Question

I've set up a host with apache to serve static pages and to use Tomcat to serve my web application (See this question). The static pages are server from

"http://myhost.com"

and the dynamic (tomcat) pages are server from

"http://myhost.com/myapp"

The mod_proxy makes sure the "http://myhost.com/myapp" are forwarded to tomcat server running on "http://myhost.com:8080".

The problem is that now you get the standard Tomcat introduction page on "http://myhost.com/myapp" but if you click on a local link (e.g. 'Status') on the left, it generates an URL "http://myhost.com/manager/status" while it should generate: "http://myhost.com/myapp/manager/status"

(The same is true for webapps installed under tomcat)

What should be changed in my configuration (apache, tomcat?) to redirect my tomcat links to the right place?

Was it helpful?

Solution

Have you set the ProxyPassReverse setting in your httpd.conf. This will overwrite the HTTP Header an you'll get to the correct request on the side of tomcat.

OTHER TIPS

Your URLs are mapped from:

http://myhost.com/myapp -> http://myhost.com:8080

This means that accessing the above URL will be mapped to the ROOT application in Tomcat. The ROOT application will generate pages that contain links from Tomcat's root context.

In other words, if you go to:

http://myhost.com:8080

you will get a page that contains links to

http://myhost.com:8080/manager/status

This link will work. However when that page is given back to a browser that requested it via Apache, the full URL then looks like: http://myhost.com/manager/status

I assume that you intend to deploy an application called 'myapp' to Tomcat? If that is the case the Tomcat URL for this app will be

http://myhost.com:8080/myapp

Which will also work be mapped correctly when accessed via Apache.

If you absolutely must access Tomcats root application in this way you'll have to rewrite the URLs it outputs in the pages it returns.

I've had the most success with mod_proxy_ajp. It requires mod_proxy, but works over ajp. Using it instead, your conf file looks similar

    ProxyPass / ajp://localhost:8009/

See my similar question and also the answer to this question. The only fault in mod_proxy_ajp that I've found is that if I need to restart tomcat I have to force an apache restart too.

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