Confluence Docs 3.3 : Running Confluence behind Apache
This page last changed on May 11, 2010 by jbondan.
IntroductionRunning Confluence behind a web server should be done for performance reasons in high-load environments. In general, web server caching and thread management is far superior to that provided by your application server's HTTP interface. To run Confluence behind the Apache httpd web server, there are two main configuration options: mod_jk or mod_proxy.
Mod_proxy documentation
Mod_jk documentation
Mod_jk2 not supportedThe misleadingly-named mod_jk2 is an older method of connecting to Tomcat from Apache. Since mod_jk2 is no longer supported by the Apache Foundation, we do not support this configuration, and are not updating our mod_jk2 documentation. Mod_jk2 also has unresolved problems with Unicode URLs; you need to use either mod_proxy or mod_jk for international characters to work correctly in Confluence. Other related documentation |
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Document generated by Confluence on Jul 09, 2010 01:09 |