Pid wrote:
On 20/11/2009 10:32, André Warnier wrote:
Pid wrote:
...
(The item is illustrated by the image of a deity applying its wrath to
a small, cute, helpless and furry creature, and the implication that
it is the addressees fault. It is an unpleasant image.)
Thanks. I think I get it now
On 20/11/2009 10:32, André Warnier wrote:
Pid wrote:
...
(The item is illustrated by the image of a deity applying its wrath to
a small, cute, helpless and furry creature, and the implication that
it is the addressees fault. It is an unpleasant image.)
Thanks. I think I get it now.
So, it's k
Pid wrote:
...
(The item is illustrated by the image of a deity applying its wrath to a
small, cute, helpless and furry creature, and the implication that it is
the addressees fault. It is an unpleasant image.)
Thanks. I think I get it now.
So, it's kind of like when you or Chuck answer a
On 20/11/2009 09:51, André Warnier wrote:
Hassan Schroeder wrote:
You do know that every time someone uses "content management"
and "WordPress" in the same context, God kills a kitten, don't you?
Always eager to learn new subtleties of the English language..
What does the above really mean ?
Hassan Schroeder wrote:
You do know that every time someone uses "content management"
and "WordPress" in the same context, God kills a kitten, don't you?
Always eager to learn new subtleties of the English language..
What does the above really mean ?
-
On Thu, Nov 19, 2009 at 5:21 AM, Anthony Jay wrote:
> My question is what is the recommended wordpress replacement that I can
> use on Tomcat to provide content management via database as well as
> providing blogging capability?
You do know that every time someone uses "content management"
and "
Hi,
I have failed to come up with a solution to link Apache 2.2 and Tomcat
6 using mod_jk / mod_proxy_ajp in a way that satisfies my requirements.
(Seamless form based authentication, CMS using wordpress etc.) I can
get 98% there but the last 2% is the blocker and I am running out of
options.
Yep, I had come accross mod_auth_cookie, but its current status is
questionable and people seem to have moved on to other things. I am just
trying to find out what those "other things" are! Best practises etc. It
would be nice to conduct a poll to find out what people are actually
using. I am acce
On 16/11/2009 22:07, André Warnier wrote:
Anthony Jay wrote:
My main issue now is about how the authentication works between Tomcat
and Apache.
That's the only one I can readily answer.
It is extremely simple with mod_jk.
If the user is authenticated at the Apache level, mod_jk will pass this
Tony:
> using Tomcat. This is good, how do you handle ssl? Does
> Apache terminate any SSL, all ssl or only static pages?
Apache terminates the SSL connection and I use JkMount to
push JSP/Servlet stuff into Tomcat.
Neil
--
Neil Aggarwal, (281)846-8957, http://UnmeteredVPS.net
Host you
Thank you very much for your informative comments.
In terms of breaking an application into single servlets, I agree that
there would need to be strong reasons for doing it, and the clear one
that springs to mind is the requirement to have different authn methods
for each, None, Form, and http bas
Thanks. Squid may be a contender but I need the CMS and blogging that
comes with apache/php. Although maybe someday our traffic may get to the
point where we will need squid to keep up! Now that would be a good
problem to have! Thanks for the pointer.
On Mon, 16 Nov 2009 15:36 -0800, "Elli Albek"
You can also look at squid to serve static files and load balance. So
squid fronts tomcat and your other apps. Squid can serve your static
files as well. All you have to do it make sure your static files
return a cache header like max-age, and squid will serve them without
going to the origin (tomc
Anthony Jay wrote:
My main issue now is about how the authentication works between Tomcat
and Apache.
That's the only one I can readily answer.
It is extremely simple with mod_jk.
If the user is authenticated at the Apache level, mod_jk will pass this
on to the Tomcat server via AJP.
The only
On 16/11/2009 17:53, Anthony Jay wrote:
Hi,
I am in need of some advice. My current setup is a web application
running on Jboss which serves static and dynamic content, jsp,
servlets and xml on two non load balanced servers (hot spare using
mysql replication). It currently uses Ht
Hi Neil,
Thanks for the comments, I really appreciate hearing from someone
that has actual production experience using these technologies!
To answer your question below, I *could* have all my servlets in one
webapp but that would not be my preference. For example I would like the
capability
Anthony:
> I am researching porting my site to Apache 2.2 and Tomcat, and hope to
> gain the following.
> 1. Serve the static content from apache e.g. images, clips sound, text
> files etc.
I do that will all of my JSP apps. I set up Apache on the
front end and use mod_jk to push JSP/servlet stu
Hi,
I am in need of some advice. My current setup is a web application
running on Jboss which serves static and dynamic content, jsp,
servlets and xml on two non load balanced servers (hot spare using
mysql replication). It currently uses Http Basic Authentication over
SSL. This has
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