About This Guide
This Getting Started Guide is recommended for first time users of the Sun ONE Web Server 6.1 product. Through hands-on exercises, this guide introduces you to the basic features of the server.
This chapter assumes that you’ve already installed the server and are ready to explore its features.
This preface contains information about the following topics:
Using the Documentation
The Sun ONE Web Server manuals are available as online files in PDF and HTML formats at:
http://docs.sun.com/db/prod/s1websrv#hic
The following table lists the tasks and concepts described in the Sun ONE Web Server manuals.
Table 1 Sun ONE Web Server Documentation Roadmap
For Information About
|
See the Following
|
Late-breaking information about the software and documentation
|
Release Notes
|
Getting started with Sun ONE Web Server, including hands-on exercises that introduce server basics and features (recommended for first-time users)
|
Getting Started Guide
|
Performing installation and migration tasks:
- Installing Sun ONE Web Server and its various components, supported platforms, and environments
- Migrating from Sun ONE Web Server 4.1 or 6.0 to Sun ONE Web Server 6.1
|
Installation and Migration Guide
Note: If you have the Sun Java Enterprise System 1 installed on your system and you want to upgrade the Sun ONE Web Server 6.1 that is part of Sun Java Enterprise System 1 to Sun ONE Web Server 6.1 SP2, you must use the Java Enterprise System (JES) installer to perform the upgrade. Do not use the separate component installer included with Sun ONE Web Server 6.1 SP2.
|
Performing the following administration tasks:
- Using the Administration and command-line interfaces
- Configuring server preferences
- Using server instances
- Monitoring and logging server activity
- Using certificates and public key cryptography to secure the server
- Configuring access control to secure the server
- Using Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE platform) security features
- Deploying applications
- Managing virtual servers
- Defining server workload and sizing the system to meet performance needs
- Searching the contents and attributes of server documents, and creating a text search interface
- Configuring the server for content compression
- Configuring the server for web publishing and content authoring using WebDAV
|
Administrator’s Guide
|
Using programming technologies and APIs to do the following:
- Extend and modify Sun ONE Web Server
- Dynamically generate content in response to client requests
- Modify the content of the server
|
Programmer’s Guide
|
Creating custom Netscape Server Application Programmer’s Interface (NSAPI) plugins
|
NSAPI Programmer’s Guide
|
Implementing servlets and JavaServer Pages (JSP) technology in Sun ONE Web Server
|
Programmer’s Guide to Web Applications
|
Editing configuration files
|
Administrator’s Configuration File Reference Guide
|
Tuning Sun ONE Web Server to optimize performance
|
Performance Tuning, Sizing, and Scaling Guide
|
How This Guide Is Organized
This guide has the following sections:
Introduces you to a few basic tasks associated with Sun ONE Web Server, including starting and accessing the server.
Demonstrates the creation and use of listen sockets, virtual server classes, and virtual servers.
Demonstrates how to set up a virtual server to support web publishing through Web-based Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV) and also, how to access resources using a WebDAV-enabled client.
Demonstrates how you can use the search functionality to make content searchable on a virtual server.
Shows how you can set up database connectivity on a virtual server and create Java 2 Enterprise Edition (J2EE) resources to store and retrieve data from a database.
Demonstrates how to enable a virtual server to handle dynamic content using Common Gateway Interface (CGI) programs.
Demonstrates how to enable a virtual server to handle dynamic content using Sun ONE Active Server Pages.
Documentation Conventions
This section describes the types of conventions used throughout this guide:
- File and directory paths are given in UNIX® format (with forward slashes separating directory names). For Windows versions, the directory paths are the same, except that backslashes are used to separate directories.
- URLs are given in the format:
http://server.domain/path/file.html
In these URLs, server is the server name where applications are run; domain is your Internet domain name; path is the server's directory structure; and file is an individual filename. Italic items in URLs are placeholders.
- Font conventions include:
- The monospace font is used for sample code and code listings, API and language elements (such as function names and class names), file names, pathnames, directory names, and HTML tags.
- Italic type is used for code variables.
- Italic type is also used for book titles, emphasis, variables and placeholders, and words used in the literal sense.
- Bold type is used as either a paragraph lead-in or to indicate words used in the literal sense.
- Installation root directories are indicated by install_dir in this document.
By default, the location of install_dir on UNIX-based platforms is:
/opt/SUNWwbsvr/
On Windows, it is:
C:\Sun\WebServer6.1
Product Support
If you have problems with your system, contact customer support using one of the following mechanisms:
Please have the following information available prior to contacting support. This helps to ensure that our support staff can best assist you in resolving problems:
- Description of the problem, including the situation where the problem occurs and its impact on your operation
- Machine type, operating system version, and product version, including any patches and other software that might be affecting the problem
- Detailed steps on the methods you have used to reproduce the problem
- Any error logs or core dumps