Date: Wed, 17 Sep 2003 00:46:46 +0200 (CEST) From: Josef El-Rayes <j.el-rayes@daemon.li> To: FreeBSD-gnats-submit@FreeBSD.org Subject: docs/56936: [patch] articles/java-tomcat: add application tags Message-ID: <20030916224646.169C860DB@gina.at> Resent-Message-ID: <200309162250.h8GMo1N2088714@freefall.freebsd.org>
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>Number: 56936 >Category: docs >Synopsis: [patch] articles/java-tomcat: add application tags >Confidential: no >Severity: non-critical >Priority: low >Responsible: freebsd-doc >State: open >Quarter: >Keywords: >Date-Required: >Class: update >Submitter-Id: current-users >Arrival-Date: Tue Sep 16 15:50:00 PDT 2003 >Closed-Date: >Last-Modified: >Originator: Josef El-Rayes >Release: FreeBSD 5.1-CURRENT i386 >Organization: >Environment: System: FreeBSD gina.at 5.1-CURRENT FreeBSD 5.1-CURRENT #1: Sat Sep 13 13:22:16 CEST 2003 root@gina.at:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GINA i386 >Description: docs/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/java-tomcat/article.sgml: o add application tags for Tomcat >How-To-Repeat: >Fix: --- article.sgml.diff begins here --- --- article.sgml.orig Wed Sep 17 00:30:07 2003 +++ article.sgml Wed Sep 17 00:41:55 2003 @@ -35,7 +35,8 @@ <!DOCTYPE article PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//DTD DocBook V4.1-Based Extension//EN" [ <!ENTITY % man PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//ENTITIES DocBook Manual Page Entities//EN"> - +<!ENTITY % freebsd PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//ENTITIES DocBook Miscellaneous FreeBSD Entities//EN"> +%freebsd; <!ENTITY % trademarks PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//ENTITIES DocBook Trademark Entities//EN"> %trademarks; @@ -99,8 +100,8 @@ least amount of aggravation. Plan on spending a whole day on such a project as it will take time to assemble all the pieces and compile them individually, and then as a whole. It also shows how - to install the famous Jakarta Tomcat Servlet and &jsp; container on - the FreeBSD operating system.</para> + to install the famous <application>Jakarta Tomcat Servlet and &jsp; container</application> on + the &os; operating system.</para> </abstract> </articleinfo> <!-- END of Article Metadata--> @@ -127,7 +128,7 @@ <filename role="package">www/apache13</filename> on my FreeBSD system.</para> - <para>The Tomcat portion of the install is very straight forward, but + <para>The <application>Tomcat</application> portion of the install is very straight forward, but the difficulty I had was getting &java; Development Kit up and running for FreeBSD 4.X, as Sun Microsystems only supplies Binaries for Linux, &solaris;, and &windowsnt;. This means that I @@ -139,8 +140,8 @@ <para>In this article, you will find how to install the &java; Development Kit for FreeBSD, and how to get up and running with - Tomcat. A <xref linkend="ref"> section is also provided for - further reading.</para> + <application>Tomcat</application>. A <xref linkend="ref"> section is also provided for + further reading.</para> </sect1> <sect1> @@ -383,24 +384,24 @@ <para><application>Tomcat</application> is an open-source implementation of the &java; Servlets and &javaserver.pages; technologies, developed under the Jakarta project at the Apache - Software Foundation. Tomcat implements a new Servlet framework + Software Foundation. <application>Tomcat</application> implements a new Servlet framework (called Catalina) that is based on completely new architecture with the Servlet 2.3 and <acronym>&jsp;</acronym> 1.2 specifications. It includes many additional features that make it a useful platform for developing and deploying web - applications and web services. In a nutshell, Tomcat is an + applications and web services. In a nutshell, <application>Tomcat</application> is an application server written in 100% Pure &java;.</para> - <para>Tomcat is used for many purposes, and is not limited to + <para><application>Tomcat</application> is used for many purposes, and is not limited to Application Servers. It provides an open platform to develop - extensible web and content management services. When Tomcat is + extensible web and content management services. When <application>Tomcat</application> is used with an optimized FreeBSD system, it can provide highly reliable and fast pacing services.</para> <para>Please refer to the <xref linkend="ref"> section for more - information on Tomcat and <acronym>&jsp;</acronym>. The next + information on <application>Tomcat</application> and <acronym>&jsp;</acronym>. The next section will demonstrate how to build the <quote>Tomcat - Environment</quote> for FreeBSD. The version of Tomcat used in + Environment</quote> for &os;. The version of <application>Tomcat</application> used in this guide is <literal>4.0.3</literal>. This version contains major bug fixes, and the following updates/changes:</para> @@ -423,11 +424,11 @@ <sect2> <title>The Tomcat environment for FreeBSD</title> - <para>It is very simple to install Tomcat on a FreeBSD machine, + <para>It is very simple to install <application>Tomcat</application> on a &os; machine, after setting up the necessary &java; environment, which we have previously completed.</para> - <para>In-order to setup Tomcat on FreeBSD, follow the below + <para>In-order to setup <application>Tomcat</application> on &os;, follow the below procedure:</para> <procedure> @@ -454,11 +455,11 @@ adding it into either <filename>.profile</filename> or <filename>.cshrc</filename>, depending on the shell you are using. This variable is very crucial for the functioning of - all the &java; based programs, including Tomcat itself.</para> + all the &java; based programs, including <application>Tomcat</application> itself.</para> </step> <step> - <para>Download the Tomcat <quote>binary distribution</quote> + <para>Download the <application>Tomcat</application> <quote>binary distribution</quote> from the Jakarta website, which is located at <literal><ulink url="&tomcat403"></ulink></literal>. The file to download is called @@ -499,7 +500,7 @@ <para><literal>Installation by using the source code is currently out of scope for this document. Please refer to the following files for addition information on building from source, - available from your Tomcat distribution + available from your <application>Tomcat</application> distribution directory:</literal></para> <itemizedlist> @@ -517,26 +518,26 @@ <sect2> <title>Operating Tomcat - Basics</title> - <para>Now that we have finished installing Tomcat. The following - example shows how to start the Tomcat server:</para> +<para>Now that we have finished installing <application>Tomcat</application>. The following +example shows how to start the <application>Tomcat</application> server:</para> <screen>&prompt.root; cd /usr/local/tomcat-4.0/bin &prompt.root; ./startup.sh (for starting Tomcat)</screen> - <para>You can test if your Tomcat server has started by visiting + <para>You can test if your <application>Tomcat</application> server has started by visiting the following URL: <literal>http://127.0.0.1:8080</literal> or <literal>http://localhost:8080</literal>. To stop - Tomcat:</para> + <application>Tomcat</application>:</para> <screen>&prompt.root; cd /usr/local/tomcat-4.0/bin &prompt.root; ./shutdown.sh</screen> - <para>(for stopping Tomcat)</para> + <para>(for stopping <application>Tomcat</application>)</para> <para>The <filename>startup.sh</filename> and <filename>shutdown.sh</filename> are frontends to the <filename>catalina.sh</filename> executable script in the same - directory; if you would like to start Tomcat automatically at + directory; if you would like to start <application>Tomcat</application> automatically at boot-time run:</para> <screen>&prompt.root; cd /usr/local/etc/rc.d @@ -550,7 +551,7 @@ <para>If your port <literal>8080</literal> is occupied by some other service, you can change it by editing the - <filename>server.xml</filename> in your Tomcat's + <filename>server.xml</filename> in your <application>Tomcat's</application> <filename>conf/</filename> directory. In the example below, the port will be changed to 80, assuming there is no service running on that port.</para> @@ -617,9 +618,9 @@ <title>Conclusion</title> <para>Finally, we are at the end of the article and have a working - version of Tomcat. We hope that you have learned the basics of + version of <application>Tomcat</application>. We hope that you have learned the basics of installing and building the &java; Development Kit on FreeBSD, - along with installation of the Tomcat binary distribution + along with installation of the <application>Tomcat</application> binary distribution application server released by the Apache Software Foundation. The <xref linkend="ref"> section contains pointers to additional resources on this topic, some which are in print, some which are --- article.sgml.diff ends here --- >Release-Note: >Audit-Trail: >Unformatted:
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