ct: Re: Sharing catalina home among tomcat machines in a load
> balanced environment gives problems with log files
>
> Jon,
>
> On 10/10/23 14:26, Mcalexander, Jon J. wrote:
> > Could you have separate work folders but have the appbase be the in
> > the shared f
10, 2023 5:59 AM
To: users@tomcat.apache.org
Subject: Re: Sharing catalina home among tomcat machines in a load
balanced environment gives problems with log files
Mark,
On 10/10/23 06:38, Mark Thomas wrote:
Running multiple instances of Tomcat from the same CATALINA_BASE is
totally unsupported.
> Sent: Tuesday, October 10, 2023 5:59 AM
> To: users@tomcat.apache.org
> Subject: Re: Sharing catalina home among tomcat machines in a load
> balanced environment gives problems with log files
>
> Mark,
>
> On 10/10/23 06:38, Mark Thomas wrote:
> > Running multip
#x27;t technically
> > support that but you should be OK situations". This is one of the rare
> > "You do that and it *will* break and you will be on your own when it
> > does." situations.
>
> +1
>
> Both the logs/ and the work/ directories will over
d it *will* break and you will be on your own when it
does." situations.
+1
Both the logs/ and the work/ directories will overwrite each other,
probably to the point of not only corruption (e.g. log files) but also
instability -- because of the work/ directory. Files will appear and
disapp
Running multiple instances of Tomcat from the same CATALINA_BASE is
totally unsupported. This isn't one of those "We don't technically
support that but you should be OK situations". This is one of the rare
"You do that and it *will* break and you will be on your own when it
does." situations.
Hello Peter,
Il giorno mar, 10/10/2023 alle 11.21 +0200, l...@kreuser.name ha scritto:
> Guiseppe,
>
> did you consider the separation of CATALINA_HOME and CATALINA_BASE. Look
> at the RUNNING.txt file that describes the purpose...
>
> Plus some symbolic links that have the really common files l
have both tomcat use it. In a test installation I only have
some problems with log files, since they are shared and the tomcats write
concurrently to the same files, overlapping their text.
I set the property java.util.logging.config.file to a per tomcat properties
file, and this works for some of
directory and have both tomcat use it. In a test installation I only have
some problems with log files, since they are shared and the tomcats write
concurrently to the same files, overlapping their text.
I set the property java.util.logging.config.file to a per tomcat properties
file, and this works for
.
-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: Mark Thomas
Gesendet: Montag, 6. September 2021 09:40
An: Tomcat Users List ; Mohan T
Betreff: Re: Exception in Log files
On 06/09/2021 08:16, Mohan T wrote:
> Hi,
>
> We could see the below exception in log files .
>
> java.io.FileNo
On 06/09/2021 08:16, Mohan T wrote:
Hi,
We could see the below exception in log files .
java.io.FileNotFoundException: apache-tomcat-8.5.35/lib/commons-cli.jar (No
such file or directory)
The file is not there in that location.
How to get rid of this exception
With the information you
Hi,
We could see the below exception in log files .
java.io.FileNotFoundException: apache-tomcat-8.5.35/lib/commons-cli.jar (No
such file or directory)
The file is not there in that location.
How to get rid of this exception
Thanks in advance
Mohan
DISCLAIMER: This communication contains
On 12/04/18 09:07, Greg Huber wrote:
> Hello,
>
> For my tomcat 9 there are now two additional log files (which are always
> empty) :
>
> host-manager.2018-04-11.log
> manager.2018-04-11.log
>
> Where do these come from as my webapps directory is empty and does not ha
Hello,
For my tomcat 9 there are now two additional log files (which are always
empty) :
host-manager.2018-04-11.log
manager.2018-04-11.log
Where do these come from as my webapps directory is empty and does not have
any applications?
Cheers Greg
uot; is the MDC part that adds the username to the log
files from the value inserted by the interceptor. You can move it to anywhere
in the appender pattern you want.
Thank you,
Bill
-Original Message-
From: Mark Thomas [mailto:ma...@apache.org]
Sent: Thursday, June 16, 2016 3:18 AM
To:
On 16/06/2016 09:05, Vijay Kumar wrote:
> Hi Andre,
>
> Thanks for the update.
>
> Could you please give me some information whether it's possible or not to
> generate user level log because i have tried using log4j but it failed.
>
> Appreciate your help on this.
Either per user logging or per
Hi Andre,
Thanks for the update.
Could you please give me some information whether it's possible or not to
generate user level log because i have tried using log4j but it failed.
Appreciate your help on this.
Thanks,
Vijay G
On Thu, Jun 16, 2016 at 12:59 PM, André Warnier (tomcat)
wrote:
>
>
Thanks. The rest below, as preferred on this mailing list.
Thanks,
Vijay G
On Thu, Jun 16, 2016 at 12:40 PM, André Warnier (tomcat)
wrote:
On 16.06.2016 08:50, Vijay Kumar wrote:
Hi Team,
We have a requirement to create a log either at User level or at User
session level.
Please provide
We are using Tomcat 7.0.33 and 7.0.62
7.0.33 when Customer is on Java 1.7
7.0.62 when our customer is on 1.8
But we can upgrade to 8 if required to achieve the logging support
Thanks,
Vijay G
On Thu, Jun 16, 2016 at 12:40 PM, André Warnier (tomcat)
wrote:
> On 16.06.2016 08:50, Vijay Kumar wr
On 16.06.2016 08:50, Vijay Kumar wrote:
Hi Team,
We have a requirement to create a log either at User level or at User
session level.
Please provide your inputs on this.
User level means a separate log to be created for that User and the same
should be used always for writing the log.
or
There
Hi Team,
We have a requirement to create a log either at User level or at User
session level.
Please provide your inputs on this.
User level means a separate log to be created for that User and the same
should be used always for writing the log.
or
There will be one log file and within that log t
ible. It all
> works well, but there is something missing: "The tomcat user is able
> to read the access log files":
>
> root@7083cdc8e2fc:/apps/tomcat/logs# ls -la
> ...
> -rw-rw 1 tomcat tomcat0 Dec 1 19:46
> 0.0.0.0_access_log.2015-12-01.txt
>
>
estrictive as possible. It all
> works well, but there is something missing: "The tomcat user is able
> to read the access log files":
>
> root@7083cdc8e2fc:/apps/tomcat/logs# ls -la
> ...
> -rw-rw 1 tomcat tomcat0 Dec 1 19:46
> 0.0.0.0_access_log.2015-12-01.txt
is able
to read the access log files":
root@7083cdc8e2fc:/apps/tomcat/logs# ls -la
...
-rw-rw 1 tomcat tomcat0 Dec 1 19:46 0.0.0.0_access_log.2015-12-01.txt
Is there any way to configure tomcat to be able to write to the
access log file, but have the file owned by roo
2015-11-07 0:52 GMT+03:00 Christopher Schultz :
> Utkarsh,
>
> On 11/6/15 12:47 PM, Utkarsh Dave wrote:
>> Hello,
>> In tomcat 7
>> I wanted to know if there is a way we can log the number of request
>> dispatcher threads used/busy/blocked, in log files. Or is t
Utkarsh,
On 11/6/15 12:47 PM, Utkarsh Dave wrote:
> Hello,
> In tomcat 7
> I wanted to know if there is a way we can log the number of request
> dispatcher threads used/busy/blocked, in log files. Or is there a mechanism
> that logs the number of request threads so that user can
Hello,
In tomcat 7
I wanted to know if there is a way we can log the number of request
dispatcher threads used/busy/blocked, in log files. Or is there a mechanism
that logs the number of request threads so that user can be warned about
the request dispatcher threads if too many are being in busy
d-only (Only applies to
files in folder)." But that is also true of Tomcat's general logs
directory, and it's got archived catalina..log files going back to
February.
I was wondering if there was a Tomcat explanation, for the apparent
disappearance of the webapp
the active log file and one archive.
>
> There are no signs of any redeployments, and Tomcat's own log files go back
> for months.
>
> I've already asked our web interface people (who are in another timezone) if
> they have any idea what (other than somebody going in and
Tomcat's own log files go
back for months.
I've already asked our web interface people (who are in another
timezone) if they have any idea what (other than somebody going in and
manually deleting the archived logs) could be causing this, but is there
some Tomcat-specific reason why thi
On 09/01/2014 18:48, Jesse Barnum wrote:
> I want my log files to be written to a log file with the same name as my
> webapp. Users can dynamically re-name my webapp when they run my installer,
> so that they can have multiple instances running, so hard-coding the context
> name i
I want my log files to be written to a log file with the same name as my
webapp. Users can dynamically re-name my webapp when they run my installer, so
that they can have multiple instances running, so hard-coding the context name
is not a good approach. Is there some environment variable that
gt; this out of the box, since the server can crash if it runs out of
> disk space.
This is entirely the point of using logrotate: it does one job, and it
does it well. It fits-in very well with the UNIX philosophy. Embrace it.
Apache httpd also doesn't rotate its own log files, though it
I believe it's documented here.
https://wiki.apache.org/tomcat/FAQ/Logging
Dan
>
>
> 2013/3/5 Daniel Mikusa
>
>> On Mar 5, 2013, at 8:54 AM, Felipe Jaekel wrote:
>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> I'd like to limit log rotation to a specific
Mikusa
> On Mar 5, 2013, at 8:54 AM, Felipe Jaekel wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> > I'd like to limit log rotation to a specific number of days to avoid that
> > the logs folder keep growing indeterminately.
>
> Which log files are you referring to? Including the na
On Mar 5, 2013, at 8:54 AM, Felipe Jaekel wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'd like to limit log rotation to a specific number of days to avoid that
> the logs folder keep growing indeterminately.
Which log files are you referring to? Including the names would help.
>
> Tried to goog
Hello,
I am looking for archives of fixed/resolved *tomcat* bugs with huge
log-files.
This is for research purpose where the goal is to ease the visualization
of log files
through automatic inference system which automatically groups like
variables in the log file.
Can some one guide me where
Hi,
> -Original Message-
> From: Rainer Jung [mailto:rainer.j...@kippdata.de]
> Sent: Saturday, January 28, 2012 3:00 PM
> To: users@tomcat.apache.org
> Subject: Re: Path of log files changed in Tomcat 7.0.25 when installing
> as Windows Service
>
> On 28.
On 28.01.2012 07:27, Caldarale, Charles R wrote:
From: Caldarale, Charles R [mailto:chuck.caldar...@unisys.com]
Subject: RE: Path of log files changed in Tomcat 7.0.25 when installing as
Windows Service
Haven't yet figured out why the ${catalina.base} references
in logging.properties a
> From: Caldarale, Charles R [mailto:chuck.caldar...@unisys.com]
> Subject: RE: Path of log files changed in Tomcat 7.0.25 when installing as
> Windows Service
> Haven't yet figured out why the ${catalina.base} references
> in logging.properties aren't getting r
On 27/01/2012 18:49, Caldarale, Charles R wrote:
>> From: verlag.preis...@t-online.de
>> [mailto:verlag.preis...@t-online.de] Subject: Re: Path of log files
>> changed in Tomcat 7.0.25 when installing as Windows Service
>
>> So it seems the Tomcat logs are st
> From: verlag.preis...@t-online.de [mailto:verlag.preis...@t-online.de]
> Subject: Re: Path of log files changed in Tomcat 7.0.25 when installing as
> Windows Service
> So it seems the Tomcat logs are stored in
> "C:\tomcat7\bin\${catalina.base}\logs\", whereas the
verlag.preis...@t-online.de wrote:
-Original-Nachricht-
Von: Mark Thomas
An: Tomcat Users List
Betreff: Re: Path of log files changed in Tomcat 7.0.25 when
installing as Windows Service
Datum: Fri, 27 Jan 2012 14:38:42 +0100
It means you messed up your install. A clean install of
-Original-Nachricht-
> Von: Mark Thomas
> An: Tomcat Users List
> Betreff: Re: Path of log files changed in Tomcat 7.0.25 when
> installing as Windows Service
> Datum: Fri, 27 Jan 2012 14:38:42 +0100
>
> It means you messed up your install. A clean install
On 27/01/2012 11:19, Konstantin Preißer wrote:
> Is this change intentional? Does that mean that I must any additional
> environment variable like CATALINA_BASE?
It means you messed up your install. A clean install of 7.0.25 (with the
installer) works fine for me.
Mark
-
Hi all,
I was using Tomcat 7.0.23 with Java 1.7.0_02 on Windows Server 2008 (32-Bit).
I installed it as service, by using the service.bat file with "service install"
command. Let's say the installation path is "C:\Tomcat7".
For Tomcat to work, I added the "JAVA_HOME" environment variable which po
t;
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Caldarale, Charles R [mailto:chuck.caldar...@unisys.com]
> Sent: Friday, October 21, 2011 3:47 PM
> To: Tomcat Users List
> Subject: RE: Tomcat produces empty/missing log files
>
> > From: Brian Jones [mailto:bjone...@uwo.
2011/10/21 Brian Jones :
>
> That defiantly makes sense. Are there any known workarounds for using
> java.util.logging instead of log4j even if the log4j.jar file is present?
>
You will need to read Commons Logging documentation for that.
http://wiki.apache.org/commons/How_to_Configure_the_Loggin
List
Subject: Re: Tomcat produces empty/missing log files
On 10/21/2011 3:53 PM, Brian Jones wrote:
> Charles,
>
> Thanks for your reply.
>
> I'm not able to do as you suggested, because the software project is not
> managed by me, or my parent company. It is an open source enterpr
On 10/21/2011 3:53 PM, Brian Jones wrote:
Charles,
Thanks for your reply.
I'm not able to do as you suggested, because the software project is not
managed by me, or my parent company. It is an open source enterprise system
that is managed by a community and a foundation.
Also, it isn't just on
usly isolate my
development from the community's.
Regards,
Brian J
-Original Message-
From: Caldarale, Charles R [mailto:chuck.caldar...@unisys.com]
Sent: Friday, October 21, 2011 3:47 PM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: RE: Tomcat produces empty/missing log files
> From: Br
> From: Brian Jones [mailto:bjone...@uwo.ca]
> Subject: RE: Tomcat produces empty/missing log files
> Are there any known workarounds for using java.util.logging
> instead of log4j even if the log4j.jar file is present?
If you only want log4j for a specific webapp rather than for T
brain.
Brian J
-Original Message-
From: Konstantin Kolinko [mailto:knst.koli...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, October 21, 2011 3:40 PM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: Tomcat produces empty/missing log files
2011/10/21 Brian Jones :
> Yes, it appears that the project I'm deploying is
2011/10/21 Brian Jones :
> Yes, it appears that the project I'm deploying is relying on log4j for
> logging; so when I remove the log4j.jar file, it obviously complains that it
> can't find it.
>
> However, what I don't understand is why Tomcat refuses to log to
Yes, it appears that the project I'm deploying is relying on log4j for
logging; so when I remove the log4j.jar file, it obviously complains that it
can't find it.
However, what I don't understand is why Tomcat refuses to log to the log
files if there is a log4j.jar file present in
On 21/10/2011 20:27, Brian Jones wrote:
> My mistake. The distro doesn't include the .jar by default. The project I
> deploy to Tomcat automatically sticks the log4j.jar file there.
>
> Sorry for the confusion; I overlooked this step.
That begs the question "What else is it doing?" since it appea
er 21, 2011 3:23 PM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: Tomcat produces empty/missing log files
On 21/10/2011 20:18, Brian Jones wrote:
> Thanks again for your insight into the problem.
>
> Following your advice, I started from a fresh install of Tomcat 5.5.33.
> I noticed that log4j.1.2.1
On 21/10/2011 20:18, Brian Jones wrote:
> Thanks again for your insight into the problem.
>
> Following your advice, I started from a fresh install of Tomcat 5.5.33.
> I noticed that log4j.1.2.16.jar is included in the common/lib folder by
> default.
No it isn't. Where are you getting this Tomcat
I removed the log4j jar file
- Tomcat now produces the output in the log files, but now complains
several times about ClassDefNotFound for log4j
Cheers,
Brian J.
-Original Message-
From: Konstantin Kolinko [mailto:knst.koli...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, October 21, 2011 2:24 PM
Please find below the context of logging.properties (updated, the 'verbose'
copy, rather than the minimalized copy you had suggested previously):
# Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
# contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
# this work
: Re: Tomcat produces empty/missing log files
2011/10/21 Brian Jones :
>
> It would be nice to see the actual command line that starts
Tomcat's
> Bootstrap. The JVM keys that configure java.util.logging should be there.
>
> - I don't know what you mean by this.
>
2011/10/21 Brian Jones :
>
> It would be nice to see the actual command line that starts Tomcat's
> Bootstrap. The JVM keys that configure java.util.logging should be there.
>
> - I don't know what you mean by this.
>
I mean catalina.bat purpose is to prepare and call "java.exe". I'd
like
ported by the software project I'm working on (as stated in previous
message)
o Tried log4j; log files didn't contain exception messages
Did you restore original configuration after these experiments? Did
you remove log4j.jar?
- Yes, restored to original configuration. I
admin console can be accessed and used properly
>
> - The problem is that the log files are always empty (0kb)
>
> - The following log files are produced by Tomcat, but are always
> empty:
>
> o admin.date.log
>
> o catalina.date.log
>
> o host-manage
installed as a Windows service. Tomcat starts/runs/stops fine
using startup.bat and shutdown.bat
- Applications deploy properly, can be accessed and used properly
- Tomcat admin console can be accessed and used properly
- The problem is that the log files are always empty (0kb
- Original Message -
From: "Mark Eggers"
To: "Tomcat Users List"
Sent: Monday, July 04, 2011 1:27 AM
Subject: Re: Placing a webapp log file aside by other server log files
- Original Message -
From: "USHAKOV, Sergey"
To: users@tomcat.apach
- Original Message -
> From: "USHAKOV, Sergey"
> To: users@tomcat.apache.org
> Cc:
> Sent: Sunday, July 3, 2011 12:51 PM
> Subject: Placing a webapp log file aside by other server log files
>
> Hi all,
>
> I am looking for a robust way to get a
Hi all,
I am looking for a robust way to get a webapp-specific log file be placed in
the same directory where all the other server logs go.
Using a line like "org.apache.juli.FileHandler.directory =
${catalina.base}/logs" in the webapp's "logging.properties" does not do the
job, as server lo
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Tobias,
On 11/15/2010 10:43 AM, Tobias Crefeld wrote:
> Am Tue, 09 Nov 2010 16:06:14 -0500
> schrieb Christopher Schultz :
>
>> Have you correctly replaced lib/tomcat-juli.jar
>> and installed lib/tomcat-juli-adapters.jar? If not, you may be falling
Am Tue, 09 Nov 2010 16:06:14 -0500
schrieb Christopher Schultz :
> Have you correctly replaced lib/tomcat-juli.jar
> and installed lib/tomcat-juli-adapters.jar? If not, you may be falling
> back to the old logger which requires logging.properties.
For whatever-reason and different than tomcat-jul
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Timothy,
My CONSOLE appender was foolishly configured.
On 11/9/2010 4:35 PM, Christopher Schultz wrote:
> log4j.appender.CONSOLE=org.apache.log4j.DailyRollingFileAppender
> log4j.appender.CONSOLE.file=${catalina.base}/logs/.
> log4j.appender.CONSOLE.
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Timothy,
On 11/9/2010 4:06 PM, Christopher Schultz wrote:
> I'm not sure why the documentation doesn't show an equivalent
> configuration for log4j. Maybe I'll write one and submit it for inclusion.
Without testing it, I've written this log4j configu
th all the different log files that are being
> generated in the default Tomcat before log4j configuration. Why are
> there so many different log files: admin, manager, localhost,
> manager, host-manager, catalina log files and then System.out and
> System.err get appended to cata
.28. I'm really
> confused with all the different log files that are being generated in the
> default Tomcat before log4j configuration. Why are there so many different
> log files: admin, manager, localhost, manager, host-manager, catalina log
> files and then System.o
I'm trying to clean up Tomcat logging to use log4j. I've read the Tomcat
logging guide that comes with my version of Tomcat 6.0.28. I'm really confused
with all the different log files that are being generated in the default Tomcat
before log4j configuration. Why are there so
On Mon, 2010-01-18 at 10:14 -0500, Christopher Schultz wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Rick,
>
> On 1/17/2010 11:16 AM, Rick Bragg wrote:
> > OK, I did
> > #apt-get install --reinstall tomcat6
> > And the log files are back!
>
On 17/01/2010 16:08, Peter Crowther wrote:
> 2010/1/17 Hassan Schroeder :
>> You're welcome to your opinion, but personally I think the whole
>> splatter-files-all-over-the-system repackaging approach is horribly
>> flawed for apps like Tomcat
> [...]
>
> Tomcat has a very strong view on where its
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Rick,
On 1/17/2010 11:16 AM, Rick Bragg wrote:
> OK, I did
> #apt-get install --reinstall tomcat6
> And the log files are back!
>
> I'm definitely a newbe at this. The re-install kept my startup scripts
> (and config files
2010/1/17 Hassan Schroeder :
> You're welcome to your opinion, but personally I think the whole
> splatter-files-all-over-the-system repackaging approach is horribly
> flawed for apps like Tomcat
[...]
Tomcat has a very strong view on where its files should live.
Some OSs have very strong views on
On Sun, Jan 17, 2010 at 10:22 AM, André Warnier wrote:
> The packagers of Debian and Ubuntu do a good job overall.
> But it is no justification for disparaging the packaged versions in general
> and in the absolute.
You're welcome to your opinion, but personally I think the whole
splatter-files
On Sun, 2010-01-17 at 09:54 -0800, Hassan Schroeder wrote:
> Uh. well. I would say "solved" is a bit of an exaggeration :-)
>
> On Sun, Jan 17, 2010 at 8:16 AM, Rick Bragg wrote:
>
> > OK, I did
> > #apt-get install --reinstall tomcat6
> > And the log fil
Hassan Schroeder wrote:
...
And so long as you're relying on the fragile Ubuntu-broken version of
Tomcat, you can count on more similar surprises. Good luck running
*that* in production.
Ok guys, I take issue with that statement.
I am not a Debian or Ubuntu packager.
We are using, on multipl
Uh. well. I would say "solved" is a bit of an exaggeration :-)
On Sun, Jan 17, 2010 at 8:16 AM, Rick Bragg wrote:
> OK, I did
> #apt-get install --reinstall tomcat6
> And the log files are back!
> I'm not sure what it was, but now it is fixed...
No, since you don
On Sun, 2010-01-17 at 09:40 -0600, Caldarale, Charles R wrote:
> > From: Caldarale, Charles R
> > Subject: RE: Log files?
> >
> > And a real Tomcat doesn't - I just installed cyclos on Tomcat 6.0.20,
> > with no damage to Tomcat. (The cyclos app won't run
> From: Caldarale, Charles R
> Subject: RE: Log files?
>
> And a real Tomcat doesn't - I just installed cyclos on Tomcat 6.0.20,
> with no damage to Tomcat. (The cyclos app won't run due to lack of a
> database, but other than that, everything's fine.) All log
Pid wrote:
On 17/01/2010 00:55, Rick Bragg wrote:
On Sat, 2010-01-16 at 17:34 -0600, Caldarale, Charles R wrote:
Everything worked great yesterday. I made a change to the memory in the
startup file, "/etc/init.d/tomcat6" to increase the mem, and no log file
after that. I since changed it back
On 17/01/2010 00:55, Rick Bragg wrote:
On Sat, 2010-01-16 at 17:34 -0600, Caldarale, Charles R wrote:
Everything worked great yesterday. I made a change to the memory in the
startup file, "/etc/init.d/tomcat6" to increase the mem, and no log file
after that. I since changed it back and still n
> From: Konstantin Kolinko [mailto:knst.koli...@gmail.com]
> Subject: Re: Log files?
>
> Probably your JVM was updated recently. Running with JRE 6u14 and
> later requires an update to the catalina.policy file, otherwise
> logging subsystem cannot initialize.
Note that catal
2010/1/17 Rick Bragg :
>
> OS: Ubuntu Hardy LTS version 8.04 - 2.6.24-16-server amd64
> Tomcat: Apache Tomcat/6.0.18
> JVM: 1.6.0_17-b04 Sun Microsystems Inc.
> MySQL: Server version: 5.0.51a-3ubuntu5.4-log
>
Probably your JVM was updated recently. Running with JRE 6u14 and
later requires an updat
> From: Rick Bragg [mailto:li...@gmnet.net]
> Subject: RE: Log files?
>
> http://project.cyclos.org/wiki/index.php?title=Installation_%
> 26_maintenance
Thanks - I did manage to find that shortly after sending the previous message.
I'll need to get MySQL set up to a
On Sat, 2010-01-16 at 17:34 -0600, Caldarale, Charles R wrote:
> > From: Rick Bragg [mailto:li...@gmnet.net]
> > Subject: Re: Log files?
> >
> > I followed all the instructions for the "standard install"
>
> Just to verify, you did use the cyclos_3.5.5
On Sat, 2010-01-16 at 17:34 -0600, Caldarale, Charles R wrote:
> > From: Rick Bragg [mailto:li...@gmnet.net]
> > Subject: Re: Log files?
> >
> > I followed all the instructions for the "standard install"
>
> Just to verify, you did use the cyclos_3.5.5
> From: Rick Bragg [mailto:li...@gmnet.net]
> Subject: Re: Log files?
>
> I followed all the instructions for the "standard install"
Just to verify, you did use the cyclos_3.5.5.zip, not
cyclos_3.5.5_standalone.zip?
Where did you find the instructions? They don
2010/1/17 Rick Bragg :
> On Sat, 2010-01-16 at 22:36 +0100, André Warnier wrote:
>> Rick Bragg wrote:
>> > On Sat, 2010-01-16 at 18:20 +0100, André Warnier wrote:
>> >> Rick Bragg wrote:
>> >> ...
>> >>
>> >>> It seems there ar
On Sat, 2010-01-16 at 22:36 +0100, André Warnier wrote:
> Rick Bragg wrote:
> > On Sat, 2010-01-16 at 18:20 +0100, André Warnier wrote:
> >> Rick Bragg wrote:
> >> ...
> >>
> >>> It seems there are no tomcat log files anywhere (other than yesterda
Rick Bragg wrote:
On Sat, 2010-01-16 at 18:20 +0100, André Warnier wrote:
Rick Bragg wrote:
...
It seems there are no tomcat log files anywhere (other than yesterdays
old logs). They were working yesterday until sometime around noon. I
was trying to get cyclos to work (cyclos.org) and all
On Sat, 2010-01-16 at 18:20 +0100, André Warnier wrote:
> Rick Bragg wrote:
> ...
>
> >>
> >
> > It seems there are no tomcat log files anywhere (other than yesterdays
> > old logs). They were working yesterday until sometime around noon. I
> > was try
Rick Bragg wrote:
...
It seems there are no tomcat log files anywhere (other than yesterdays
old logs). They were working yesterday until sometime around noon. I
was trying to get cyclos to work (cyclos.org) and all of a sudden, no
more logs...
I had a quick look at the www.cyclos.org
On Sat, 2010-01-16 at 11:16 -0500, Christopher Schultz wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Rick,
>
> On 1/16/2010 10:04 AM, Rick Bragg wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > Does anybody know what could have happened to my tomcat log files?
> &
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Hash: SHA1
Rick,
On 1/16/2010 10:04 AM, Rick Bragg wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Does anybody know what could have happened to my tomcat log files?
>
> It seems that logging has stopped.
>
> I am using Ubuntu LTS 8.04 amd64, and they are in:
> /
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