i think gwt has a same source domain filter
On Thu, Nov 9, 2023 at 11:47 AM Leon <leon.pennings@gmail.com> wrote:
As far as I know, gwt uses relative paths wrt it's own context root. So the client calls should always be able to reach the gwt servlets. I've never had to configure anything to make that happen.If you setup apache2 to forward virtual name based hosts to tomcat, apache2 is nothing more than a proxy server to 127.0.0.1:8080. Then you can keep the tomcat fairly simple and straightforward.There are multiple examples online of how to deploy a .war file to tomcat on the internet. It's nothing more than that.--On Thu, Nov 9, 2023 at 6:34 PM 'dav...@googlemail.com' via GWT Users <google-web-toolkit@googlegroups.com> wrote:yeah that sounds doable, I think it's along the lines I was already thinkingSo mydomain..com is served by apache2 and includes the GWT javascriptApache2 also has a conf for subdomain.mydomain.com that creates a backend AJP to tomcat where I serve subdomain.mydomain.com/appA and subdomain.mydomain.com/appBSo I just create a ROOT folder in webapps, pop a copy of my GWT code's WEB-INF there and that does a job.But not the job! The servelet that GWT server code creates to pass the remote ip to the client code is now running at subdomain.mydomain.com/foo/bar instead of mydomain.com/foo/bar, so the GWT produced client javascript served at mydomain.com and the servelet can't talk.I feel there must be a solution, but just now I don't see it and even thus far, I feel I'm jumping through hoops. Am I missing a recommended way to do this?--On Thursday, 9 November 2023 at 13:40:02 UTC Leon Pennings wrote:You can deploy the web application on tomcat and use mod_proxy on apache2 to forward https (or http if required) to tomcat on 8080 (or another port if required)Op woensdag 8 november 2023 om 18:31:19 UTC+1 schreef dav...@googlemail.com:hi EdYes understood and most of the "app" is GWT produced javascript, part of a web page, which I've always run on apache2 and don't really want to change that for the ip address supplying servelet which is a recent addition. I already also run a backend tomcat with an AJP connection to apache2 for a couple of java coded apps. So is setting up the WEB-INF directory of my GWT "app" separately in tomcat the preferred way to do this or at least a possibility?Prior to adding the server code the WEB_INF directory was not needed by apache2 I believe, rather just the javascript, directory. so that does appear to be a reasonable way to go?DavidOn Wednesday, 8 November 2023 at 12:31:36 UTC Ed wrote:jetty is application server while apache2 is a web server. tomcat is the apache app server.On Wed, Nov 8, 2023 at 4:48 AM 'dav...@googlemail.com' via GWT Users <google-we...@googlegroups.com> wrote:On my development machine I test my code in jetty. The client code calls a server to get the client ip address. This works fine and I see a server at localhost:8080/foo/bar as I expect. If I browse to it I get a 405 as GET request are not allowed, but that's not a problem as it does the job it's supposed to do ie pass request address back to client code.It does not work in production were the code is run on apache; the server is not created as on jetty, so that's not unexpected. I first suspicion was that modsecurity is preventing the creation of the server, but that proves to be not so. I also see the same failure over http as over https.I have a pretty basic apache2 setup on debian (apart from adding modsecurity) and the site config is pretty bog standard for both http and https. I'm guessing I need to tweak something somewhere to allow the server to be created?--
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