Well Andre, you are right, but when I started reading what is the easiest way
to
make Tomcat available on port 80 (under Centos 5.3) the most common answer was:
use Apache HTTPD.
Other solutions looked even more complicated as:
1 - Ports below 1024 are available only to root user, and I wanted
From: Maciej Zabielski [mailto:m...@tessel.pl]
Subject: RE: mod_jk problem related to multiple hosts on Apache and
Tomcat
when I started reading what is the easiest way to make Tomcat
available on port 80 (under Centos 5.3) the most common
answer was: use Apache HTTPD.
Probably written
From: Maciej Zabielski [mailto:m...@tessel.pl]
Subject: mod_jk problem related to multiple hosts on Apache and Tomcat
Tomcat Host
Host name=localhost debug=0 appBase=webapps unpackWARs=true
autoDeploy=true
xmlValidation=false xmlNamespaceAware=false
Context path=
What Chuck means is that you need
docBase=/var/lib/tomcat5/webapps/alfresco
On Wed, Oct 7, 2009 at 8:51 PM, Caldarale, Charles R
chuck.caldar...@unisys.com wrote:
From: Maciej Zabielski [mailto:m...@tessel.pl]
Subject: mod_jk problem related to multiple hosts on Apache and Tomcat
Tomcat
On 07.10.2009 19:40, Maciej Zabielski wrote:
Hello,
I have a mod_jk problem related to multiple hosts on Apache and Tomcat
My setup is
Centos 5.3 + Apache HTTPD 2.2.3 + Tomcat 5
httpd.conf contains (Just before section 3) Basic mod_jk directives.
At the end it contains two virtual
Thank you both for your support!
You are absolutely right.
My thinking (rather unexperienced, because this is my first month with linux /
tomcat)
was that by setting:
docBase=/var/lib/tomcat5/webapps/alfresco
alfresco would become root of localhost (as it actually does?)
and therefore would be
One real question is why you are bothering with an Apache httpd in
front, since unless I saw this wrong, you are proxying absolutely
everything to Tomcat, in both virtual hosts.
JkMount /* etc..
Why not just turn off Apache, and have Tomcat listen on port 80 ?
You would save yourself some