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I have a simple class "StarterClass" which implements javax.servlet.ServletContextListener. It is overridden method of the ServletContextListener class i.e. contextInitialized(), I would like to know which port Tomcat is running on. The main aim here is to find something unique for this tomcat which I think is the port as there can be more tomcats running on one machine but with different port

I am sorry if this question is already answered but I couldn't find it.

Thanks in advance.

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  • How does identifying the Tomcat you're running on helps your application? I'm sure whatever you're trying to do, there's probably a much better way. Jul 12, 2013 at 6:46
  • Hi Ravi, thanks for your answer, I have to make a unique name for this tomcat ans send it to other module using IPC, So I planning to make a name using MAC id and tomcat port. What basically happens in the other module is that it keeps track of this tomcat instance so that it can sens message to this tomcat as to when it should stop taking requests.
    – user578219
    Jul 12, 2013 at 6:53
  • I suggest configuring the unique id in your web.xml and making it available throughout the application as a global servlet context attribute. Since, the identifier would hardly change configuring it makes more sense as opposed to calculating it every time. Jul 12, 2013 at 7:13
  • Thanks again, but that may not be a suitable here because there is a same copy of the war that can be deployed in same machine or different machine, if I put in web.xml, they will all send same unique-id which is a problem. This id has to be unique for each war that can be deployed on same or different machine hence I decided to use mac id and port.
    – user578219
    Jul 12, 2013 at 7:21
  • By configuring, I meant you would be setting up different identifiers for different installations as a one-time deployment activity (doesn't matter on the same machine or not). Jul 12, 2013 at 7:30

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