I need to run my Java application on cPanel
. I have successfully installed Tomcat,
I can run my application by copying war
file into my www
folder but the problem is that it shows the Project name (war
file name) in the address, I need to know how to remove that, so users can access www.example.com
rather than www.example.com/MyProject/index.jsp
?
According to one cpanel hosting service command prompt access is generally turned off for cpanel for security reasons and you have to ask for it specifically. If you have this access you can login and run the unzip command (after uploading the war file using FileZilla or similar).
According to cpanel if you don't have command prompt access, you can upload the war to your public_html directory, but before doing this you need to change the apache config and add a "JkMount" for this (see the one with "appname" below).
Except of course you put "your app name" instead of appname. This change will instruct apache to redirect calls to the top-level url (ie mydomain.com/appname) to your Tomcat instance (ie mydomain.com:8080/appname). After you have uploaded the war and changed the config, you have to restart apache.
But we said we didn't have ssh access, so how do we modify that file. according to this forum we can edit the /home/username/public_html/.htaccess or just /public_html/.htaccess and add these lines:
Now, apache will re-direct to tomcat for mydomain.com/appname instead of mydomain.com:8080/appname. How do we get it to work from just mydomain.com? I simply don't know the answer to this. As far as I know using the usual trick of changing the war file to ROOT.war does not work in cpanel.
they just need to unzip the .war archive in shell. See:
How to deploy a .WAR application - Ubiquity Web Hosting Wiki
We have over 100 users that have used these instructions and it works great. If you deployed Tomcat using EasyApache and have it setup as cPanel has designed, that should be about it. That was derived from:
http://twiki.cpanel.net/twiki/pub/Al...s08/Tomcat.pdf
http://forums.cpanel.net/f42/how-auto-deploy-war-cpanel-server-55096.html
You will have to fix the entries at /usr/local/jakarta/tomcat/conf/server.xml Some time back after lot of tweaking I used this and it worked:
There's several ways to set the application root context in tomcat. All of them described in the documentation of the server. Here's another one
Modify
tomcat_home\conf\server.xml
. Under the<Host
tag putwhere you put
yourappname.war
in thewebapps
folder reflectingappBase
attribute of the<Host
tag.Save, restart the server.
If you can't edit
server.xml
, Then you can delete ROOT.war and rename your war file to ROOT.war or just extract your .war file to a directory name ROOT.Next time you open your site ex - www.example.com , index.jsp will be shown to you.
I have done the same for my site at Openshift which provides free PAAS service
A name of a war file has nothing to do how the project is presented by the container - it's just a matter of configuration and by default containers presents context path as a file name.
And using ROOT.war is just a silly trick, read about Context configuration in Tomcat (I have assumed you are using Tomcat)
http://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-7.0-doc/config/context.html