Thanks to all of you.
I had tried this and could not get it to work.
I forgot to inform my router to forward port 8080 to my computer.
Ray
Ray Hurst wrote:
Can Geronimo be the web server or does it need be a back end to Apache?
Are there docs that explain the advantages and disadvantages?
I am a
Interestingly enough, just after I read this, I found an article in the
stuff I've downloaded about Geronimo that describes how to use PHP in
Geronimo. The article is called "Run PHP applications in Apache
Geronimo". It's at developerWorks at IBM.
http://www-128.ibm.com/developerworks/
Ray Hurs
Hi Ray
If you are new to geronimo, there are documents to start and play with it.
http://cwiki.apache.org/GMOxDOC11/apache-geronimo-v11-users-guide.html
Also the Configuring virtual host has discussed here
Regards
Kanchana
On 12/20/06, Ray Hurst <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Can Geronimo be the
It should be listening on the primary interface by default. So if
you are running Geronimo on the server hosted by your ISP, and the
ISP allows traffic to port 8080, then you can simply point your we-
browser at http://:8080
--jason
On Dec 19, 2006, at 6:02 PM, Ray Hurst wrote:
So it can
So it can be used in standalone mode...great. I have been using it as a
localhost for a couple of days now.
How do I get it to respond to the outside world?
In other words, I want to be able to type in the IP address given to me
by my ISP and have Geronimo respond.
--ray
Jason Dillon wrote:
N
No, you do not need Apache HTTPD, you can use the webcontainer that
comes in Geronimo (either Tomcat or Jetty depending on which
distribution you pick). If you want you can setup an AJP connector
from the webcontainer in Geronimo to allow an Apache HTTPD to
integration with Geronimo seamle
Can Geronimo be the web server or does it need be a back end to Apache?
Are there docs that explain the advantages and disadvantages?
I am an extreme newbie?
Ray