Shawn,

        Could you point me more specifically at where Enhydra uses multiple
ContextManagers?  I just downloaded EE 4.0a4 and couldn't find any files
that have examples of multiple ContextManagers on different ports serving
groups of apps.  Whenever I try to use multiple ContextManagers on different
ports I get lots of messages about removing duplicate servlets (like the jsp
servlet, status servlet, exception servlet), and tomcat is unresponsive to
any of my requests and refuses to shutdown, until I 'kill' it.

Any help on figuring this out would be great.  From my code archeology I was
just about to conclude that it wasn't possible in tomcat 3.2.1 until your
comment made me think that I had missed something.

-Bill

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Shawn McMurdo [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Tuesday, March 06, 2001 10:25 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: Assigning Servlets to different ports.
>
>
> Hi Mel,
> If you are interested in an approach to getting Tomcat to serve
> apps on multiple ports, you might want to check out the
> Enhydra Enterprise 4.0 source.
> We create multiple ContextManagers, where each ContextManager
> handles the group of apps running on a particular connection (port).
> This is currently using Tomcat 3.2.1.
> Shawn
>
> Mel Martinez wrote:
>
> > --- Uijin Hong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > Why don't you just run 2 servlet container(Tomcat)s
> > > for each port?
> > >
> >
> > That could get memory expensive if you have to do this
> > for several ports.
> >
> > The best performance scenario might be to use Apache
> > to listen to several ports and rewrite them to go to a
> > single tomcat 'delegator' servlet which then
> > dispatches them to servlets/JSPs appropriately.  And
> > actually, you should just use apache rewrites directly
> > to dispatch to any static resources.
> >
> > Mel
> >
> > > -----Original Message-----
> > > From: William Wishon
> > > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> > > Sent: Tuesday, March 06, 2001 9:27 AM
> > > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > > Subject: Assigning Servlets to different ports.
> > >
> > >
> > > Hi,
> > >
> > > <snipped>
> > >
> > > An example of what I'm trying to do is to have a GET
> > > on "/" of port 8080
> > > return webapps/app1/index.html and a GET of "/" on
> > > port 8081 return
> > > webapps/app2/index.html.
> > >
> > > Thanks,
> > > Bill
> > >
> > >
> > >
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> --
> Shawn McMurdo              mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Lutris Technologies        http://www.lutris.com
> Enhydra.Org                http://www.enhydra.org
>
>
>
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