Re: Cocoon 2.1 web application base path
Including {request.contextPath} as a transform param did the trick, thanks! Is there any way to do this globally for all matches in the sitemap or does it have to be passed to each transform? - Bob On May 16, 2012 12:53 PM, Bob Harrod rjhar...@gmail.com wrote: Ok, thank you! I can look at the LinkRewriterTransformer. Since I'm new to this, I have some follow up questions: 1. Is this a plugin that I have to install or does it exist in the stock version of cocoon 2.1? 2. The examples reference the transformer from a sitemap context. Is there a way to use the LinkRewriterTranformer directly from another transform (as this transform is actually creating the anchor)? Thanks so much for your help. - Bob On Wed, May 16, 2012 at 10:24 AM, Bob Harrod rjhar...@gmail.com wrote: I'm rending html in a transform, and would like to render an anchor who's href is absolute, not relative. For example, instead of this: a href=../home.../a I would like to be able to provide a full url in the href: a href=http://mysite/application1/home;.../a Thank you for your assistance with this! On Wed, May 16, 2012 at 12:52 AM, Bob Harrod rjhar...@gmail.com wrote: I'm quite new to cocoon, and supporting an older version (2.1). Does anyone know how I can gain access the web application base path inside of a transform? Of course, it can be passed by the sitemap... Any help would be appreciated! Thanks!
Re: Cocoon 2.1 web application base path
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Andy, On 5/16/12 12:36 PM, Andy Stevens wrote: Hi Bob, Assuming you have the request input module in your cocoon.xconf, then you can pass the context path into an xsl:param (or otherwise use in the sitemap) with e.g. map:transform src=mytransform.xslt map:parameter=xslParamName ={request:contextPath}/ /map:transform +1 IMO this is the right way to do things. If you want a completely, fully-absolute URL, you might want to: map:parameter name=requestScheme value={request:scheme} / map:parameter name=requestServerName value={request:serverName} / map:parameter name=requestServerPort value={request:serverPort} / map:parameter name=context-path value={request:contextPath} / map:parameter name=request-uri value={request:requestURI} / map:parameter name=query-string value={request:queryString} / We have a bunch of XSL templates that produce XHTML and need to provide references back to themselves in certain circumstances. So, we pass everything and the template can build as much of the URL as it chooses in a case-by-case basis. - -chris -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG/MacGPG2 v2.0.17 (Darwin) Comment: GPGTools - http://gpgtools.org Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org/ iEYEARECAAYFAk+1IRUACgkQ9CaO5/Lv0PCCZQCgqewzX0xNnTU4rPzeccS2tadN AwYAn3xRtJ2ZpXOHU8tg2IJLD1BAq87m =9G3l -END PGP SIGNATURE- - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@cocoon.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@cocoon.apache.org
Re: Cocoon 2.1 web application base path
I'm rending html in a transform, and would like to render an anchor who's href is absolute, not relative. For example, instead of this: a href=../home.../a I would like to be able to provide a full url in the href: a href=http://mysite/application1/home;.../a Thank you for your assistance with this! On Wed, May 16, 2012 at 12:52 AM, Bob Harrod rjhar...@gmail.com wrote: I'm quite new to cocoon, and supporting an older version (2.1). Does anyone know how I can gain access the web application base path inside of a transform? Of course, it can be passed by the sitemap... Any help would be appreciated! Thanks!
Re: Cocoon 2.1 web application base path
Hi Bob, Assuming you have the request input module in your cocoon.xconf, then you can pass the context path into an xsl:param (or otherwise use in the sitemap) with e.g. map:transform src=mytransform.xslt map:parameter=xslParamName ={request:contextPath}/ /map:transform Regards, Andy On 16 May 2012 06:02, Bob Harrod rjhar...@gmail.com wrote: I'm quite new to cocoon, and supporting an older version (2.1). Does anyone know how I can gain access the web application base path inside of a transform? Of course, it can be passed by the sitemap... Any help would be appreciated! Thanks!
Re: Cocoon 2.1 web application base path
Ok, thank you! I can look at the LinkRewriterTransformer. Since I'm new to this, I have some follow up questions: 1. Is this a plugin that I have to install or does it exist in the stock version of cocoon 2.1? 2. The examples reference the transformer from a sitemap context. Is there a way to use the LinkRewriterTranformer directly from another transform (as this transform is actually creating the anchor)? Thanks so much for your help. - Bob On Wed, May 16, 2012 at 10:24 AM, Bob Harrod rjhar...@gmail.com wrote: I'm rending html in a transform, and would like to render an anchor who's href is absolute, not relative. For example, instead of this: a href=../home.../a I would like to be able to provide a full url in the href: a href=http://mysite/application1/home;.../a Thank you for your assistance with this! On Wed, May 16, 2012 at 12:52 AM, Bob Harrod rjhar...@gmail.com wrote: I'm quite new to cocoon, and supporting an older version (2.1). Does anyone know how I can gain access the web application base path inside of a transform? Of course, it can be passed by the sitemap... Any help would be appreciated! Thanks!
Re: Cocoon 2.1 web application base path
2012/5/16 Bob Harrod rjhar...@gmail.com Ok, thank you! I can look at the LinkRewriterTransformer. Since I'm new to this, I have some follow up questions: 1. Is this a plugin that I have to install or does it exist in the stock version of cocoon 2.1? It's included as a block for cocoon-2.1 and it's builded with cocoon-2.1 by default but I've used it for Cocoon 2.2 3 so I'm not sure how to configure it. I remember that you have to declare the component at the beginning of the sitemap before use it. You can browse the block code and samples for linkrewritter here http://svn.apache.org/viewvc/cocoon/tags/cocoon-2.1/RELEASE_2_1_11/src/blocks/linkrewriter/ Or even better, download the sources and play a bit with the samples :) http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/cocoon/tags/cocoon-2.1/RELEASE_2_1_11 2. The examples reference the transformer from a sitemap context. Is there a way to use the LinkRewriterTranformer directly from another transform (as this transform is actually creating the anchor)? The LinkRewriterTransformer is a transformer component for pipeline process and must be used from a sitemap context. You should place the transformer in the pipeline so the links get transformed to the right location, usually at the end of the pipeline before the serializer. map:pipeline ... map:match pattern=welcome map:generate src=welcome.xml map:transform src=xslt/xml2page.xsl/ !-- your transformation -- map:transform type=linkrewritter src=cocoon:/linkmap !-- the links are transformed -- map:parameter name=namespace-uri value= http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml/ /map:transform map:serialize type=xml/ /map:match ... /map:pipeline Thanks so much for your help. - Bob On Wed, May 16, 2012 at 10:24 AM, Bob Harrod rjhar...@gmail.com wrote: I'm rending html in a transform, and would like to render an anchor who's href is absolute, not relative. For example, instead of this: a href=../home.../a I would like to be able to provide a full url in the href: a href=http://mysite/application1/home;.../a Thank you for your assistance with this! On Wed, May 16, 2012 at 12:52 AM, Bob Harrod rjhar...@gmail.com wrote: I'm quite new to cocoon, and supporting an older version (2.1). Does anyone know how I can gain access the web application base path inside of a transform? Of course, it can be passed by the sitemap... Any help would be appreciated! Thanks!
Re: Cocoon 2.1 web application base path
Hi ! What are you trying to achieve? Jos On Wed, May 16, 2012 at 6:52 AM, Bob Harrod rjhar...@gmail.com wrote: I'm quite new to cocoon, and supporting an older version (2.1). Does anyone know how I can gain access the web application base path inside of a transform? Of course, it can be passed by the sitemap... Any help would be appreciated! Thanks! -- The doctrine of human equality reposes on this: that there is no man really clever who has not found that he is stupid. -- Gilbert K. Chesterson