+insert the following patch into /etc/apache/httpd.conf. Edit the directories
+to suit your needs.
+
+<IfModule mod_jk.c>
+JkWorkersFile /usr/share/tomcat/conf/workers.properties
+Include /usr/share/tomcat/conf/mod_jk.conf-auto
+</IfModule>
+
+Do not put any JkMount lines into your httpd.conf!
+
+If mod_jk.conf-auto doesn't get written or is 0 bytes in size, check your
+system for file ownership/permissions problems.
+
+
+12. Add a password to your PostgreSQL user and link it to Mir (optional)
+
+Add a hard to guess password to the PostgreSQL user database:
+
+# psql -U postgres Mir
+alter user postgres with password 'yourpassword';
+
+
+Then, in /etc/postgresql/pg_hba.conf you should make sure that nobody can
+use the database without a password:
+
+local all password
+host all 127.0.0.1 255.0.0.0 password
+host all 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 reject
+
+
+Then, change the database password line in config.properties:
+
+Database.Username=postgres
+Database.Password=yourpassword
+
+You should make sure that no copy of config.properties (neither in mir nor
+in Mir/src nor in Mir/WEB-INF/classes) is world-readable. Else you wouldn't
+have to install a password, anyway.
+
+If you can't access PostgreSQL after this for any reason, try to change
+"password" in /etc/postgresql/pg_hba.conf into "trust". This should disable
+any authentication method and make the database accessible again.
+
+that's it :)
+
+now the admin-application is accesable via:
+
+ http://host/Mir
+
+and the openposting-servlet via
+
+ http://host/OpenMir
+
+standard login is redaktion/indymedia