Markus,
I got this HOW TO from a user who got TC 4.0.1 to work with Apache 1.3.22 on
a W2K machine ... He also claims to have gotten it running under AIX

It was  Arnaud Héritier [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]  that claims the
success story, however I used the directions provided below and got my
version of 1.3.22 + 4.0.1 + mod_jk + jdk1.3.1 working on a w2k platform ....




-----Original Message-----
From: Arnaud Héritier [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Thursday, October 11, 2001 4:31 AM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: RE: TOMCAT 4.0 + APACHE + AJP 1.3 : look at this.


> -----Message d'origine-----
> De:   Curley, Thomas [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Date: jeudi 11 octobre 2001 12:05
> À:    [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Objet:        RE: TOMCAT 4.0 + APACHE + AJP 1.3 : look at this.
>
> I realise there has been alot of chat ref integration but I would 
> appreciate clarification for Win2K platform
>
> Qu:
> --
> I wish to integrate Apache 1.3 and Tomcat 4.0 for on Win 2000 (ie) 
> static resources from apache, JSP and Servlets from TC
>
> a)    Do I need to add AJP 1.3 support ?


It seems that there's no release for windows of the other connector : 
mod_webapp.
So I think that is the only connector available today except that you want 
and you can compile the mod_webapp connector under a Windows Plateform.

I followed instructions from this documents and adapted them for TC 4.0.

So here is what I done .


1) Tomcat 4.0 :
- Be carefull to do not install TC4 in a path with spaces " " !!!!! 
otherwise you should use the 8.3 directory names to configure TC
- In the server/lib subdirectory of TC4 add the ajp.jar and the 
tomcat-util.jar
- in the conf subdirectory copy the workers.properties from a TC 3.2. Edit 
it and fill the lines :

        workers.tomcat_home=C:\Programs\Tomcat4.0
        workers.java_home=C:\Programs\jdk1.3.1

with your own configuration.
- Edit the server.xml and add the AJP connector like this :

<!-- Connector for AJP 1.3 -->
    <Connector className="org.apache.ajp.tomcat4.Ajp13Connector"
               port="8009" minProcessors="5" maxProcessors="75"
               acceptCount="10" debug="0" connectionTimeout="0" />

Now the tomcat server is ready

2) Apache
- firstly copy the mod_jk.dll from the TC3 distrib in the apache modules 
subdirectory
- Configure Apache
Contrary to TC3, TC4 do not generate the Apache configuration. So you should
do it yourself.

At the end of your httpd.conf file you should add (and adapt)

# TC 4.0 settings

#
# The following line instructs Apache to load the jk module
#
LoadModule jk_module modules/mod_jk.dll

JkWorkersFile "C:/Programs/Tomcat4.0/conf/workers.properties"
JkLogFile "C:/Programs/Tomcat4.0/logs/mod_jk.log"

#
# Log level to be used by mod_jk
#
JkLogLevel error

#
# Root context mounts for Tomcat
#
JkMount /*.jsp ajp13
JkMount /servlet/* ajp13

Then for each Context you had created in tomcat you should had a paragraph 
like this (it's the same thong as in TC3):
Here my context is /pfe
and the directory of the web-app is C:/Work/Dev/pfe/stock/gui/dist/pfe-gui

#
# The following line makes apache aware of the location of the /pfe context
# Alias /pfe "C:/Work/Dev/pfe/stock/gui/dist/pfe-gui"
<Directory "C:/Work/Dev/pfe/stock/gui/dist/pfe-gui">
    Options Indexes FollowSymLinks
</Directory>

#
# The following line mounts all JSP files and the /servlet/ uri to tomcat #
JkMount /pfe/servlet/* ajp13 JkMount /pfe/*.jsp ajp13 JkMount /pfe/*.do
ajp13

#
# The following line prohibits users from directly accessing WEB-INF #
<Location "/pfe/WEB-INF/">
    AllowOverride None
    deny from all
</Location>
#
# Use Directory too. On Windows, Location doesn't work unless case matches #
<Directory "C:/Work/Dev/pfe/stock/gui/dist/pfe-gui/WEB-INF/">
    AllowOverride None
    deny from all
</Directory>

#
# The following line prohibits users from directly accessing META-INF #
<Location "/pfe/META-INF/">
    AllowOverride None
    deny from all
</Location>
#
# Use Directory too. On Windows, Location doesn't work unless case matches #
<Directory "C:/Work/Dev/pfe/stock/gui/dist/pfe-gui/META-INF/">
    AllowOverride None
    deny from all
</Directory>


You can also do the same type of things to deploy the web-app directly as 
the root of apache.

To help you, I join my configuration files.


   

Wishing that this explainations will help you.

arno.



>       (if yes the instructions below don't work - TC wont start - I
> guess the note applies only to        linux build)
>
> b)    Can I just follow the TC 3.3 doc for integrating Apache and
> mod_jk as outlined
>
>       
> http://jakarta.apache.org/tomcat/tomcat-3.3-doc/tomcat-apache-howto.ht
> ml
>       
> http://jakarta.apache.org/tomcat/tomcat-3.3-doc/mod_jk-howto.html
>
>
> many thanks for this clarification
>
>
>
> Thomas Curley
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Arnaud Héritier [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: 11 October 2001 09:41
> To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
> Subject: TOMCAT 4.0 + APACHE + AJP 1.3 : look at this.
> Importance: High
>
>
> For all people who want to integrate tomcat 4.0 and Apache 1.3(.20) 
> with the AJP 1.3 connector, you must refer to this page :
>
> http://jakarta.apache.org/~hgomez/ajp13-tc4.0/
>
> Arno
>
> > -----Message d'origine-----
> > De: Krasi Zlatev [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> > Date:       jeudi 11 octobre 2001 10:21
> > À:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Objet:      Tomcat4+Apache Web server question?
> >
> > How to make the connection between Tomcat4 and
> > Apache web server
> > when I uncomment the Ajp13 connector in server.xml
> > I get
> >
> > Catalina.start: java.lang.ClassNotFoundException: 
> > org.apache.ajp.tomcat4.Ajp13Connector
> > java.lang.ClassNotFoundException: 
> > org.apache.ajp.tomcat4.Ajp13Connector
> >
> > Indeed I do not need Tomcat as a standalone server I
> > just need it to serve the invoked jsps and serlvets
> > from Apache WEb server.
> >
> > How to configure Tomcat to do that, and what to use
> > as a connector between Apache Web server and Tomcat.
> >
> > Thank You!
> >
> > =====
> > Krasi Zlatev
> > Enjoy!
> >
> > __________________________________________________
> > Do You Yahoo!?
> > Make a great connection at Yahoo! Personals. 
> > http://personals.yahoo.com


Attachment: workers.properties
Description: Binary data

<!-- Example Server Configuration File -->
<!-- Note that component elements are nested corresponding to their
     parent-child relationships with each other -->

<!-- A "Server" is a singleton element that represents the entire JVM,
     which may contain one or more "Service" instances.  The Server
     listens for a shutdown command on the indicated port.

     Note:  A "Server" is not itself a "Container", so you may not
     define subcomponents such as "Valves" or "Loggers" at this level.
 -->

<Server port="8005" shutdown="SHUTDOWN" debug="5">


  <!-- A "Service" is a collection of one or more "Connectors" that share
       a single "Container" (and therefore the web applications visible
       within that Container).  Normally, that Container is an "Engine",
       but this is not required.

       Note:  A "Service" is not itself a "Container", so you may not
       define subcomponents such as "Valves" or "Loggers" at this level.
   -->

  <!-- Define the Tomcat Stand-Alone Service -->
  <Service name="Tomcat-Standalone">

    <!-- A "Connector" represents an endpoint by which requests are received
         and responses are returned.  Each Connector passes requests on to the
         associated "Container" (normally an Engine) for processing.

         By default, a non-SSL HTTP/1.1 Connector is established on port 8080.
         You can also enable an SSL HTTP/1.1 Connector on port 8443 by
         following the instructions below and uncommenting the second Connector
         entry.  SSL support requires the following steps:
         * Download and install JSSE 1.0.2 or later, and put the JAR files
           into "$JAVA_HOME/jre/lib/ext".
         * Edit "$JAVA_HOME/jre/lib/security/java.security" and add
             security.provider.2=com.sun.net.ssl.internal.ssl.Provider
         * Execute: keytool -genkey -alias tomcat -keyalg RSA
           with a password value of "changeit".

         By default, DNS lookups are enabled when a web application calls
         request.getRemoteHost().  This can have an adverse impact on
         performance, so you can disable it by setting the
         "enableLookups" attribute to "false".  When DNS lookups are disabled,
         request.getRemoteHost() will return the String version of the
         IP address of the remote client.
    -->

    <!-- Define a non-SSL HTTP/1.1 Connector on port 8080 -->
    <Connector className="org.apache.catalina.connector.http.HttpConnector"
               port="8080" minProcessors="5" maxProcessors="75"
               enableLookups="true" redirectPort="8443"
               acceptCount="10" debug="0" connectionTimeout="60000"/>
    <!-- Note : To disable connection timeouts, set connectionTimeout value 
     to -1 -->

    <!-- Define an SSL HTTP/1.1 Connector on port 8443 -->
    <!--
    <Connector className="org.apache.catalina.connector.http.HttpConnector"
               port="8443" minProcessors="5" maxProcessors="75"
               enableLookups="true"
	       acceptCount="10" debug="0" scheme="https" secure="true">
      <Factory className="org.apache.catalina.net.SSLServerSocketFactory"
               clientAuth="false" protocol="TLS"/>
    </Connector>
    -->

    <!-- Define a Proxied HTTP/1.1 Connector on port 8081 -->
    <!-- See proxy documentation for more information about using this. -->
    <!--
    <Connector className="org.apache.catalina.connector.http.HttpConnector"
               port="8081" minProcessors="5" maxProcessors="75"
               enableLookups="true"
               acceptCount="10" debug="0" connectionTimeout="60000"
               proxyPort="80"/>
    -->

    <!-- Define a non-SSL HTTP/1.0 Test Connector on port 8082 -->
    <!--
    <Connector className="org.apache.catalina.connector.http10.HttpConnector"
               port="8082" minProcessors="5" maxProcessors="75"
               enableLookups="true" redirectPort="8443"
               acceptCount="10" debug="0"/>
    -->

	<!-- Connector for AJP 1.3 -->    
    <Connector className="org.apache.ajp.tomcat4.Ajp13Connector"
               port="8009" minProcessors="5" maxProcessors="75"
               acceptCount="10" debug="0" connectionTimeout="0" />

    <!-- An Engine represents the entry point (within Catalina) that processes
         every request.  The Engine implementation for Tomcat stand alone
         analyzes the HTTP headers included with the request, and passes them
         on to the appropriate Host (virtual host). -->

    <!-- Define the top level container in our container hierarchy -->
    <Engine name="Standalone" defaultHost="localhost" debug="0">

      <!-- The request dumper valve dumps useful debugging information about
           the request headers and cookies that were received, and the response
           headers and cookies that were sent, for all requests received by
           this instance of Tomcat.  If you care only about requests to a
           particular virtual host, or a particular application, nest this
           element inside the corresponding <Host> or <Context> entry instead.

           For a similar mechanism that is portable to all Servlet 2.3
           containers, check out the "RequestDumperFilter" Filter in the
           example application (the source for this filter may be found in
           "$CATALINA_HOME/webapps/examples/WEB-INF/classes/filters").

           Request dumping is disabled by default.  Uncomment the following
           element to enable it. -->
      <!--
      <Valve className="org.apache.catalina.valves.RequestDumperValve"/>
      -->

      <!-- Global logger unless overridden at lower levels -->
      <Logger className="org.apache.catalina.logger.FileLogger"
              prefix="catalina_log." suffix=".txt"
              timestamp="true"/>

      <!-- Because this Realm is here, an instance will be shared globally -->

      <Realm className="org.apache.catalina.realm.MemoryRealm" />

      <!-- Replace the above Realm with one of the following to get a Realm
           stored in a database and accessed via JDBC -->

      <!--
      <Realm  className="org.apache.catalina.realm.JDBCRealm" debug="99"
             driverName="org.gjt.mm.mysql.Driver"
          connectionURL="jdbc:mysql://localhost/authority?user=test;password=test"
              userTable="users" userNameCol="user_name" userCredCol="user_pass"
          userRoleTable="user_roles" roleNameCol="role_name" />
      -->

      <!--
      <Realm  className="org.apache.catalina.realm.JDBCRealm" debug="99"
             driverName="oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver"
          connectionURL="jdbc:oracle:thin:@ntserver:1521:ORCL?user=scott;password=tiger"
              userTable="users" userNameCol="user_name" userCredCol="user_pass"
          userRoleTable="user_roles" roleNameCol="role_name" />
      -->

      <!--
      <Realm  className="org.apache.catalina.realm.JDBCRealm" debug="99"
             driverName="sun.jdbc.odbc.JdbcOdbcDriver"
          connectionURL="jdbc:odbc:CATALINA"
              userTable="users" userNameCol="user_name" userCredCol="user_pass"
          userRoleTable="user_roles" roleNameCol="role_name" />
      -->

      <!-- Define the default virtual host -->
      <Host name="localhost" debug="0" appBase="webapps" unpackWARs="true">

        <!-- Normally, users must authenticate themselves to each web app
             individually.  Uncomment the following entry if you would like
             a user to be authenticated the first time they encounter a
             resource protected by a security constraint, and then have that
             user identity maintained across *all* web applications contained
             in this virtual host. -->
        <!--
        <Valve className="org.apache.catalina.authenticator.SingleSignOn"
                   debug="0"/>
        -->

        <!-- Access log processes all requests for this virtual host.  By
             default, log files are created in the "logs" directory relative to
             $CATALINA_HOME.  If you wish, you can specify a different
             directory with the "directory" attribute.  Specify either a relative
             (to $CATALINA_HOME) or absolute path to the desired directory.
        -->
        <Valve className="org.apache.catalina.valves.AccessLogValve"
                 directory="logs"  prefix="localhost_access_log." suffix=".txt"
                 pattern="common"/>

        <!-- Logger shared by all Contexts related to this virtual host.  By
             default (when using FileLogger), log files are created in the "logs"
             directory relative to $CATALINA_HOME.  If you wish, you can specify
             a different directory with the "directory" attribute.  Specify either a
             relative (to $CATALINA_HOME) or absolute path to the desired
             directory.-->
        <Logger className="org.apache.catalina.logger.FileLogger"
                 directory="logs"  prefix="localhost_log." suffix=".txt"
	        timestamp="true"/>

        <!-- Define properties for each web application.  This is only needed
             if you want to set non-default properties, or have web application
             document roots in places other than the virtual host's appBase
             directory.  -->

        <!-- Tomcat Root Context -->
        <!--
          <Context path="" docBase="ROOT" debug="0"/>
        -->

        <!-- Tomcat Examples Context -->
        <Context path="/examples" docBase="examples" debug="0"
                 reloadable="true">
          <Logger className="org.apache.catalina.logger.FileLogger"
                     prefix="localhost_examples_log." suffix=".txt"
        	  timestamp="true"/>
          <Ejb   name="ejb/EmplRecord" type="Entity"
                 home="com.wombat.empl.EmployeeRecordHome"
               remote="com.wombat.empl.EmployeeRecord"/>
          <!-- PersistentManager: Uncomment the section below to test Persistent 
		       Sessions.
                         
               saveOnRestart: If true, all active sessions will be saved
                 to the Store when Catalina is shutdown, regardless of
                 other settings. All Sessions found in the Store will be 
                 loaded on startup. Sessions past their expiration are
                 ignored in both cases.
               maxActiveSessions: If 0 or greater, having too many active 
                 sessions will result in some being swapped out. minIdleSwap
                 limits this. -1 means unlimited sessions are allowed.
                 0 means sessions will almost always be swapped out after
                 use - this will be noticeably slow for your users.
               minIdleSwap: Sessions must be idle for at least this long
                 (in seconds) before they will be swapped out due to 
               maxActiveSessions. This avoids thrashing when the site is 
                 highly active. -1 or 0 means there is no minimum - sessions
                 can be swapped out at any time.
               maxIdleSwap: Sessions will be swapped out if idle for this
                 long (in seconds). If minIdleSwap is higher, then it will
                 override this. This isn't exact: it is checked periodically.
                 -1 means sessions won't be swapped out for this reason,
                 although they may be swapped out for maxActiveSessions.
                 If set to >= 0, guarantees that all sessions found in the
                 Store will be loaded on startup.
               maxIdleBackup: Sessions will be backed up (saved to the Store,
                 but left in active memory) if idle for this long (in seconds), 
                 and all sessions found in the Store will be loaded on startup.
                 If set to -1 sessions will not be backed up, 0 means they
                 should be backed up shortly after being used.

               To clear sessions from the Store, set maxActiveSessions, maxIdleSwap,
               and minIdleBackup all to -1, saveOnRestart to false, then restart 
               Catalina.
          -->
		  <!--
          <Manager className="org.apache.catalina.session.PersistentManager"
              debug="0"
              saveOnRestart="true"
              maxActiveSessions="-1"
              minIdleSwap="-1"
              maxIdleSwap="-1"
              maxIdleBackup="-1">
                <Store className="org.apache.catalina.session.FileStore"/>
          </Manager>
		  -->
          <Environment name="maxExemptions" type="java.lang.Integer"
                      value="15"/>
          <Parameter name="context.param.name" value="context.param.value"
                     override="false"/>
          <Resource name="jdbc/EmployeeAppDb" auth="SERVLET"
                    type="javax.sql.DataSource"/>
          <ResourceParams name="jdbc/TestDB">
            <parameter><name>user</name><value>sa</value></parameter>
            <parameter><name>password</name><value></value></parameter>
            <parameter><name>driverClassName</name>
              <value>org.hsql.jdbcDriver</value></parameter>
            <parameter><name>driverName</name>
              <value>jdbc:HypersonicSQL:database</value></parameter>
          </ResourceParams>
          <Resource name="mail/Session" auth="Container"
                    type="javax.mail.Session"/>
          <ResourceParams name="mail/session">
            <parameter>
              <name>mail.smtp.host</name>
              <value>localhost</value>
            </parameter>
          </ResourceParams>
        </Context>

	<Context path="/pfe" docBase="C:/Work/Dev/pfe/stock/gui/dist/pfe-gui" debug="0">
        </Context>

      </Host>

    </Engine>

  </Service>

  <!-- The MOD_WEBAPP connector is used to connect Apache 1.3 with Tomcat 4.0
       as its servlet container. Please read the README.txt file coming with
       the WebApp Module distribution on how to build it.
       (Or check out the "jakarta-tomcat-connectors/webapp" CVS repository)

       To configure the Apache side, you must ensure that you have the
       "ServerName" and "Port" directives defined in "httpd.conf".  Then,
       lines like these to the bottom of your "httpd.conf" file:

         LoadModule webapp_module libexec/mod_webapp.so
         WebAppConnection warpConnection warp localhost:8008
         WebAppDeploy examples warpConnection /examples/

       The next time you restart Apache (after restarting Tomcat, if needed)
       the connection will be established, and all applications you make
       visible via "WebAppDeploy" directives can be accessed through Apache.
  -->

  <!-- Define an Apache-Connector Service -->
  <Service name="Tomcat-Apache">

    <Connector className="org.apache.catalina.connector.warp.WarpConnector"
     port="8008" minProcessors="5" maxProcessors="75"
     enableLookups="true"
     acceptCount="10" debug="0"/>

    <!-- Replace "localhost" with what your Apache "ServerName" is set to -->
    <Engine className="org.apache.catalina.connector.warp.WarpEngine"
     name="Apache" debug="0" appBase="webapps">

      <!-- Global logger unless overridden at lower levels -->
      <Logger className="org.apache.catalina.logger.FileLogger"
              prefix="apache_log." suffix=".txt"
              timestamp="true"/>

      <!-- Because this Realm is here, an instance will be shared globally -->
      <Realm className="org.apache.catalina.realm.MemoryRealm" />

    </Engine>

  </Service>

</Server>

Attachment: httpd.conf.Tomcat4.0
Description: Binary data

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