Links Top Level Elements Executors Connectors Containers Nested Components Cluster Elements Global Settings | Apache Tomcat Configuration ReferenceThe Host ContainerIntroduction |
The Host element represents a virtual host,
which is an association of a network name for a server (such as
"www.mycompany.com" with the particular server on which Catalina is
running. In order to be effective, this name must be registered in the
Domain Name Service (DNS) server that manages the Internet
domain you belong to - contact your Network Administrator for more
information.
In many cases, System Administrators wish to associate more than
one network name (such as www.mycompany.com and
company.com ) with the same virtual host and applications.
This can be accomplished using the Host
Name Aliases feature discussed below.
One or more Host elements are nested inside an
Engine element. Inside the Host element, you
can nest Context elements for the web
applications associated with this virtual host. Exactly one of the Hosts
associated with each Engine MUST have a name matching the
defaultHost attribute of that Engine.
The description below uses the variable name $CATALINA_BASE to refer the
base directory against which most relative paths are resolved. If you have
not configured Tomcat for multiple instances by setting a CATALINA_BASE
directory, then $CATALINA_BASE will be set to the value of $CATALINA_HOME,
the directory into which you have installed Tomcat.
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Attributes |
Common Attributes |
All implementations of Host
support the following attributes:
Attribute | Description |
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appBase |
The Application Base directory for this virtual host.
This is the pathname of a directory that may contain web applications
to be deployed on this virtual host. You may specify an
absolute pathname, or a pathname that is relative to the
$CATALINA_BASE directory. See
Automatic Application
Deployment for more information on automatic recognition and
deployment of web applications. If not specified, the default of
webapps will be used.
| xmlBase |
The XML Base directory for this virtual host.
This is the pathname of a directory that may contain context XML
descriptors to be deployed on this virtual host. You may specify an
absolute pathname for this directory, or a pathname that is relative
to the $CATALINA_BASE directory. See
Automatic Application
Deployment for more information on automatic recognition and
deployment of web applications. If not specified the default of
[engine_name]/[host_name] will be used.
| createDirs |
If set to true, Tomcat will attempt to create the directories defined
by the attributes appBase and xmlBase during
the startup phase. The default value is true . If set to
true, and directory creation fails, an error message will be printed out
but will not halt the startup sequence.
| autoDeploy |
This flag value indicates if Tomcat should check periodically for new
or updated web applications while Tomcat is running. If true, Tomcat
periodically checks the appBase and xmlBase
directories and deploys any new web applications or context XML
descriptors found. Updated web applications or context XML descriptors
will trigger a reload of the web application. The flag's value defaults
to true. See
Automatic Application
Deployment for more information.
| backgroundProcessorDelay |
This value represents the delay in seconds between the
invocation of the backgroundProcess method on this host and
its child containers, including all contexts.
Child containers will not be invoked if their delay value is not
negative (which would mean they are using their own processing
thread). Setting this to a positive value will cause
a thread to be spawn. After waiting the specified amount of time,
the thread will invoke the backgroundProcess method on this host
and all its child containers. A host will use background processing to
perform live web application deployment related tasks. If not
specified, the default value for this attribute is -1, which means
the host will rely on the background processing thread of its parent
engine.
| className |
Java class name of the implementation to use. This class must
implement the org.apache.catalina.Host interface.
If not specified, the standard value (defined below) will be used.
| deployOnStartup |
This flag value indicates if web applications from this host should
be automatically deployed when Tomcat starts. The flag's value defaults
to true. See
Automatic Application
Deployment for more information.
| name |
Network name of this virtual host, as registered in your
Domain Name Service server. Regardless of the case used to
specify the hostname, Tomcat will convert it to lower case internally.
One of the Hosts nested within an Engine MUST
have a name that matches the defaultHost setting for that
Engine. See Host Name Aliases for
information on how to assign more than one network name to the same
virtual host.
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Standard Implementation |
The standard implementation of Host is
org.apache.catalina.core.StandardHost.
It supports the following additional attributes (in addition to the
common attributes listed above):
Attribute | Description |
---|
copyXML |
Set to true if you want a context XML descriptor
embedded inside the application (located at
/META-INF/context.xml ) to be copied to xmlBase
when the application is deployed. On subsequent starts, the copied
context XML descriptor will be used in preference to any context XML
descriptor embedded inside the application even if the descriptor
embedded inside the application is more recent. The flag's value
defaults to false . Note if deployXML
is false , this attribute will have no effect.
| deployXML |
Set to false if you want to disable parsing the context
XML descriptor embedded inside the application (located at
/META-INF/context.xml ). Security conscious environments
should set this to false to prevent applications from
interacting with the container's configuration. The administrator will
then be responsible for providing an external context configuration
file, and putting it in the location defined by the
xmlBase attribute. The flag's value defaults to
true .
| errorReportValveClass |
Java class name of the error reporting valve which will be used
by this Host. The responsibility of this valve is to output error
reports. Setting this property allows to customize the look of the
error pages which will be generated by Tomcat. This class must
implement the
org.apache.catalina.Valve interface. If none is specified,
the value org.apache.catalina.valves.ErrorReportValve
will be used by default.
| unpackWARs |
Set to true if you want web applications that are
placed in the appBase directory as web application
archive (WAR) files to be unpacked into a corresponding disk directory
structure, false to run such web applications directly
from a WAR file. WAR files located outside of the Host's
appBase will not be expanded. See
Automatic Application
Deployment for more information.
| workDir |
Pathname to a scratch directory to be used by applications for
this Host. Each application will have its own sub directory with
temporary read-write use. Configuring a Context workDir will override
use of the Host workDir configuration. This directory will be made
visible to servlets in the web application by a servlet context
attribute (of type java.io.File ) named
javax.servlet.context.tempdir as described in the
Servlet Specification. If not specified, a suitable directory
underneath $CATALINA_BASE/work will be provided.
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Nested Components |
You can nest one or more Context elements
inside this Host element, each representing a different web
application associated with this virtual host.
You can nest at most one instance of the following utility components
by nesting a corresponding element inside your Host
element:
- Realm -
Configure a realm that will allow its
database of users, and their associated roles, to be shared across all
Contexts nested inside this Host (unless
overridden by a Realm configuration
at a lower level).
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Special Features |
Logging |
A host is associated with the
org.apache.catalina.core.ContainerBase.[engine_name].[host_name]
log category. Note that the brackets are part of the name,
don't omit them.
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Automatic Application Deployment |
If you are using the standard Host implementation,
the following actions take place automatically when Catalina is first
started, if the deployOnStartup property is set to
true (which is the default value):
- Any XML file in the Host's
xmlBase directory (by
default $CATALINA_BASE/conf/[engine_name]/[host_name] ) is
assumed to be a context XML descriptor containing a
Context element (and its associated
sub-elements) for a single web application. The web applications
associated with each of these context XML descriptor files will be
deployed first.
The docBase attribute of this <Context>
element must only be set if the docBase is outside the Host's
appBase . For web applications located inside the Host's
appBase , the docBase will be the name of the
XML file with ".xml" replaced with ".war" for a web application archive
or the name of the XML file with ".xml" removed for a directory.
The path attribute must not be set. The context path used
will be a slash character ("/") followed by the name of the XML file
(less the .xml extension). Multi-level context paths may be defined
using #, e.g. foo#bar.xml for a context path of
/foo/bar . The default web application that has a context
path of / may be defined by using a file called
ROOT.xml .
- Any web application archive file within the Host's
appBase
directory that has not already been deployed as a result of a context
XML descriptor and does not have a corresponding directory of the same
name (without the ".war" extension) will be deployed next. The context
path used will be a slash character ("/") followed by the web
application archive name less the ".war" extension. The one exception to
this rule is that a web application archive named "ROOT.war" will be
deployed with a context path of / . Multi-level contexts may
be defined by using #, e.g. use a WAR named foo#bar.war for
a context path of /foo/bar .
If the unpackWARs attribute is true , the web
application archive file will be expanded to a directory of the same
name (without the ".war" extension".
Note: If you re-deploy an updated WAR file while Tomcat is stopped, be
sure to delete the associated expanded directory before restarting
Tomcat, so that the updated WAR file will be re-expanded when Tomcat
restarts.
If copyXml is true (it is false
by default), any web application archive file within the Hosts's
appBase directory that does not have a corresponding
context XML descriptor (with a ".xml" extension rather than a ".war"
extension) in the Host's xmlBase will be scanned to see
if it contains a context XML descriptor (located at
/META-INF/context.xml ) and if one is found the descriptor
will be copied to the xmlBase directory and renamed.
- Finally, any sub-directory within the Host's
appBase that
has not already been deployed as a result of a context XML descriptor
will be deployed. The context path used will be a slash character
("/") followed by the directory name, unless the directory name is ROOT,
in which case the context path will / . Multi-level contexts
may be defined by using #, e.g. use a directory named
foo#bar for a context path of /foo/bar .
If copyXml is true (it is false
by default), any directory within the Hosts's appBase
directory that does not have a corresponding context XML descriptor in
the Host's xmlBase will be scanned to see if it contains
a context XML descriptor (located at /META-INF/context.xml )
and if one is found the descriptor will be copied to the
xmlBase directory and renamed.
In addition to the automatic deployment that occurs at startup time,
you can also request that new XML configuration files, WAR files, or
sub-directories that are dropped in to the appBase (or
xmlBase in the case of an XML configuration file) directory
while Tomcat is running will be automatically deployed, according to the
rules described above. The auto deployer will also track web applications
for the following changes:
- An update to the WEB-INF/web.xml file will trigger a reload of the
web application
- Deleting a WAR file will trigger an undeploy of the application with
the removal of any associated expanded directory, context file and
work directory. Any current user sessions will not be persisted.
- Deleting a directory will trigger an undeploy of the application
with the removal of any associated context file and work directory.
Any current user sessions will not be persisted. If there is an
associated WAR file, it will not be deleted and the application will
be redeployed from the WAR file the next time the auto deployer checks
for changes.
- Deleting a context file will trigger an undeploy of the application
with the removal of any associated work directory. Any current user
sessions will not be persisted. If there is an associated WAR file
and/or directory, they will not be deleted and the application will be
redeployed from the WAR file (or from directory if there is no WAR
file) the next time the auto deployer checks for changes.
- Updating a WAR file will trigger an undeploy of the application with
the removal of any associated expanded directory, context file and
work directory. Any current user sessions will not be persisted.
- Updating a directory (not the directory contents) will trigger an
undeploy of the application with the removal of any associated context
file and work directory. Any current user sessions will not be
persisted. The application will be redeployed the next time the auto
deployer checks for changes.
- Updating a context file will trigger an undeploy of the application
with the removal of any associated work directory. Any current user
sessions will not be persisted. The application will be redeployed the
next time the auto deployer checks for changes.
When using automatic deployment, the docBase defined by
an XML Context file should be outside of the
appBase directory. If this is not the case difficulties
may be experienced deploying the web application or the application may
be deployed twice.
Finally, note that if you are defining contexts explicitly in server.xml,
you should probably turn off automatic application deployment. Otherwise,
the web applications will each be deployed twice, and that may cause
problems for the applications.
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Single Sign On |
In many environments, but particularly in portal environments, it
is desireable to have a user challenged to authenticate themselves only
once over a set of web applications deployed on a particular virtual
host. This can be accomplished by nesting an element like this inside
the Host element for this virtual host:
| | | |
<Host name="localhost" ...>
...
<Valve className="org.apache.catalina.authenticator.SingleSignOn"
debug="0"/>
...
</Host>
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The Single Sign On facility operates according to the following rules:
- All web applications configured for this virtual host must share the
same Realm. In practice, that means you can
nest the Realm element inside this Host element (or the surrounding
Engine element), but not inside a
Context element for one of the involved
web applications.
- As long as the user accesses only unprotected resources in any of the
web applications on this virtual host, they will not be challenged
to authenticate themselves.
- As soon as the user accesses a protected resource in
any web application associated with this virtual
host, the user will be challenged to authenticate himself or herself,
using the login method defined for the web application currently
being accessed.
- Once authenticated, the roles associated with this user will be
utilized for access control decisions across all
of the associated web applications, without challenging the user
to authenticate themselves to each application individually.
- As soon as the user logs out of one web application (for example,
by invalidating the corresponding session if form
based login is used), the user's sessions in all
web applications will be invalidated. Any subsequent attempt to
access a protected resource in any application will require the
user to authenticate himself or herself again.
- The Single Sign On feature utilizes HTTP cookies to transmit a token
that associates each request with the saved user identity, so it can
only be utilized in client environments that support cookies.
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