Tomcat 4.0.5 binary
Installing Tomcat 4.0.5
This is a log of my instal of Tomcat 4.0.5 binary under Solaris.
Jan Labanowski, Oct. 2, 2002
1. First you need Java SDK. I installed the latest greatest 1.4.1 at
this moment. Look at the log of Java install under Solaris at:
/cca/software/JAVA/J2SDK-1.4.1/solaris2.8.shtml
2. Created a directory /usr/local/tomcat_4.0.5/distribution/bin directory.
I made the files under /usr/local/tomcat_4.0.5/ and directory itself
owned by the "webrun" user (the user and a group which runs Apache
and Tomcat on our machine). Then, I did everyting as webrun user,
rather then root. I retrieved Tomcat distribution from Jakarta
Apache site: http://jakarta.apache.org/. The actual directory
in this case is:
http://jakarta.apache.org/builds/jakarta-tomcat-4.0/release/v4.0.5/
and placed it in the /usr/local/tomcat_4.0.5/distribution/bin
directory. Since I will run Tomcat under Java 1.4.x, I retrieved file
jakarta-tomcat-4.0.5-LE-jdk14.tar.gz, which does
not pack parsers and other files already available in J2SDK 1.4.1
distribution. If you are not using Sun JDK, or if you use earlier
Sun JDK, you need to retrieve the Tomcat full distribution which
contains parsers. Also, retrieve the latest distribution, since
bug and security problem fixes appear quite often.
3. I unpacked the distribution using GNU tar (the regular tar which
comes with Solaris, is not really useful in this case, since you
would have to first gunzip the tar.gz file, and only then untar it).
cd /usr/local/tomcat_4.0.5/distribution/bin
tar zxvf jakarta-tomcat-4.0.5-LE-jdk14.tar.gz
This created the directory: jakarta-tomcat-4.0.5-LE-jdk14
which contains the standard tree of TOMCAT_HOME. To make the
path human-friendly I did the following:
cd /usr/local/tomcat_4.0.5/distribution/bin/jakarta-tomcat-4.0.5-LE-jdk14
mv * /usr/local/tomcat_4.0.5
TOMCAT_HOME=/usr/local/tomcat_4.0.5
export TOMCAT_HOME
This helps, since I can go to the top of Tomcat tree by just doing
cd $TOMCAT_HOME
4. Now, making tomact RUN. You definitely need to read the file:
${TOMCAT_HOME}/RUNNING.txt which comes with the distribution.
I started from making sure that my port assignments do not collide
with other servers which I run on the machine. I edited the
${TOMCAT_HOME}/conf/server.xml file and made all post starting
from 80xx, changed to start from 405xx to make sure I can do
some testing without interfaring with other Tomcat which currently
uses the default ports. Namely:
8005 --> 40505
8008 --> 40508
8009 --> 40509
8080 --> 40580
8081 --> 40581
8082 --> 40582
8083 --> 40583
8443 --> 40543
Note that most statements using these ports are commented out.
But I changed just in case, so it is consistent in case I later
need to uncomment some connectors.
5. Testing tomcat. Before starting Tomcat, you need to set the
JAVA_HOME environmental variable (read $TOMCAT_HOME/bin/catalina.sh
script for more information). In my case:
JAVA_HOME=/usr/local/j2sdk1.4.1
export JAVA_HOME
cd ${TOMCAT_HOME}/bin
./startup.sh
I actually created a small script called jkl-up.sh which contained:
JAVA_HOME=/usr/local/j2sdk1.4.1
export JAVA_HOME
TOMCAT_HOME=/usr/local/tomcat_4.0.5
export TOMCAT_HOME
cd ${TOMCAT_HOME}/bin
./startup.sh
to make sure, I have things set up correctly. I placed it in
$TOMCAT_HOME/bin, changed its mode to 755, and started it as:
cd $TOMCAT_HOME/bin
./jkl-up.sh
I also created a script called jkl-down.sh which was quite similar:
JAVA_HOME=/usr/local/j2sdk1.4.1
export JAVA_HOME
TOMCAT_HOME=/usr/local/tomcat_4.0.5
export TOMCAT_HOME
cd ${TOMCAT_HOME}/bin
./shutdown.sh
I then checked in my browser, if I am getting something by opening
the page: http://heechee.ccl.net:40580/ (heechee was my machine,
where I installed tomcat). I went through examples, and ran a few...
Some ran, some did not (e.g., Send mail example did not run,
since there are not JavaMail jar in the CLASSPATH at this point).
Then I shut down tomcat as:
cd $TOMCAT_HOME/bin
./jkl-down.sh
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