I never got a reply from anyone for the message below, so I'm trying it
once again.
Thanks
Setup includes:
Redhat Linux 9
Apache 2.0.49
Tomcat 5.0.19
mod_jk2
After performing the appropriate installs, I can get to the Apache
default page, and I can
Setup includes:
Redhat Linux 9
Apache 2.0.49
Tomcat 5.0.19
mod_jk2
After performing the appropriate installs, I can get to the Apache
default page, and I can access the Tomcat as well on 8080. I can even
access the jkstatus via Apache, but when I try to access jsp-examples
via Apache, I'm getting
I thought I'd try this request one more time since I didn't get any
responses my first time out:
I finally got Apache2+Tomcat5+mod_jk2 all talking. I entered the address
http://myhost/jkstatus; and received the correct response page.
However, when I entered the address:
After all of the problems I had last week trying to get these pieces to
work together, I figured that I would start from scratch, erase
everything, and recompile the Apache server, Tomcat, and the mod_jk2.
While compiling and installing the Apache HTTP server, I ran into a
problem and figured that
I finally got Apache2+Tomcat5+mod_jk2 all talking. I entered the address
http://myhost/jkstatus; and received the correct response page.
However, when I entered the address: httpd://myhost/jsp-examples, I
get the following output:
I have a quick question regarding WARs and Tomcat 4.x, which I hope
someone can give me a straight answer for:
I'm reposting this message since I still haven't received an answer:
I created a WAR file containing a servlet, and a few JSPs. I put all of
the necessary stuff into the web.xml, and
of creating a Context entry was to
provide the application with its own private context at runtime? If
this is so, who's context is this application running under. It
certainly doesn't appear to be creating a context for MyWebApp.
Ken Ramirez - Principal/CTO
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Master-Mind
of creating a Context entry was to
provide the application with its own private context at runtime? If
this is so, who's context is this application running under. It
certainly doesn't appear to be creating a context for MyWebApp.
Ken Ramirez - Principal/CTO
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Master-Mind
Totally awesome. This worked like a charm.
Thanks,
Ken Ramirez - Principal/CTO
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Master-Mind Consulting Services
http://www.mastermind.com
Ph - 570-688-9600
Fx - 208-275-2301
-Original Message-
From: Sriram Narayanan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday
/servlet-mapping
Now, I simply call the servlet from the browser without the servlet
keyword and everything works as expected. Thanks again for the
suggestion.
Ken Ramirez - Principal/CTO
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Master-Mind Consulting Services
http://www.mastermind.com
Ph - 570-688-9600
Fx
reads adds the classes directory for
all of the apps deployed in the server.xml
(with Context info), which I defined as follows:
Context path=/MyApp docBase=MyApp debug=0 reloadable=true /
Thanks,
Ken Ramirez - Principal/CTO
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Master-Mind Consulting Services
http
/servlet/images/myimage.jpg HTTP/1.1 404 696
I'd like to get this to work without the hack I mentioned above. Does
anyone have any suggestions?
Thanks,
Ken
Ken Ramirez - Principal/CTO
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Master-Mind Consulting Services
http://www.mastermind.com http://www.mastermind.com/
Ph
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