Thanks for clarifying. Sound like you are caught between a rock and a
hard place.
Good luck.
Charl Gerber wrote:
Costs - the only way I can get a private Tomcat JVM in
South Africa, is dedicated hosting. Ie, renting a
complete machine. Costs are about 10x as much as
shared VM.
As I said, I hav
Costs - the only way I can get a private Tomcat JVM in
South Africa, is dedicated hosting. Ie, renting a
complete machine. Costs are about 10x as much as
shared VM.
As I said, I have a private VM at a US based account
and it works beautifully, but in South Africa (where
the app MUST be hosted), we
I am not sure how a private JVM on a VPS or on a regular shared OS can
be more difficult than the challenges you are
facing with the present shared JVM. A shared JVM is good for a very
basic JSP/Servlet application. However by its nature
(shared), you will not be able to do certain configurations
How? I tried that, but kept on getting messages that
the comp:env thingey was read-only and I couldn't set
up a jndi datasource that could be used by my
application, jstl and hibernate in one go.
I'd be delighted if someone could give me a working
example.
> What about putting a listener in your
I currently DO have my own Tomcat server, but the
application is now moved to South Africa (site for a
business over there, makes it a lot faster for the
users who will 99% be based in SA) and Tomcat hosting
alone is difficult, leave alone a private JVM.
--- Ken Bowen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Why not move your hosting to an isp who provides a vps?
Then you get complete control of your own tomcat; the whole thing looks and
feels like you have your own server, even though you are sharing the
physical machine.:w
The prices I've seen are comparable to those where you have to share
your
What about putting a listener in your web.xml that create a connection
pool and link it to jndi?
En l'instant précis du 03/10/07 14:01, Charl Gerber s'exprimait en ces
termes:
> Turns out datasource configuration is not possible
> using Plesk as a shared tomcat server, the guys at
> Plesk themselv
Turns out datasource configuration is not possible
using Plesk as a shared tomcat server, the guys at
Plesk themselves told me.
That sucks. Means I have to create and manage the
Datasource in my app... minor refactoring, but not a
nice way of doing it. I also use hibernate and could
only get that
Tomcat 5.0.something. (I wanted 5.5 or 6.0, but alas)
I wanted to create a JDBC Resource in the
GlobalNamingResources to start with. Plesk puts the
application into the server.xml something like this:
So in the Context definition, I would want to put a
ResourceLink sett
Charl Gerber wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I just moved my hosting from a provider where I had a
> private Tomcat server with complete control over it to
> a provider that uses Plesk and I share the Tomcat
> server with other users. The provider has no Tomcat
> knowledge in house and the Tomcat service is rare
Hi,
I just moved my hosting from a provider where I had a
private Tomcat server with complete control over it to
a provider that uses Plesk and I share the Tomcat
server with other users. The provider has no Tomcat
knowledge in house and the Tomcat service is rarely
used, so they couldn't help me
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