$Id$ Running The Tomcat 5 Servlet/JSP Container ========================================== This subproject contains Tomcat 5, a server that implements the Servlet 2.4 and JSP 2.0 specifications from the Java Community Process (http://www.jcp.org). In order to install and run this container, you must do the following: (0) Download and Install a Java Development Kit * Download a Java Development Kit (JDK) release (version 1.2 or later) from: http://java.sun.com/j2se/ * Install the JDK according to the instructions included with the release. * Set an environment variable JAVA_HOME to the pathname of the directory into which you installed the JDK release. (1) Download and Install the Tomcat 5 Binary Distribution NOTE: As an alternative to downloading a binary distribution, you can create your own from the Tomcat source repository, as described in "BUILDING.txt". If you do this, the value to use for "${catalina.home}" will be the "dist" subdirectory of your source distribution. * Download a binary distribution of Tomcat from: http://jakarta.apache.org/builds/jakarta-tomcat-5/nightly/ On a Windows platform, you will need: jakarta-tomcat-5-YYYYMMDD.zip On a Unix platform, you will need: jakarta-tomcat-5-YYYYMMDD.zip * Unpack the binary distribution into a convenient location so that the distribution resides in its own directory (conventionally named "jakarta-tomcat-5"). For the purposes of the remainder of this document, the symbolic name "" is used to refer to the full pathname of the release directory. (2) Start Up Tomcat 5 Tomcat 5 can be started by executing the following commands: \bin\startup.bat (Windows) /bin/startup.sh (Unix) After startup, the default web applications included with Tomcat 5 will be available by browsing: http://localhost:8080/ Further information about configuring and running Tomcat 5 can be found in the documentation included here, as well as on the Tomcat web site: http://jakarta.apache.org/tomcat/ (3) Shut Down Tomcat 5 Tomcat 5 can be shut down by executing the following command: \bin\shutdown (Windows) /bin/shutdown.sh (Unix) (4) Advanced Configuration - Multiple Tomcat 5 Instances In many circumstances, it is desirable to have a single copy of a Tomcat 5 binary distribution shared among multiple users on the same server. To make this possible, you must pass a "-Dcatalina.base=" argument when executing the to the startup command (see (2)). In this "-Dcatalina.base=" argument, replace with the directory that contains the files unique to your Tomcat 5 instance. When you use this "-Dcatalina.base=" argument, Tomcat 5 will calculate all relative references for files in the following directories based on the value of instead of : * conf - Server configuration files (including server.xml) * logs - Log and output files * webapps - Automatically loaded web applications * work - Temporary working directories for web applications * temp - Directory used by the JVM for temporary files (java.io.tmpdir) If you do not pass the "-Dcatalina.base=" argument to the startup command, will default to the same value as (which means that the same directory is used for all relative path resolutions). The administration and manager web applications, which are defined in the /webapps/admin.xml and /webapps/manager.xml will not run in that configuration, unless either: - The path specified in the docBase attribute of the Context element is made absolute, and replaced respectively by /server/webapps/admin and /server/webapps/manager - Copying and linking both web applications in , and modify accordingly the path specified in the docBase attribute of the Context element - Disabling both web applications by removing /webapps/admin.xml and /webapps/manager.xml (5) Troubleshooting: There are only really 3 things that can go wrong during the stand-alone Tomcat 5 install: 1) The most common hiccup is when another web server (or any process for that matter) has laid claim to port 8080. This is the default HTTP port that Tomcat attempts to bind to at startup. To change this, open the file: $CATALINA_HOME/conf/server.xml and search for '8080'. Change it to a port that isn't in use, and is greater than 1024, as ports less than or equal to 1024 require superuser access to bind to. Restart Tomcat and you're in business. Be sure that you replace the "8080" in the URL you're using to access Tomcat. For example, if you change the port to 1977, you would request the URL http://localhost:1977/. 2) An "out of environment space" error when running the batch files in Windows 95, 98, or ME operating systems. Right-click on the STARTUP.BAT and SHUTDOWN.BAT files. Click on "Properties" then on the "Memory" tab. For the "Initial environment" field, enter in something like 4096. After you click apply, Windows will create shortcuts in the directory with which you can use to start and stop the container. 3) The 'localhost' machine isn't found. This could happen if you're behind a proxy. If that's the case, make sure the proxy configuration for your browser knows that you shouldn't be going through the proxy to access the "localhost" machine. In Netscape, this is under Edit/Preferences -> Advanced/Proxies, and in Internet Explorer, Tools -> Internet Options -> Connections -> LAN Settings.