[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Gesendet: Freitag, 8. Dezember 2006 14:24
> An: Tomcat Users List
> Betreff: Re: AW: Web Service Request not passing through Mod_Jk
>
> Peter
> please ask on axis-users
> Martin
> ---
de le diffuser, de le distribuer ou de le reproduire.
- Original Message -
From: "Peter Neu" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'Tomcat Users List'"
Sent: Friday, December 08, 2006 4:38 AM
Subject: AW: AW: Web Service Request not passing through Mod_Jk
Wow, I wa
006 10:39
> An: 'Tomcat Users List'
> Betreff: AW: AW: Web Service Request not passing through Mod_Jk
>
> Wow, I was lucky there was a binary version of mod_jk for my httpd
> version.
>
> Here is the new log output. I can send it to you directly as attachment if
> you lik
): received from ajp13
pos=0 len=3 max=8192
ajp_connection_tcp_get_message::jk_ajp_common.c (1028): 06 1F FA 00
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 -
> -Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
> Von: Rainer Jung [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Gesendet: Freitag, 8. Dezember 2006
Under Linux you can use tcpdump to sniff network packets.
It looks like your mod_jk is pretty old? The log messages don't fit to
newer versions. We improved logging and overall maintainability in the
meantime. Please switch to 1.2.19 to make debugging easier.
Regards,
Rainer
Peter Neu schrieb:
Hi,
the problem is that a web service request coming from external client
fails with a timeout exception while the same client on the proxy host
works.
I only see the java.net.SocketTimeout exception in my java stack trace. My
assumption is that the tomcat server does receive nothing at all becau