On 15/02/12 16:42, Ryan Harper wrote:
--
/d
"2B | !2B = FF"
* Doron Fediuck <dfediuck(a)redhat.com> [2012-02-15 08:16]:
> On 15/02/12 15:56, Ryan Harper wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I've followed the building engine from source wiki[1] and I've got it
>> all running (thanks!) but to test things out, I wanted to exercise the
>> gui and other parts via the web portal. By default, jboss is listening
>> only to localhost:8080, and I was wondering the right way to change that
>> to something else?
>>
>> I see localhost and ports buried down in
>>
>> ./backend/manager/conf/standalone.xml
>>
>> but not clear if I should be mucking with those and re-deploying or
>> what.
>>
>> Thanks for the help,
>>
> Hi Ryan,
> This is the JBoss default.
> There are 2 options when changing the relevant ports, and you need to
> decide how to proceed;
>
> - ports <1024
> In Linux processes binding to this port range (for example 80, 22 ...),
> require root permissions. There are technical solutions for it, such as
> mod_ssl and iptables routin.
>
> - ports >=1024
> This can be resolved in standalone.xml or-
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.1/static/sql-alterdatabase.html
OK, sounds like if I want to change either hostname or ports, I'd do
that via database settings in standalone.xml? Once I've changed them
The standalone.xml JBoss configuration holds several settings amongst them is data
source.
Port binding is one of these settings. Look for something like-
socket-binding name="http" port="8080"
do I just do another
mvn2 clean install -Pdep
No need, since you're not changing the application,
but the underlying
application server setup.
do I also need to restart jboss-as at some point?
That's the only thing you
need to do.
>
> --
>
> /d
>
> Why doesn't DOS ever say "EXCELLENT command or filename!"