). displaying port numbers in the url r not a problem if u restrict 
who sees the urls. as a suggestion u can authenticate ur users through 
encryption, user/password logins using ssl or read this about url 
obfuscation: http://www.n3dst4.com/articles/urlobfus . thanx, david.

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RE: Apache and Tomcat port mapping

2002-11-27 Thread Laxmikanth M.S.
use connector mod_jk

Regards
Laxmikanth M S 
Off*  : 6610330 extn 1256
Res* : 5267150
http://www.sonata-software.com

> Coming together is the beginning, staying together is progress and working
> together is Success
What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to
what lies within us  - Emerson


> -Original Message-
> From: Brian Dixon [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Wednesday, November 27, 2002 6:30 PM
> To:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject:  Apache and Tomcat port mapping
> 
> I have recently installed Tomcat 3.3.1 along with Apache.  The two are
> working well together, and I have no complaints except that my Apache
> pages all have the xxx.mydomain.org/ structure while my Tomcat pages are
> isolated and appear under the xxx.mydomain.org:8080/ structure.  Is
> there a way to get Tomcat to respond to port 80 requests or some other
> mechanism for removing the port number from appearing to users???
> 
> Thanks,
> Brian
> 
> 
> Brian Dixon
> Regenstrief Institute, Inc.
> Indiana University Medical Center
> 1050 Wishard Blvd.
> Indianapolis, IN 46202
> (317) 630-8822
> Web: www.regenstrief.org
> Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  
> "Human creativity multiplied by the computing power of super-recursive
> devices and algorithms will cause the real revolution in information
> technology and in our lives." - Mark Burgin
> 
> 
> 
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> To unsubscribe, e-mail:
> 
> For additional commands, e-mail:
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Re: Apache and Tomcat port mapping

2002-11-27 Thread Andoni
Yes, there is.  Look into linking Apache and Tomcat together using mod_jk.

Andoni.

- Original Message -
From: "Brian Dixon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, November 27, 2002 12:59 PM
Subject: Apache and Tomcat port mapping


> I have recently installed Tomcat 3.3.1 along with Apache.  The two are
> working well together, and I have no complaints except that my Apache
> pages all have the xxx.mydomain.org/ structure while my Tomcat pages are
> isolated and appear under the xxx.mydomain.org:8080/ structure.  Is
> there a way to get Tomcat to respond to port 80 requests or some other
> mechanism for removing the port number from appearing to users???
>
> Thanks,
> Brian
>
> 
> Brian Dixon
> Regenstrief Institute, Inc.
> Indiana University Medical Center
> 1050 Wishard Blvd.
> Indianapolis, IN 46202
> (317) 630-8822
> Web: www.regenstrief.org
> Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> "Human creativity multiplied by the computing power of super-recursive
> devices and algorithms will cause the real revolution in information
> technology and in our lives." - Mark Burgin
>
>
>
> --
> To unsubscribe, e-mail:

> For additional commands, e-mail:

>
>


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