oops, sorry I meant mod_proxy, not mod_rewrite...
--
* Matthew Kerle
** IT Consultant* **
* Canberra, Australia*
Mobile: +61404 096 863
Email: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>< Matthew Kerle
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Web: Matthew Kerle <http://threebrightlights.blogspot.com/>
Matthew Kerle wrote:
the only way to get rid of the port number is to have something
listening on :443 (that's the way browsers are, sorry), and then hand
requests over to tomcat, so to get what you want something will have
to bind to :443 at some point, requiring root privs. What you want is
something that will bind to the port as a privileged user and
subsequently drop priv's to a limited user. the Apache web server is
excellent for this kind of thing.
The easiest way to do this would be with apache sitting in front of
tomcat with either mod_jk2 or forwarding requests with mod_rewrite. It
doesn't really matter where the port forwarder sits, but usually you
want to align with existing IT infrastructure and use an existing
internal/internet web server to redirect requests to your app. If your
company already has apache then this is a cinch, otherwise you'll have
to figure out how to reverse-proxy with the web server du jour...
Is this close to what you're after?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
To start a new topic, e-mail: users@tomcat.apache.org
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]