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Re: Apache configuration



   good greif,

   why don't you listen and why don't you post the requested information
   when some of

   the worlds best programmers like Scott want's to help you ?

   I just don't understand !
   On Tue, Apr 24, 2012 at 7:19 PM, Selders, Vince E
   <[1]VESelders@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

     Thanks for the info. �I probably will drop this like a hot potato.
     �I don't have the authorities I need, the intelligence to ask
     questions, or the patience (anymore)
     My admins want me to sit with them to explain what to set up, etc.
     However, �without having the authorities (*IOSYSCFG) I have no idea
     what screens are going to pop up. �So each step will be painful ,
     resulting in me walking back across the street to my cubicle,
     research what is needed next, and so on and so forth. �I guess some
     shops just aren't coder-friendly, and this is one.
     v-out

   -----Original Message-----
   From: [2]ftpapi-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
   [mailto:[3]ftpapi-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Scott
   Klement
   Sent: Tuesday, April 24, 2012 11:47
   To: HTTPAPI and FTPAPI Projects
   Subject: Re: Apache configuration

   Hi Vince,
   >
   > All that I am trying to get to (at this point) is how to configure
   > apache to provide a place for me to build a web service with
   > HTTPAPI.
   >
   I'm not certain whether you understand this already, so I'll say it
   just
   to make sure we're on the same page: �HTTPAPI cannot be used to
   provide
   a web service.
   HTTPAPI is a client-side tool. It can be used to _call_ a web service
   that's provided by another tool (such as Apache, IWS, Tomcat,
   WebSphere,
   IIS, etc)
   If you use a traditional web site as an analogy, HTTPAPI takes the role
   of the "web browser". �Apache takes the role of the "web server."
   That said, you'd never set up a web service (or web site) without
   testing it. �So you might use HTTPAPI for calling/testing your web
   service (I know that I do!)
   > I know that there is a file somewhere in which some entry goes into
   > to determine a port for the server. �The fact is, rambling on as I
   am
   > I've begun to recall some of this and will pursue it.
   >
   Apache configuration files normally live in:
   � �/www/your-instance-name/conf/httpd.conf
   however, the proper way to edit them is with the IBM HTTP *ADMIN tool.
   You aren't supposed to change these files by hand.
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   --
   Regards,
   Henrik Rützou
   �   [6]http://powerEXT.com
   �   [plogofull200.png]

References

   1. mailto:VESelders@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
   2. mailto:ftpapi-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
   3. mailto:ftpapi-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
   4. http://www.scottklement.com/mailman/listinfo/ftpapi
   5. http://www.scottklement.com/mailman/listinfo/ftpapi
   6. http://powerext.com/
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