You dn't need Tomcat on your local machine. The URLs are correct, though. 
TcpTunnelGUI "magically" makes it seem to your client as if the Tomcat 
service which is in fact running on the ren.cs.odu.edu machine is in fact 
running locally.

M.


At 12:28 PM 28/05/2002 -0400, you wrote:
>Thank you Mark. So I need to have a Tomcat running on my local machine while
>I am using TcpTunnelGUI, right? Also my SOAP client should communicate with
>the URL of http://localhost:8888/soap/servlet/rpcrouter, not
>http://localhost:8888, right?
>
>Thanks,
>Rufeng
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Mark Childerson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>Sent: Tuesday, May 28, 2002 12:16 PM
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Re: About using TcpTunnelGui tool
>
>
>Your SOAP client should be looking for
>http://localhost:8888/soap/servlet/rpcrouter TcpTunnelGUI will
>automatically translate that to the desired URL.
>
>Mark.
>
>At 11:58 AM 28/05/2002 -0400, you wrote:
> >Hello,
> >
> >I was trying to use the TcpTunnelGui tool like the following on my local
> >machine:
> >
> >c:\>java org.apache.soap.util.net.TcpTunnelGui 8888 ren.cs.odu.edu 8989
> >
> >where 8888 is listenport on my local machine, ren.cs.odu.edu is tunnelhost
> >(a UNIX machine), and 8989 is tunnelport. My soap service is running on
> >ren.cs.odu.edu:8989 hosted by tomcat.
> >
> >The GUI tool received and showed the request message from the soap client,
>I
> >see it in the first window and it looks fine, but in the second window it
> >showed the tomcat exception messages and it seemed the soap request didn't
> >get to the soap service.
> >
> >My question is don't we need to specify the router like
> >http://ren.cs.odu.edu:8989/soap/servlet/rpcrouter or
> >http://ren.cs.odu.edu:8989/soap/servlet/messagerouter? How will
>TcpTunnelGui
> >konw where to find the soap router and services if we don't provide this
> >detail.
> >
> >Please give me some help.
> >
> >Thanks alot!
> >
> >Rufeng


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