<?xml version='1.0' encoding='cp1252'?>
<!--
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contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version
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(the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
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Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or
implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.
-->
<tomcat-users>
<user name="admin" password="kiran" roles="admin-gui,manager-gui" />
<!--
NOTE: By default, no user is included in the "manager-gui" role
required
to operate the "/manager/html" web application. If you wish to use
this app,
you must define such a user - the username and password are arbitrary.
-->
<!--
NOTE: The sample user and role entries below are wrapped in a comment
and thus are ignored when reading this file. Do not forget to remove
<!.. ..> that surrounds them.
-->
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!--
Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version
2.0
(the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or
implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.
-->
<tomcat-users>
<!--
NOTE: By default, no user is included in the "manager-gui" role
required
to operate the "/manager/html" web application. If you wish to use
this app,
you must define such a user - the username and password are arbitrary.
-->
<!--
NOTE: The sample user and role entries below are wrapped in a comment
and thus are ignored when reading this file. Do not forget to remove
<!.. ..> that surrounds them.
-->
<role rolename="AdminRole"/>
<role rolename="UserRole"/>
<user password="tomcat" roles="tomcat,role1" username="both"/>
<user password="tomcat" roles="UserRole" username="role1"/>
<user password="tomcat" roles="AdminRole,manager-script,admin"
username="tomcat"/>
<role rolename="manager-gui"/>
<user username="kiran" password="kiran" roles="manager-gui"/>
<role rolename="probeuser" />
<role rolename="poweruser" />
<role rolename="poweruserplus" />
<role rolename="manager" />
<user username="admin" password="t0psecret" roles="manager" />
</tomcat-users>
Any ideas why its not working in 7.0.27 ?
My system is win 7 32 bit home premium with JDK 1.6.32
________________________________
From: André Warnier<a...@ice-sa.com>
To: Tomcat Users List<users@tomcat.apache.org>
Sent: Sunday, April 29, 2012 2:18 PM
Subject: Re: How to run Tomcat as Service on windows start up.
Mark Eggers wrote:
NetBeans will complain that it cannot find the startup.bat and
shutdown.bat
required to do these tasks if you install the service.
Presumably then, you could replace startup.bat and shutdown.bat
by similarly-named .bat files which respectively do
net start "Apache Tomcat"
and
net stop "Apache Tomcat"
(to keep it simple)
I suppose you could. I don't know how intrusive NetBeans'
investigation of the scripts are. In Windows Vista and Windows 7,
UAC might become a problem. I'm not a Windows person, so I'd have to
investigate this.
Similarly, it should be possible to create .bat files which run the
Tomcat wrapper tomcatX.exe with the appropriate arguments to start,
stop, or run Tomcat in debug mode.
From my recollection of the service, don't you have to configure
the service for debug using the service configuration program? I'm
not sure how you would handle that through NetBeans, since I believe
it simply does what start.bat / catalina.bat require (pass the debug
argument to catalina.bat).
So, you might need a single startup.bat and shutdown.bat that would
determine which service to run, and which service was running . . . .
No ?
(Although, if I understood the OP's request correctly, the point
here would
be to start Tomcat as a service as soon as Windows starts. So
presumably,
the necessity of having a "startup.bat" is not evident anymore).
It's a little unclear as to what the OP request is. It sounds like
the OP has two requirements:
1. Deal with Tomcat in a development environment using NetBeans
To me this means starting, stopping, debugging, launching with the
security manager, etc. That's hard to do when you don't own /
completely control the service.
The same problem exists in Linux. People want a system-wide Tomcat
but want to use NetBean's deploy and debug facilities. There are all
sorts of interesting permissions problems with this.
NetBeans operates by deploying a context.xml file as [app-name].xml
in the appropriate Engine/host directory. The application is
actually run out of [project-name]/build. This works fine, and you
can do a lot of dynamic updates in this fashion.
What happens when the user of the IDE doesn't have access to post a
context. xml to the appropriate directory? What happens when Tomcat
doesn't have access to read a user's [project-name]/build directory?
So for this use case, it's far easier and cleaner to maintain your
own copy of Tomcat that can be registered, managed, and controlled
by NetBeans.
2. Demonstrate works in progress to other developers
Putting aside for the moment that turning development box into a
demonstration server may not be a good thing, it's sometimes handy.
For this I was recommending a system-wide Tomcat (run as a service).
You then just use the manager application to update it with the
latest demonstration-ready software.
I think this has a few advantages. You don't show off intermediate
(and potentially embarrassing) code. The service is up regardless of
whether you're developing or not (OP's original request).
. . . . just my two cents.
/mde/
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