Hi Janno,
Sorry, my mistake for not reading your email closely enough. Using a tomcat configured like your jetty (listening on 8080 with an app registered on the path /ipt/) my apache is configured like so, and admin functions work for me (so the url in my case is http://www.domain.com/ipt ):
ProxyPreserveHost On ProxyPass /ipt http://localhost:8080/ipt ProxyPassReverse /ipt http://localhost:8080/ipt
Because the /ipt path is the same for apache and tomcat, in this case you don't need the reversecookiepath directive. Let's see if that helps.
Cheers, Oliver
On 2011-05-02, at 3:47 PM, janno jõgeva wrote:
Hi Oliver,
Well tried again - I have read these instructions a while back - they seam to be same as before (Updated Jan 30, 2011 by timrober...@gmail.com).
This set-up gets me to a state where shown on a picture in attachment. I can log in to the system but graphical elements are not loaded.
If I have not understood something wrong then the configuration suggested on the wiki page is going to forward all requests from / to http://localhost:8080/ipt/ That doesn't sound right. I have also looked into several jetty examples like this one here: http://docs.codehaus.org/display/JETTY/Configuring+mod_proxy
So why is ProxyPassReverse / http://localhost:8080/ipt/ needed in the case of IPT?
My needed set-up should only forward requests from sitename.ee/ipt/ to the IPT located on port 8080. Other requests should be handled by Apache.
Best, Janno
2011/5/2 Oliver Meyn (GBIF) omeyn@gbif.org:
Hi Janno,
We successfully setup an ipt in the way you suggest, and wrote it up on a wiki page. Please have a look at http://code.google.com/p/gbif-providertoolkit/wiki/IPTServerPreparation, right at the bottom. Important settings copied here:
ProxyPreserveHost On ProxyPass / http://localhost:8080/ipt/ ProxyPassReverse / http://localhost:8080/ipt/ ProxyPassReverseCookiePath /ipt /
Please try those settings and report back. If that doesn't work we'll help you figure it out.
Thanks, Oliver
On 2011-05-02, at 2:37 PM, janno jõgeva wrote:
Hello!
I managed to find on line in the httpd.conf that is no needed. ProxyPassReverse /ipt/ http://localhost:8080/ As I already have ProxyPreserveHost On.
But that didn't solve my problem. I did change the ipt.baseURL as you said. But that gets me to a point where some of the page contents are loaded and some are not. (I do have a login field and text fields but no graphical elements are loaded (logos etc.) ).
I'll try to give my situation: I have a web server running Apache2 behind a firewall that has port 80 open and Apache2 using it. I would like to get IPT up an running so I decided to use jetty to run the app on port 8080 and mod_proxy to direct requests from Apache to IPT. I start IPT with: /usr/bin/java $JAVA_OPTS -classpath /opt/ipt/webapp/WEB-INF/classes/:/opt/ipt/webapp/WEB-INF/lib/* org.gbif.ipt.Server 8080
It is given as an argument to a function that makes it a service. With appropriate PID output dirs etc.
So it starts. I navigate to the site in a machine on the address. Log in to the system. Everything seams fine. I can see my unpublished dataset users etc. But when I for example want to change the role of a user it tries to send its request to address sitename.ee/ not to sitename.ee/ipt/ as usually.
The problem only seams to occur when IPT is trying to access ...admin/config.do or ...admin/user.do. When I inject ipt/admin/config.do instead of admin/config.do to the save button action(in the loaded page) then the changes are actually saved to the IPT user configuration - in this case the role of the user changes.
As I understand ipt.baseURL should be publicly accessible and should point to the installation in my server. As requests have to pass firewall I should point them to sitename.ee/ipt not to sitename.ee as there is content served by Apache not by IPT.
I am quite new to mod_proxy as well, but as it seams be the way to go I started using it.
Probably I am just going the wrong way.
Best, Janno Jõgeva University of Tartu Natural History Museum
2011/5/1 Tim Robertson (GBIF) trobertson@gbif.org:
Dear Janno,
Welcome to the list. To my knowledge you are the first that is using mod_proxy and also using Jetty - I have only used modjk to bind tomcat to apache and jetty during development.
You should not need to change any property files - those are internal and controlled by the app itself - but your point on the property file commentary is quite correct.
Because you have changed the addressable URL, the IPT needs to know of it's new address. You can change this in the admin section (top option), or if you prefer, change the
ipt.baseURL=http://sitename.domain/ipt/
to
ipt.baseURL=http://sitename.domain
and restart.
If you have registered any resources with GBIF then afterwards you need to go into the admin section and hit the "update metadata" button to change all resource URLs in the GBIF registry.
I hope this helps and sorts your issues, Tim
On May 1, 2011, at 1:09 PM, janno jõgeva wrote:
Hello!
I am quite new to this list so hello to everyone. Maybe I just missed something but here is my question. I am setting up an IPT node on our site. As IPT is not too much of a load it could run on a server that has other tasks as well. I have managed to set the IPT up and running via apache mod_proxy using jetty. I have daemonized it to a service on port 8080.
The version I am using is ipt-2.0.2-SNAPSHOT-r3084.
My ipt.properties is as follows: analytics.key= debug=false proxy= ipt.baseURL=http://sitename.domain/ipt/ analytics.gbif=true defaultLocale=en and apache configured as: ... ProxyPass /ipt/ http://localhost:8080/ ProxyPassReverse /ipt/ http://localhost:8080/ ProxyPassReverseCookiePath /ipt / ProxyPreserveHost On ... Alias /ipt "/opt/ipt/webapp" <Directory "/opt/ipt/webapp"> ... My problem - the IPT runs fine - I can make changes for example in source data SQL configuration part. but whenever the application(IPT) has to call sitename.domain/ipt/admin/user.do it calls sitename.domain/admin/user.do instead and understandably fails. My question - is there a good documentation source for the ipt.properties file? If not then could you tell me what is the "proxy" configuration parameter for?
Hope that the explanation is detailed enough.
PS. IMHO a configuration file should have documentation for each and every parameter written inside the file. It would help a lot.
Best wishes, Janno Jõgeva University of Tartu Natural History Museum _______________________________________________ IPT mailing list IPT@lists.gbif.org http://lists.gbif.org/mailman/listinfo/ipt
IPT mailing list IPT@lists.gbif.org http://lists.gbif.org/mailman/listinfo/ipt
-- Oliver Meyn Software Developer Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) +45 35 32 15 12 http://www.gbif.org
IPT mailing list IPT@lists.gbif.org http://lists.gbif.org/mailman/listinfo/ipt
<IPT_mod_proxy.JPG>_______________________________________________ IPT mailing list IPT@lists.gbif.org http://lists.gbif.org/mailman/listinfo/ipt
-- Oliver Meyn Software Developer Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) +45 35 32 15 12 http://www.gbif.org