IIS
From Resin 3.0
When used with IIS, Resin installs an IIS filter named isapi_srun and dispatches JSPs and Servlets to backend Resin servers while IIS serves static content like html and images.
Before you integrate Resin with IIS
Many users find that the performance, flexibility, and features of Resin make Resin a desirable replacement for IIS. Unless specific features of IIS are required, consider running Resin as the primary web server.
If you have not yet done so, follow the Resin web server instructions and get a working installation with Resin as the only web server. This is especially true with more complicated setups such as those involving virtual hosts. Doing so isolates the steps and makes troubleshooting easier.
Prerequisites and environment variables
Resin requires a 1.4 JDK. You can download one from Sun and install it.
The Control Panel is used to configure two environment variables:
JAVA_HOME=C:\j2sdk1.4.2 RESIN_HOME=C:\resin-pro-3.0.x
Configuring IIS/PWS
To configure Resin with IIS, you must follow the following steps:
- Configure the isapi_srun filter
- Configure resin.conf
- Start httpd.exe
ISAPI filter
Resin uses an ISAPI filter isapi_srun.dll to dispatch requests from IIS to backend Resin servers.
You should run RESIN_HOME/bin/setup.exe to setup your configuration and install isapi_srun.dll. If setup.exe is not used, or it fails, the steps in #Manual configuration are necessary.
ISAPI filter priority
isapi_srun.dll installs itself as the default priority. Some users may need to set the priority to a higher level, e.g. to override IIS's DAV support.
ResinConfigServer localhost 6802 CauchoStatus yes IISPriority high
Configure resin.conf
The default resin.conf looks in resin-pro-3.0.x/webapps/ROOT for JSP files and resin-pro-3.0.x/webapps/ROOT/WEB-INF/classes for servlets and java source files. To tell Resin to use IIS's document area, configure an explicit web-app with the appropriate document-directory:
The mapping of url paths from the browser to real files on the disk must be the same for Resin as they are for IIS. For more complicated configurations that use mappings in IIS, you'll need to add path-mapping directives to match.
<resin xmlns="http://caucho.com/ns/resin" xmlns:resin="http://caucho.com/ns/resin/core"> ... <server> ... <host id=""> <web-app id='/' document-directory="C:\Intepub"/> </host> ... </server> </resin>
Test the servlet engine
From a cmd shell run httpd.exe to start the servlet runner.
C:\> cd %RESIN_HOME% C:\resin-pro-3.0> httpd.exe
Now browse http://localhost/test.jsp. You should get a 'file not found' message.
Create a test file 'd:\inetpub\wwwroot\test.jsp'
2 + 2 = <%= 2 + 2 %>
Browse http://localhost/test.jsp again. You should now get
2 + 2 = 4
Command line options
- Main article: command line option
Deploying a Windows service
- Main article: Windows service
Once you're comfortable with using Resin with IIS, you can install it as a Windows service. As a service, Resin will automatically start when Windows reboots. The service will also automatically restart Resin if it unexpectedly exits.
To install the service, use
win> resin-pro-3.0.x/httpd.exe -install
To remove the service, use
win> resin-pro-3.0.x/httpd.exe -remove
You will either need to reboot the machine or start the service from the Control Panel/Services panel to start the server. On a machine reboot, NT will automatically start the servlet runner.
There is a bug in many JDKs which cause the JDK to exit when the administrator logs out. JDK 1.4 and later can avoid that bug if the JDK is started with -Xrs.
win> resin-pro-3.0.x/httpd.exe -install -Xrs
Load balancing
- Main article: load balancing
With Resin, you can distribute requests to multiple machines. All requests with the same session will go to the same host. In addition, if one host goes down, the IIS filter will send the request to the next available machine.
<resin xmlns="http://caucho.com/ns/resin"> <server> <cluster> <srun id="a" host="123.0.11" port="6802" index="1"/> <srun id="b" host="123.0.12" port="6802" index="2"/> </cluster> ... </server> </resin>
win> resin-pro-3.0.x/httpd.exe -install-as "Resin-A" -server a -Xrs win> resin-pro-3.0.x/httpd.exe -install-as "Resin-B" -server b -Xrs win> resin-pro-3.0.x/httpd.exe -install-as "Resin-C" -server c -Xrs
Manual configuration
Experts may want to configure Resin/IIS by hand instead of using the setup program. The steps involved are:
- Make sure httpd.exe works
- Copy isapi_srun.dll to the IIS scripts directory, d:\inetpub\scripts. You may need to run net stop w3svc to get permission to overwrite the file.
- If you have a virtual site (virtual hosts), you must configure IIS to have the virtual directory /scripts point to d:\inetpub\scripts for each virtual site.
- (optional) Create a resin.ini in d:\inetpub\scripts pointing to the ResinConfigServer
- (optional) Add a "CauchoStatus yes" line to the resin.ini for debugging
- Configure IIS to load isapi_srun.dll as an ISAPI filter.
- Restart IIS (control panel/services) or net stop w3svc followed by net start w3svc.
- Browse /servlet/Hello and /foo.jsp. You should see a "cannot connect" error.
- Start httpd.exe
- Browse /servlet/Hello and /foo.jsp. You should now see the servlet.
Copying isapi_srun.dll to inetpub/scripts/ directory is relatively straightforward. If you're upgrading to a new version of Resin, you may need to stop IIS (control panel/services) to get permission to overwrite isapi_srun.dll.
resin.ini
resin.ini is an optional file in inetpub/scripts/ to override the automatic registry $RESIN_HOME/conf/resin.conf configuration file. If you only have one Resin server, you should not create a resin.ini and let isapi_srun.dll use the registry value set by the setup.exe program.
resin.ini is only needed if you have multiple Resin configuration files for different IIS virtual hosts.
The resin.ini should contain the following line:
ResinConfigServer localhost 6802
You can change the host from localhost to a backend server. You can also add multiple ResinConfigServer items to cluster the configuration.
For debugging, you can add a "CauchoStatus yes" line to the resin.ini:
ResinConfigServer localhost 6802 CauchoStatus yes
For security purposes, the default value of CauchoStatus is "no" when you have a resin.ini.
Adding an ISAPI filter is accomplished in the IIS manager.
IIS and Resin on different machines
When Resin and IIS are on different machines, you'll change the ResinConfigServer from "localhost" to the IP address of the Resin server.
ResinConfigServer 192.168.0.10 6802 CauchoStatus yes
Virtual sites (Virtual hosts)
If IIS is managing multiple virtual sites (everyone else calls them virtual hosts), then you need to configure IIS to use the isapi_srun.dll filter for each virtual site. Configure IIS to have the virtual directory scripts/ for each virtual site point to d:\inetpub\scripts, so that each virtual site uses the isapi_srun.dll.
Details for configuring Resin to recognize virtual hosts are in the virtual hosts topic.
Virtual sites with different JVM's
If a seperate JVM for each virtual site is desired, a seperate resin.ini is used for each virtual site. The resin.ini file is placed in the scripts/ directory.
resin-foo.conf:
<resin xmlns="http://caucho.com/ns/resin"> <server> <cluster> <srun port="6802"/> </cluster> ... <host id="*"> ... </host> </server> </resin>
resin-bar.conf:
<resin xmlns="http://caucho.com/ns/resin"> <server> <cluster> <srun port="6803"/> </cluster> ... <host id="*"> ... </host> </server> </resin>
Install a servlet runner for each virtual site:
win> resin-pro-3.0.x/httpd.exe -install-as "Resin-foo" -conf resin-foo.conf -Xrs win> resin-pro-3.0.x/httpd.exe -install-as "Resin-bar" -conf resin-bar.conf -Xrs
resin.ini for IIS virtual site foo.com:
ResinConfigServer localhost 6802
resin.ini for IIS virtual site bar.com:
ResinConfigServer localhost 6803
The ResinConfigServer tells the isapi_srun.dll the port number to use to connect to the Resin instance. You can change the host from localhost to a backend server. You can also add multiple ResinConfigServer items to cluster the configuration.
resin-foo.conf and resin-bar.conf contain a <host id="*">, you do not need to specify the host name because each conf/JVM is only going to receive requests from a particular virtual site (because of the unique resin.ini files).
Troubleshooting
- Check your configuration with the standalone web server. In other words, add a <http port='8080'/> block and browse http://localhost:8080.
- Check http://localhost/caucho-status. That will tell if the ISAPI filter/extension is properly installed.
- Each srun host should be green and the mappings should match your resin.conf.
- If caucho-status fails entirely, the problem is in the isapi_srun installation. Try http://localhost/scripts/isapi_srun.dll/caucho-status directly (bypassing the filter). If this fails, IIS can't find isapi_srun.dll.
- Check that isapi_srun.dll is in c:\inetpub\scripts.
- Make sure that both IIS and the underlying NTFS file system have permissions set appropriately for isapi_srun.dll.
- Make sure that your IIS host has a mapping from scripts/ to c:\inetpub\scripts and that the /scripts has execute permissions.
- IIS 6 users may need to look at Troubleshooting IIS 6 below for additional steps.
- If you've created a new IIS web site, you need to create a virtual directory scripts pointing to the d:\inetpub\scripts directory.
- If caucho-status shows the wrong mappings, there's something wrong with the resin.conf.
- If caucho-status shows a red servlet runner, then httpd.exe hasn't properly started.
- If you get a "cannot connect to servlet engine", caucho-status will show red, and httpd.exe hasn't started properly.
- If httpd.exe doesn't start properly, you should look at the logs in resin3.0/log. You should start httpd.exe -verbose to get more information.
- If you get Resin's file not found, the IIS configuration is good but the resin.conf probably points to the wrong directories.
Troubleshooting IIS 6
IIS 6/Windows 2003 users may need to perform additional steps.
- Make sure that the System account has suffiicient privleges to read the C:\InetPub and C:\InetPub\Scripts directory and the isapi_srun.dll.
- Check the `Web Service Extensions' listed in the `Internet Service Manager' to make sure that Resin is listed as a Web Service Extension and has a status of "enabled". You may need to click "add a new web service extension...", under Extension name add .jsp or whatever your file extension is, click Add and browse to the isapi_srun.dll, check the "Set extension status to allowed box", click OK.
- Check that the user specified as the "application pool identity" for Resin has read/write permission to the Resin installation directory. In the Internet Service Manager, open the Properties dialog for "Application Pools". Find the User on the "Identity" tab, it may be the user named "Network Service" in the drop-down list associated with the radio button labeled "predefined". Then check physical file permissions on the Resin installation directory and all its subdirectories and subfiles, to ensure that that user has read/write permission status is "Enabled".