http://server:port/context-root/servlet-mapping?name=value
Administering Web Applications |
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This chapter explains how to administer web applications in the GlassFish Server Open Source Edition 5.0 environment.
The following topics are addressed here:
Instructions for accomplishing some of these tasks by using the Administration Console are contained in the Administration Console online help.
You can call a servlet deployed to GlassFish Server by using a URL in a browser or embedded as a link in an HTML or JSP file. The format of a servlet invocation URL is as follows:
http://server:port/context-root/servlet-mapping?name=value
The following table describes each URL section.
Table 6-1 URL Fields for Servlets Within an Application
URL element | Description |
---|---|
server`:`port |
The IP address (or host name) and optional port number. To access the default web module for a virtual server, specify only this URL section. You do not need to specify the context-root or servlet-name unless you also wish to specify name-value parameters. |
context-root |
For an application, the context root is defined in the For both applications and individually deployed web modules, the default
context root is the name of the WAR file minus the |
servlet-mapping |
The |
|
Optional request parameters. |
Example 6-1 Invoking a Servlet With a URL
In this example, localhost
is the host name, MortPages
is the
context root, and calcMortgage
is the servlet mapping.
http://localhost:8080/MortPages/calcMortgage?rate=8.0&per=360&bal=180000
Example 6-2 Invoking a Servlet From Within a JSP File
To invoke a servlet from within a JSP file, you can use a relative path. For example:
<jsp:forward page="TestServlet"/><jsp:include page="TestServlet"/>
ServletContext.log
messages are sent to the server log. By default,
the System.out
and System.err
output of servlets are sent to the
server log. During startup, server log messages are echoed to the
System.err
output. Also by default, there is no Windows-only console
for the System.err
output.
You can change these defaults using the Administration Console Write to
System Log box. If this box is checked, System.out
output is sent to
the server log. If it is unchecked, System.out
output is sent to the
system default location only.
You can use the default-web.xml
file to define features such as
filters and security constraints that apply to all web applications.
For example, directory listings are disabled by default for added
security. To enable directory listings in your domain’s
default-web.xml
file, search for the definition of the servlet whose
servlet-name
is equal to default
, and set the value of the
init-param
named listings
to true
. Then restart the server.
<init-param>
<param-name>listings</param-name>
<param-value>true</param-value>
</init-param>
If listings
is set to true
, you can also determine how directory
listings are sorted. Set the value of the init-param
named sortedBy
to NAME
, SIZE
, or LAST_MODIFIED
. Then restart the server.
<init-param>
<param-name>sortedBy</param-name>
<param-value>LAST_MODIFIED</param-value>
</init-param>
The mime-mapping
elements in default-web.xml
are global and
inherited by all web applications. You can override these mappings or
define your own using mime-mapping
elements in your web application’s
web.xml
file. For more information about mime-mapping
elements, see
the Servlet specification.
You can use the Administration Console to edit the default-web.xml
file, or edit the file directly using the following steps.
default-web.xml
FilePlace the JAR file for the filter, security constraint, or other feature in the domain-dir`/lib` directory.
Edit the domain-dir`/config/default-web.xml` file to refer to the JAR file.
To apply your changes, restart GlassFish Server.
See To Restart a Domain.
You can specify that a request for an old URL be treated as a request for a new URL. This is called redirecting a URL.
To specify a redirected URL for a virtual server, use the redirect_n
property, where n is a positive integer that allows specification of
more than one. Each of these redirect_n
properties is inherited by all
web applications deployed on the virtual server.
The value of each redirect_n
property has two components which can be
specified in any order:
The first component, from
, specifies the prefix of the requested URI
to match.
The second component, url-prefix
, specifies the new URL prefix to
return to the client. The from prefix is replaced by this URL prefix.
Example 6-3 Redirecting a URL
This example redirects from
dummy
to etude
:
<property name="redirect_1" value="from=/dummy url-prefix=http://etude"/>
mod_jk
The Apache Tomcat Connector mod_jk
can be used to connect the web
container with web servers such as Apache HTTP Server. By using
mod_jk
, which comes with GlassFish Server, you can front GlassFish
Server with Apache HTTP Server.
You can also use mod_jk
directly at the JSP/servlet engine for load
balancing. For more information about configuring mod_jk
and Apache
HTTP Server for load balancing with GlassFish Server 5.0 refer to
"Configuring HTTP Load Balancing" in GlassFish Server
Open Source Edition High Availability Administration Guide.
The following topics are addressed here:
mod_jk
You can front GlassFish Server with Apache HTTP Server by enabling the
mod_jk
protocol for one of GlassFish Server’s network listeners, as
described in this procedure. A typical use for mod_jk
would be to have
Apache HTTP Server handle requests for static resources, while having
requests for dynamic resources, such as servlets and JavaServer Pages
(JSPs), forwarded to, and handled by the GlassFish Server back-end
instance.
When you use the jk-enabled
attribute of the network listener, you do
not need to copy any additional JAR files into the /lib
directory. You
can also create JK connectors under different virtual servers by using
the network listener attribute jk-enabled
.
Install Apache HTTP Server and mod_jk
.
For information on installing Apache HTTP Server, see
http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/install.html
.
For information on installing mod_jk
, see
http://tomcat.apache.org/connectors-doc/webserver_howto/apache.html
.
Configure the following files:
apache2/conf/httpd.conf
, the main Apache configuration file
apache2/conf/workers.properties
Example 6-4 and Example 6-5 provide examples
of configuring these two files.
Start Apache HTTP Server (httpd
).
Start GlassFish Server with at least one web application deployed.
In order for the mod_jk
-enabled network listener to start listening
for requests, the web container must be started. Normally, this is
achieved by deploying a web application.
Create a jk-enabled network listener by using the
create-network-listener
subcommand.
asadmin> create-network-listener --protocol http-listener-1 \ --listenerport 8009 --jkenabled true jk-connector
If you are using the glassfish-jk.properties
file to use
non-default values of attributes described at
http://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-5.5-doc/config/ajp.html
), set the
jk-configuration-file
property of the network listener to the
fully-qualified file name of the glassfish-jk.properties
file.
asadmin> set server-config.network-config.network-listeners.network-listener.\ jk-connector.jk-configuration-file=domain-dir/config/glassfish-jk.properties
If you expect to need more than five threads for the listener,
increase the maximum threads in the http-thread-pool
pool:
asadmin> set configs.config.server-config.thread-pools.thread-pool.\ http-thread-pool.max-thread-pool-size=value
To apply your changes, restart GlassFish Server.
See To Restart a Domain.
Example 6-4 httpd.conf
File for mod_jk
This example shows an httpd.conf
file that is set for mod_jk
. In
this example, mod_jk
used as a simple pass-through.
LoadModule jk_module /usr/lib/httpd/modules/mod_jk.so
JkWorkersFile /etc/httpd/conf/worker.properties
# Where to put jk logs
JkLogFile /var/log/httpd/mod_jk.log
# Set the jk log level [debug/error/info]
JkLogLevel debug
# Select the log format
JkLogStampFormat "[%a %b %d %H:%M:%S %Y] "
# JkOptions indicate to send SSL KEY SIZE,
JkOptions +ForwardKeySize +ForwardURICompat -ForwardDirectories
# JkRequestLogFormat set the request format
JkRequestLogFormat "%w %V %T"
# Send all jsp requests to GlassFish
JkMount /*.jsp worker1
# Send all glassfish-test requests to GlassFish
JkMount /glassfish-test/* worker1
Example 6-5 workers.properties
File for mod_jk
This example shows a workers.properties
that is set for mod_jk
. This
workers.properties
file is referenced in the second line of
Example 6-4.
# Define 1 real worker using ajp13
worker.list=worker1
# Set properties for worker1 (ajp13)
worker.worker1.type=ajp13
worker.worker1.host=localhost
worker.worker1.port=8009
See Also
For more information on Apache, see http://httpd.apache.org/
.
For more information on Apache Tomcat Connector, see
http://tomcat.apache.org/connectors-doc/index.html
.
mod_jk
and GlassFish ServerLoad balancing is the process of dividing the amount of work that a computer has to do between two or more computers so that more work gets done in the same amount of time. Load balancing can be configured with or without security.
In order to support stickiness, the Apache mod_jk
load balancer relies
on a jvmRoute
system property that is included in any JSESSIONID
received by the load balancer. This means that every GlassFish Server
instance that is front-ended by the Apache load balancer must be
configured with a unique jvmRoute
system property.
On each of the instances, perform the steps in To Enable
mod_jk
.
If your instances run on the same machine, you must choose different JK
ports. The ports must match worker.worker*.port
in your
workers.properties
file. See the properties file in
Example 6-5.
On each of the instances, create the jvmRoute
system property of
GlassFish Server by using the create-jvm-options
subcommand.
Use the following format:
asadmin> create-jvm-options "-DjvmRoute=/instance-worker-name"/
where instance-worker-name is the name of the worker that you defined to
represent the instance in the workers.properties
file.
3. To apply your changes, restart Apache HTTP Server and GlassFish
Server.
Example 6-6 httpd.conf
File for Load Balancing
This example shows an httpd.conf
file that is set for load balancing.
LoadModule jk_module /usr/lib/httpd/modules/mod_jk.so
JkWorkersFile /etc/httpd/conf/worker.properties
# Where to put jk logs
JkLogFile /var/log/httpd/mod_jk.log
# Set the jk log level [debug/error/info]
JkLogLevel debug
# Select the log format
JkLogStampFormat "[%a %b %d %H:%M:%S %Y] "
# JkOptions indicate to send SSL KEY SIZE,
JkOptions +ForwardKeySize +ForwardURICompat -ForwardDirectories
# JkRequestLogFormat set the request format
JkRequestLogFormat "%w %V %T"
# Send all jsp requests to GlassFish
JkMount /*.jsp worker1
# Send all glassfish-test requests to GlassFish
JkMount /glassfish-test/* loadbalancer
Example 6-7 workers.properties
File for Load Balancing
This example shows a workers.properties
or glassfish-jk.properties
file that is set for load balancing. The worker.worker*.port
should
match with JK ports you created.
worker.list=worker1,worker2,loadbalancer
worker.worker1.type=ajp13
worker.worker1.host=localhost
worker.worker1.port=8009
worker.worker1.lbfactor=1
worker.worker1.socket_keepalive=1
worker.worker1.socket_timeout=300
worker.worker2.type=ajp13
worker.worker2.host=localhost
worker.worker2.port=8010
worker.worker2.lbfactor=1
worker.worker2.socket_keepalive=1
worker.worker2.socket_timeout=300
worker.loadbalancer.type=lb
worker.loadbalancer.balance_workers=worker1,worker2
mod_jk
Load Balancer and the BrowserTo activate security for mod_jk
on GlassFish Server, you must first
generate a Secure Socket Layer (SSL) self-signed certificate on the
Apache HTTP Server with the mod_ssl
module. The tasks include
generating a private key, a Certificate Signing Request (CSR), a
self-signed certificate, and configuring SSL-enabled virtual hosts.
Before You Begin
The mod_jk
connector must be enabled.
Generate the private key as follows:
openssl genrsa -des3 -rand file1:file2:file3:file4:file5 -out server.key 1024
where file1:file2:
and so on represents the random compressed files.
2. Remove the pass-phrase from the key as follows:
openssl rsa -in server.key -out server.pem
Generate the CSR is as follows:
openssl req -new -key server.pem -out server.csr
Enter the information you are prompted for.
4. Generate a temporary certificate as follows:
openssl x509 -req -days 60 -in server.csr -signkey server.pem -out server.crt
This temporary certificate is good for 60 days.
5. Create the http-ssl.conf
file under the /etc/apache2/conf.d
directory.
6. In the http-ssl.conf
file, add one of the following redirects:
* Redirect a web application, for example, JkMount /hello/* worker1
.
* Redirect all requests, for example, JkMount /* worker1
.
# Send all jsp requests to GlassFish
JkMount /*.jsp worker1
# Send all glassfish-test requests to GlassFish
JkMount /glassfish-test/* loadbalancer
Example 6-8 http-ssl.conf
File for mod_jk
Security
A basic SSL-enabled virtual host will appear in the http-ssl.conf
file. In this example, all requests are redirected.
Listen 443
<VirtualHost _default_:443>
SSLEngine on
SSLCipherSuite ALL:!ADH:!EXP56:RC4+RSA:+HIGH:+MEDIUM:+LOW:+SSLv2:+EXP:+eNULL
SSLCertificateFile "/etc/apache2/2.2/server.crt"
SSLCertificateKeyFile "/etc/apache2/2.2/server.pem"
JkMount /* worker1
</VirtualHost>
mod_jk
Load Balancer and GlassFish ServerThis procedure does not enable SSL transfer between mod_jk
and
GlassFish Server. It enables mod_jk
to forward SSL-encrypted
information from the browser to GlassFish Server.
Before You Begin
The self-signed certificate must be configured.
Perform the steps in To Enable mod_jk
.
Start another GlassFish Server with at least one web application
deployed.
In order for the mod_jk
-enabled network listener to start listening
for requests, the web container must be started. Normally, this is
achieved by deploying a web application.
Follow instructions from To Configure an
HTTP Listener for SSL on the mod_jk
connector.
Use the following format:
asadmin> create-ssl --type http-listener --certname sampleCert new-listener
Add the following directives in the httpd.conf
file under the
/etc/apache2/conf.d
directory:
# Should mod_jk send SSL information (default is On) JkExtractSSL On # What is the indicator for SSL (default is HTTPS) JkHTTPSIndicator HTTPS # What is the indicator for SSL session (default is SSL_SESSION_ID) JkSESSIONIndicator SSL_SESSION_ID # What is the indicator for client SSL cipher suit (default is SSL_CIPHER ) JkCIPHERIndicator SSL_CIPHER # What is the indicator for the client SSL certificated? (default is SSL_CLIENT_CERT ) JkCERTSIndicator SSL_CLIENT_CERT
To apply your changes, restart Apache HTTP Server and GlassFish Server.
mod_proxy_ajp
The Apache Connector mod_proxy_ajp
can be used to connect the web
container with Apache HTTP Server. By using mod_proxy_ajp
, you can
front GlassFish Server with Apache HTTP Server.
mod_proxy_ajp
You can front GlassFish Server with Apache HTTP Server and its
mod_proxy_ajp
connector by enabling the AJP protocol for one of
GlassFish Server’s network listeners, as described in this procedure. A
typical use for mod_proxy_ajp
would be to have Apache HTTP Server
handle requests for static resources, while having requests for dynamic
resources, such as servlets and JavaServer Pages (JSPs), forwarded to,
and handled by the GlassFish Server back-end instance.
Install Apache HTTP Server.
For information on installing Apache HTTP Server, see
http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/install.html
.
Configure apache2/conf/httpd.conf
, the main Apache configuration
file.
For example:
LoadModule proxy_module /usr/lib/httpd/modules/mod_proxy.so LoadModule proxy_ajp_module /usr/lib/httpd/modules/mod_proxy_ajp.so Listen 1979 NameVirtualHost *:1979 <VirtualHost *:1979> ServerName localhost ErrorLog /var/log/apache2/ajp.error.log CustomLog /var/log/apache2/ajp.log combined <Proxy *> AddDefaultCharset Off Order deny,allow Allow from all </Proxy> ProxyPass / ajp://localhost:8009/ ProxyPassReverse / ajp://localhost:8009/ </VirtualHost>
Start Apache HTTP Server (httpd
).
Create a jk-enabled network listener by using the
create-network-listener
subcommand.
asadmin> create-network-listener --protocol http-listener-1 \ --listenerport 8009 --jkenabled true jk-connector
If you expect to need more than five threads for the listener,
increase the maximum threads in the http-thread-pool
pool:
asadmin> set configs.config.server-config.thread-pools.thread-pool.\ http-thread-pool.max-thread-pool-size=value
To apply your changes, restart GlassFish Server.
See To Restart a Domain.
See Also
For more information on Apache, see http://httpd.apache.org/
.
For more information on the Apache mod_proxy_ajp
Connector, see
http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.1/mod/mod_proxy.html
and
http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.1/mod/mod_proxy_ajp.html
.
For more information on the AJP protocol, see
http://tomcat.apache.org/connectors-doc/ajp/ajpv13a.html
.
mod_proxy_ajp
and GlassFish ServerLoad balancing is the process of dividing the amount of work that a computer has to do between two or more computers so that more work gets done in the same amount of time. In the GlassFish Server context, load balancing is most frequently used to distribute work among the instances in a GlassFish Server cluster.
To configure load balancing using mod_proxy_ajp
, you must use the
mod_proxy_balancer
Apache module in addition to mod_proxy_ajp
.
In order to support stickiness, the mod_proxy_balancer
load balancer
relies on a jvmRoute
system property that is included in any
JSESSIONID
received by the load balancer. Consequently, every
GlassFish Server instance that is front-ended by the Apache load
balancer must be configured with a unique jvmRoute
system property.
LoadModule proxy_module /usr/lib/httpd/modules/mod_proxy.so LoadModule proxy_ajp_module /usr/lib/httpd/modules/mod_proxy_ajp.so LoadModule proxy_balancer_module /usr/lib/httpd/modules/mod_proxy_balancer.so # Forward proxy needs to be turned off ProxyRequests Off # Keep the original Host Header ProxyPreserveHost On <Proxy *> Order deny,allow Deny from all Allow from localhost </Proxy> # Each BalancerMember corresponds to an instance in the GlassFish Server # cluster. The port specified for each instance must match the ajp port # specified for that instance. <Proxy balancer://localhost> BalancerMember ajp://localhost:8009 BalancerMember ajp://localhost:8010 BalancerMember ajp://localhost:8011 </Proxy>
Start Apache HTTP Server (httpd
).
In GlassFish Server, use the create-network-listener
subcommand to
create a jk-enabled network listener targeted to the cluster.
For example:
asadmin> create-network-listener --jkenabled true --target cluster1 \ --protocol http-listener-1 --listenerport ${AJP_PORT} jk-listener
In this example, cluster1
is the name of the cluster and jk-listener
is the name of the new listener.
5. If you expect to need more than five threads for the listener,
increase the maximum threads in the http-thread-pool
pool:
asadmin> set configs.config.cluster1-config.thread-pools.thread-pool.\
http-thread-pool.max-thread-pool-size=value
Use the create-jvm-options
subcommand to create the jvmRoute
property targeted to the cluster.
For example:
asadmin> create-jvm-options --target cluster1 \ "-DjvmRoute=\${AJP_INSTANCE_NAME}"
Use the create-system-properties
subcommand to define the
AJP_PORT
and AJP_INSTANCE_NAME
properties for each of the instances
in the cluster, making sure to match the port values you used in
StepĀ 2 when specifying the load balancer members.
For example:
asadmin> create-system-properties --target instance1 AJP_PORT=8009 asadmin> create-system-properties --target instance1 \ AJP_INSTANCE_NAME=instance1 asadmin> create-system-properties --target instance2 AJP_PORT=8010 asadmin> create-system-properties --target instance2 \ AJP_INSTANCE_NAME=instance2 asadmin> create-system-properties --target instance3 AJP_PORT=8011 asadmin> create-system-properties --target instance3 \ AJP_INSTANCE_NAME=instance3
In this example, instance1
, instance2
and instance3
are the names
of the GlassFish Server instances in the cluster.
8. To apply your changes, restart GlassFish Server.
See To Restart a Domain.
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