Cookbook
From Resin 3.0
(Difference between revisions)
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
: using /var/www/hosts/www.foo.com/webapps/ROOT for virtual hosts and webapps | : using /var/www/hosts/www.foo.com/webapps/ROOT for virtual hosts and webapps | ||
; [[Cookbook: Cluster with Two Servers ]] | ; [[Cookbook: Cluster with Two Servers ]] | ||
+ | : cluster configuration describing how to add multiple servers to a cluster | ||
; [[Cookbook: Resin Load Balancing ]] | ; [[Cookbook: Resin Load Balancing ]] | ||
: Using Resin as a HTTP server, load balancing to backend application servers | : Using Resin as a HTTP server, load balancing to backend application servers |
Revision as of 23:04, 2 October 2010
The Resin Cookbook category contains single-configuration examples, each focused on a single Resin configuration.
Contents |
Full Configurations
- Cookbook: Apache-style single webapp server
- using /var/www/public-html as the single webapp
- Cookbook: Webapps-style war deployment
- using /var/www/webapps for .war deployment and expansion
- Cookbook: Virtual Hosts using Hosts Directory
- using /var/www/hosts/www.foo.com/webapps/ROOT for virtual hosts and webapps
- Cookbook: Cluster with Two Servers
- cluster configuration describing how to add multiple servers to a cluster
- Cookbook: Resin Load Balancing
- Using Resin as a HTTP server, load balancing to backend application servers
Security
Proxy and Load Balancing
- Cookbook: FastCGI
- using Resin to load balance to a backend FastCGI server like Ruby or PHP
- Cookbook: HttpProxy
- using Resin to load balance to a backend HTTP like Apache or IIS
Networking
- Cookbook: Throttling HTTP by Remote IP
- protecting the server against attacks by limiting connections from a single IP address