Re: Two SSL certs. for same web app

2011-08-31 Thread Greg Johnson
Jeffrey wrote: >I do hope you are billing them an arm & a leg for that "better" certificate. Our client is an integral partner of a well-known certificate provider, so they are providing it for us without chargefor just their subdomain.  Chuck wrote: >Since you have only one , the name attri

[Solved] Two SSL certs. for same web app

2011-08-31 Thread Greg Johnson
No, and you don't need to make any changes other than adding the extra .  Traffic from both s will be routed to the single and . >Thanks for the advice, Chuck. I did end up needing to slightly change the Host >and Engine declarations to point to 'ip-address-one' in my example. So my >server.xm

Two SSL certs. for same web app

2011-08-29 Thread Greg Johnson
We have a wildcard SSL cert. installed on our tomcat (6.0.18) instance. We are not fronted by Apache, as we just use Tomcat to serve the content directly. We provide subdomains for our clients to connect to us. For example: https://client1.mycompany.com represents "client 1's" portal into our web

Re: UTF-8 Properties File

2007-10-17 Thread Greg Johnson
> Besides using native2ascii, would someone please recommend me how to make > tocmat to work with UTF-8 properties files, thanks! After using native2ascii on your property files, put the following tag in your JSP files: <%@ page contentType="text/html;charset=UTF-8" language="java" %>

Session Statistics command is broken in TC6?

2007-09-07 Thread Greg Johnson
I'm in the process of upgrading a server from TC5.5 to TC6. I've used the following command in the past to check on sessions: http://localhost/manager/sessions?path=/ This worked in 5.5. According to the docs for TC6, it should still work: http://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-6.0-doc/manager-howto.html

RE: Embedded tomcat

2007-02-14 Thread Greg Johnson
> asaf.lahav wrote: >The problem is that I cannot guarantee that web applications running under >the embedded tomcat won't hold any duplicate jars. Then write your own ClassLoader to handle your unique situation. Your ClassLoader will need to enforce that the classes are loaded from the same jar

jsvc + Tomcat vs Apache + Tomcat

2006-09-11 Thread Greg Johnson
If I put Apache in front of Tomcat, can I run Tomcat on port 8080, yet have Apache serve the content on port 80? My production web server is currently running standalone Tomcat on Linux. I chose to use jsvc to serve the content on port 80. For the most part, jsvc works, but it has a few problems