And possibly a HttpSessionActivationListener object as a session
attibute. The sessionDidActivate() method on the object gets called if
the session is still valid when tomcat restarts. You can use this to fix
your state.
HTH,
Jon
Mark Thomas wrote:
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL
So after a restart of tomcat, I login and it appears the session is still
valid, so it does not go through my session listener.
I need to be aware of the web application lifecycle and want to grab a
resource when the webapp starts and release when the web app goes away.
How do I do that?
I was
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
So after a restart of tomcat, I login and it appears the
session is still
valid, so it does not go through my session listener.
I need to be aware of the web application lifecycle and want to grab a
resource when the webapp starts and
My web app has two servlets. One JSF Faces servlet and another servlet
for processing AJAX requests from javascript. I want to know when the
app starts and when the app is done. Is the only way to do this is to
have a ServletContextListener listening to both those servlets? On the
first one, I
whoops, nevermind. stupid question I found out after poking around.
dean
Dean Hiller wrote:
My web app has two servlets. One JSF Faces servlet and another servlet
for processing AJAX requests from javascript. I want to know when the
app starts and when the app is done. Is the only way to do