I've got a great link for solving this problem. Take a look at it. Hope that helps somebody.
http://www.onjava.com/pub/a/onjava/2004/03/03/filters.html --- Christopher Schultz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió: > To whom it may concern, > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > >> Something is wrong with that mod_jk version, by > the way. The most > >> recent release of mod_jk is 1.2.23. > > > > Well, the installation file that I found in the > server is named: > > mod_jk-3.3-ap20.so, that's why I assumed that > version. > > Strange. You must have some odd packaged version of > apache + mod_jk that > has its own (confusing) version number. > > > This [filter] method looks really cool, any way, > does somebody knows > > another solution. I read about configuring apache > http.conf and/or > > installing the headers module. > > I'm sure you can do something like this using Apache > httpd only, I'm > just not sure how to do it. > > > Is that filter installation the only way in which > this could be > > achieved with tomcat?? > > There are other ways, but this is the most > convenient. Tomcat itself > does not support anything like this (that I know > of), so you basically > have to solve this at an application level. > > Hope that helps, > -chris > > ____________________________________________________________________________________ ¡Sé un mejor fotógrafo! Perfecciona tu técnica y encuentra las mejores fotos. http://mx.yahoo.com/promos/mejorfotografo.html --------------------------------------------------------------------- To start a new topic, e-mail: users@tomcat.apache.org To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]