Hi all,
I solved this issue following a parallel discussion on another forum:
http://forum.linode.com/viewtopic.php?f=19t=8991
Basically, I had IPTables firewall rules rerouting port 443 traffic to port
8443, and port 80 traffic to port 8080.
This is because the tomcat6 user cannot access ports
Hi Chris,
On 6/8/12 11:12 AM, Assaf Urieli wrote:
Ok, this is strange. I created a test.jsp page that prints
request.getLocalName(), request.getServerName(), and
request.getLocalAddr(). I tried various scenarios in the browser:
http://domain1.com, http://www.domain1.com, http:/1.2.3.4
Thanks Mark Konstantin for your replies.
I'm still having no luck here.
I've tried to apply all of Mark's suggestions to Ubuntu.
SAN certificates are not currently an option for me (because of pricing,
and also because the two domains do not officially belong to the same legal
entity).
My
Answering my own question to a certain extent:
* When an HTTP/HTTPS request is made, when and how do
request.getLocalName() and request.getLocalAddr() get filled in?
From v6.0.35 source code, org/apache/catalina/connector/CoyoteAdapter.java,
line 489:
if (connector.getUseIPVHosts())
Hi all,
I'm attempting to set up a multi-host system with a separate SSL
certificate per host.
According to the documentation, this is problematic using name-based
virtual hosting:
http://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-6.0-doc/ssl-howto.html#General_Tips_on_Running_SSL
Finally, using name-based virtual
Hello,
Looking at the code, the value used for host name in IP-based virtual
hosts is ServletRequest.getLocalName(). It is not getLocalAddr() and
there is no pattern in AccessLogValve that prints it. You can write
simple JSP page that will display its value.
Ok, this is strange. I created