This chapter covers the following topics:

eXo Platform comes with two sample portals that show the capabilities of the product. However, once implementing your own extensions, you may not need these sample portals. In some cases, you usually want to remove them before deploying your system in production.

The following instructions are used in cases where the hsqldb embedded database configuration is used.

Remove Acme website/Acme Social Intranet

Both Acme website and Acme Social Intranet are sample extensions demonstrating the intranet that you can implement with eXo Platform.

1. Stop the server using the shutdown.sh command.

2. Delete the following relevant files:

Tomcat

JBoss

3. Restart the server.

Remove a Crash

Crash is a complementary tool for development and maintenance. As it opens telnet and SSH sockets, it is highly recommended that you remove Crash for your production deployments. Crash is in the crash.war file in tomcat/webapps.

1. Stop the serve by using the shutdown.sh command.

2. Delete the crash.war file.

3. Restart the server.

See also

It may be necessary to use the HTTP server as a front-end for Tomcat. For example, you may want to keep more than one application server on the same host, and/or you want to access these app servers with the separate DNS names, without adding a port to the URL.

There are two methods that allow you to "glue" Apache HTTP Daemon and Tomcat application server:

Base configuration for Apache

First, you need to configure a new virtual host in Apache HTTPD for the application server. This is the simplest example of a virtual host:

You can find more information on the Apache HTTP daemon host here.

See also

With the glue method, it is necessary to configure the Apache HTTP daemon to work as the reverse proxy, which will redirect the client's requests to the app server's HTTP connector.

For this connection type, you need to include the mod_proxy module in the HTTP daemon configuration file. This can be found in the httpd.conf file, which is usually located at /etc/httpd/conf/. However, depending on your OS, this path may vary. You will then need to add some directives to your virtual host configuration.

Details:

In the above example, the HTTP daemon will work in the reverse proxy mode (ProxyRequests Off) and will redirect all requests to the tcp port 8080 on the localhost. So, the configuration of a virtual host looks like the following:

For more detail on mod_proxy, refer to this documentation.

As described above, the 'glue' method can be implemented via one of the following ways:

With the first method, you only need the HTTP daemon and application server, but settings are limited.

With the second method, you can obtain more settings, but you will need to download and install additional modules for the HTTP Daemon that are not included in the default package.

AJP proxy module

Make sure that mod_proxy_ajp.so is included in the list of loadable modules. Add the following to your virtual host configuration setting:

In this example, the app server is located on the same host as the Apache HTTP daemon, and accepts incoming connections on the port 8009 (the default setting for the Tomcat application server). You can find the full list of virtual host configurations here:

Apache Tomcat's AJP connector

1. Download AJP connector module here.

2. Move the downloaded mod_jk.so file to the HTTPD's module directory, for example /etc/httpd/modules. The directory may be different, depending on the OS.

3. Create the configuration file for the mod_jk.conf module.

LoadModule    jk_module  modules/mod_jk.so
<IfModule jk_module>
  # ---- Where to find workers.properties
        JkWorkersFile   conf.d/workers.properties
  # ---- Where to put jk logs
  JkLogFile       logs/mod_jk.log
  # ---- Set the jk log level [debug/error/info]
  JkLogLevel    info
  # ---- Select the timestamp log format
  JkLogStampFormat "[%a %b %d %H:%M:%S %Y] "
  JkRequestLogFormat "%w %R %T"
  # ---- Send everything for context /examples to worker named worker1 (ajp13)
  JkMountFileReload       "0"
</IfModule>

For more details, see the Tomcat documentation.

4. Place the mod_jk.conf file into the directory where other configuration files for Apache HTTP daemon are located. For example, /etc/httpd/conf.d/.

5. Create the workers.properties file, which defines the AJP workers for the HTTP daemon.

worker.list=status, WORKER_NAME
# Main status worker
worker.stat.type=status
worker.stat.read_only=true
worker.stat.user=admin
# Your AJP worker configuration
worker.WORKER_NAME.type=ajp13
worker.WORKER_NAME.host=localhost
worker.WORKER_NAME.port=8109
worker.WORKER_NAME.socket_timeout=120
worker.WORKER_NAME.socket_keepalive=true

Note

In the example above, you can change WORKER_NAME to any value.

6. Put this file in the same directory as the mod_jk.conf file.

7. Update the virtual host configuration.

<VirtualHost *:80>
  ServerName      Enter your server DNS name here
  RedirectMatch	permanent "^/?$" "/portal/"
  ProxyRequests   Off
  JkMount         /*	WORKER_NAME
</VirtualHost>
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