Hi David, You can find the server.xml close to the bottom of my first post. I get very little logging. The only trace is a failure of a GET(/) in one of the logs. I will check with the system administrator if anything was changed related to DNS. The Apache server definitely works. I will try Tomcat locally as soon as I have access to the server again.
Kind regards, Piet On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 5:39 PM, David Smith <d...@cornell.edu> wrote: > Hmmm ... maybe retour.mycompany.com isn't resolving to the IP you think > it is. Is there anything in your tomcat logs that might imply the > request is actually getting there? To me this smells a lot like a > network issue (DNS not resolving, firewall rules, etc., ...). Can you > verify tomcat works on the machine itself via a localhost request? I'd > also like to see what the server.xml file looks like. I don't think its > the issue, but it'd be nice to elliminate it entirely. > > --David > > java piet wrote: > > Sorry David, > > > > The addresses and names are fakes for reasons of confidentiality. > > The addresses and names in my code have worked before though. > > > > Kind regards, > > > > Piet > > > > On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 2:42 PM, David Smith <d...@cornell.edu> wrote: > > > > > >> Are you replacing DNS names and IPs with fakes for the purposes of email > >> or are these real values? 192.168.x.x is unroutable and suggests the > >> time out is because your firewall or cable router aren't passing through > >> the requests from clients. > >> > >> --David > >> > >> java piet wrote: > >> > >>> Thank you for the feedback. > >>> > >>> Sorry for the incomplete information. > >>> The Apache http server is functioning as a reverse proxy. > >>> Multiple applications have to be accessed through the internet. > >>> > >>> Now, I have Tomcat listening on 8081. > >>> > >>> Going to retour.mycompany.com:8080 or retour.mycompany.com:8081 > >>> gives a network timeout. (The server at retour.mycompany.com is taking > >>> > >> too > >> > >>> long to respond.) > >>> > >>> On the other hand, when I use the ip address like > >>> http://192.168.210.143:8080/ > >>> I get the resource (/) not found error > >>> while http://192.168.210.143:8081/ gives a network timeout. > >>> > >>> Tomcat without the Apache http server service gives the same network > >>> > >> timeout > >> > >>> when accessed through 8081. > >>> > >>> Hope this gives a clearer picture. > >>> > >>> Kind regards. > >>> > >>> Piet > >>> > >>> > >>> On Sun, Aug 16, 2009 at 9:02 PM, Caldarale, Charles R < > >>> chuck.caldar...@unisys.com> wrote: > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>>>> From: java piet [mailto:javap...@gmail.com] > >>>>> Subject: Re: apache2.2 tomcat5.5.27 Windows 2008 virtual hosts > >>>>> > >>>>> The reason for the Apache http server is because I thought I > >>>>> need it to handle the virtual hosting. > >>>>> > >>>>> > >>>> No, Tomcat can handle that quite well: > >>>> http://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-5.5-doc/virtual-hosting-howto.html > >>>> > >>>> > >>>> > >>>>> As for the port 80, something else is already using it on the server. > >>>>> > >>>>> > >>>> You may be able to use a different IP address and have Tomcat use port > >>>> > >> 80 > >> > >>>> with that. > >>>> > >>>> > >>>> > >>>>> First I will try to have Tomcat listen on 8081 and see where > >>>>> that gets me. > >>>>> > >>>>> > >>>> Your first step should really be to eliminate httpd; it will make > things > >>>> much simpler. > >>>> > >>>> - Chuck > >>>> > >>>> > >>>> THIS COMMUNICATION MAY CONTAIN CONFIDENTIAL AND/OR OTHERWISE > PROPRIETARY > >>>> MATERIAL and is thus for use only by the intended recipient. If you > >>>> > >> received > >> > >>>> this in error, please contact the sender and delete the e-mail and its > >>>> attachments from all computers. > >>>> > >>>> > >>>> > >>>> > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tomcat.apache.org > For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tomcat.apache.org > >