If I understand you correctly, you are saying that your reverse proxy does not
serve the documents that you expect it to, but that any document requested is
served by the backend.
That is because of the ProxyPass directive that passes all requests having the
URL path prefix / to the backend.
Brian Rectanus wrote:
What you had will strip the mydir off at the backend.
ProxyRequests off
ProxyPass /mydir/ http://www.mydomain.com:8080/mydir/
-B
On 5/18/06, Oliver A. Rojo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Krist van Besien wrote:
On 5/18/06, Oliver A. Rojo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all!
I had a similiar problem with the mod_proxy modules,
but even specifiying these modules during the
./configure phase did not work properly for me.
Try this:
cd $source_dir/modules/proxy
$apache-home/bin/apxs -i -a -c *.c
R.
--- JP [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi. My question is:
Is
--- Don O'Neil [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Well I would tend to agree with you, except for the
fact that the 3 sites
did not use any SQL, they were all simple html sites
with very little
content.
I did find something that referenced hidden field
injections as well, but
again, none of the
Hello everyone,
Is it possible to use rotatelogs with a rewriteLog on a Windows
OS? If so, how.
TIA
-
The official User-To-User support forum of the Apache HTTP Server Project.
See
On 5/19/06, Browne, Anthony A [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello everyone,
Is it possible to use rotatelogs with a rewriteLog on a Windows
OS? If so, how.
I've never tried it, but I don't believe this is possible.
But you shouldn't need to rotate the RewriteLog. This should be used
for
It didn't appear to be possible when I tried it, but I was wondering if
someone knew a way to do it. We need to use the rewriteLog if our
customers, who will use a gui to change the verbosity, experience
problems. Our goal was to rotate the logs when they reached a certain
size so they could be
Ok, how about
cd $source_dir/modules/proxy
$apache-home/bin/apxs -i -a -c *proxy*.c
I know I got it to work using some sort of wildcards.
I'll try to see if I can find it back in my shell's
history.
--- JP [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I had a similiar problem with the mod_proxy
We are now using Apache 1.3.31 and Tomcat 4.0.6 on Unix. We want to upgrade the Apache to 2.0. Just wondering if anyone has done this, or if this will cause problems with Tomcat.
Thanks
Colleen
Colleen,
I strongly recommend
going straight to Apache 2.2 and Tomcat 5.5. You can get rid of the (in my
opinion horrible) mod_jk setups and all the tricky stuff involved with setting
up Tomcat connectors. Over the past 4 years of working with Apache and Tomcat,
I wasted 2 days getting
Tribley William-cwt010 wrote:
It only took about an hour to connect Apache 2.2 to Tomcat 5.5 .
Tomcat 5.5 also supports separate files to configure each webapp
instead of glomming it all in server.xml, a huge win for the
configuration management and risk management camps.
Bill
Ok, how about
cd $source_dir/modules/proxy
$apache-home/bin/apxs -i -a -c *proxy*.c
That compiles, but produces the symbol resolution error at runtime. I was
wondering if I am missing something obvious. The docs say to use apxs to
compile modules outside of the source tree, so I was
Hi Ricardo,
You are right. I was thinking that if you are used to the Apache 1.3 world and
have to read the new material on 2.2, Tomcat 5.5 and the way they connect, then
install and test it, an hour will go by.
Frankly I was amazed at how easy it was. I am a big Apache 2.2/Tomcat 5.5 fan.
On 5/19/06, Oliver A. Rojo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
ok this is my whole config...
VirtualHost 69.16.199.98
ServerAdmin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
DocumentRoot /var/www/html
ServerName mydomain.com.com
ServerAlias www
ProxyRequests off
ProxyPass /mydir
Hi,
I'm trying to use the piped log on Windows 2003 (apache httpd 2.2), but it
doesn't work. I tried it out on linux and it works great. My log.exe
program is called 5 times when server starts, and were not killed after
server stops. And my log.exe program doesn't seem to capture the logs.
Is there a better list to use for questions about core modules?
I'm using mod_cache on Apache 2.0.55 (Debian Sid) with the following
config:
ProxyViaOn
CacheRoot /var/cache/apache2/proxy
CacheSize 1000
CacheMaxExpire 300
Have you enabled some exception handling that would bypass exceptions
on cin? cin should be closed on the write end of the pipe, before or
as the parent process exits. The only way this would fail is if somehow
the write end of the pipe is inhereted by the child process.
Launching your program
I've spent hours googling and asked about this error message on a PHP list and
was directed here.
Every time I gracefully restart Apache 2.2.2, the error log reports:
[Thu May 18 19:59:29 2006] [notice] Graceful restart requested, doing restart
[Thu May 18 19:59:29 2006] [error] (9)Bad file
Thanks for the reply.
The same log.exe works well in accepting inputs in, e.g., dir | log, so I
don't see why it would fail when launched by httpd.
As far as I know, httpd on windows is multi-threaded, meaning there is only
one child that creates all the threads to handle requests. (There
On 5/19/06, Bill Moseley [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is there a better list to use for questions about core modules?
Nope. This is the one.
When I first start up Apache files are cached. But, once they expire
then they are no longer cached and *always* fetch from the back end
server. It's
Thanks Vic Feria and William Rowe.
Vic Feria wrote:
I think they have a windows version
Can you please point me to the windows version. I know of XSP on Windows
and not mod_mono on Windows.
And William Rowe wrote:
Tope Akinniyi wrote:
and does not run on Windows platform.
Huh?
The link to mod_mono for Windows is
http://dev.anmar.eu.org/mono/mod_mono/ . Currently, though , it only
appears to work with the Apache 2.0.x distribution.
-Wraith
Oluwatope Akinniyi wrote:
Thanks Vic Feria and William Rowe.
Vic Feria wrote:
I think they have a windows version
Can you
After upgrading to the latest Apache and PHP on a server running
FreeBSD 6.0-release, I find that the AddType application/x-httpd-php
.php line in httpd.conf is working everywhere except for *one*
virtual host, accessed by *a single* browser. In other words, every
v-host works as it always did
Hi,
This was with an older version of Apache (2.0.52), but I just did this this
week to compile the mod_proxy modules on Solaris:
cd source/modules/proxy
apxs -i -a -c *.c
Jim
JP [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Ok, how about
cd $source_dir/modules/proxy
$apache-home/bin/apxs -i
Oops, sorry! The problem was solved when I cleared Mozilla's cache,
since I had been troubleshooting earlier ... too late to prevent
wasting your time, I'm afraid. Thanks anyway!
Jordan
On 5/19/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
After upgrading to the latest Apache and PHP on a
Hi,
I am trying to use apache httpd 2.2 and php 5.1.4.4 on windows xp.
the php was manually installed in c:/php
when I add the following to httpd.conf (as given in online manual:
http://us3.php.net/manual/en/install.windows.apache2.php):
#
# For PHP 5 do something like this:
LoadModule
Argh, this was supposed to go to the list, too...
From: Brian Rectanus [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: May 19, 2006 9:14 AM
Subject: Re: [EMAIL PROTECTED] url reformat - howto
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Well, that is wrong, too:
ProxyPass /mydir http://www.domain.com:8080/mydir/
should be:
ProxyPass
Could you tell me a little more about your setup? Kernel, CPU (32-bit or
64-bit), filesystem (ReiserFS or ?), compiler version, etc.? Are you running
2.2.2? I'd really appreciate knowing.
I'm digging into this, one way or another. If it were just an occassional error
message, I might ignore
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