As I stated, I used the jsp:directive syntax. You'd think the spec would be a little more clear about this. It's pretty easy to miss that brief sentence while scanning for answers...

Thanks for the help.

Andrew

At 09:53 PM 8/17/2004, you wrote:
JSPs don't use the mime-mappings from web.xml (per the JSP spec).  You have
to use the <jsp:directive.page contentType="..." /> syntax.

"Andrew Shirk" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> This is pretty much a stock T5 install. No filters are configured for this
> app. So if it is indeed a servlet, it must be the faces servlet or the jsp
> servlet that is applying the text/xml mime type. However, as a work
around,
> I am able to use a jsp directive to set the mime type from the document:
>
> <jsp:directive.page contentType="text/html" />
>
> This seems silly though since I'm already setting the mime type in
web.xml.
>
> Andrew
>
> At 11:08 AM 8/17/2004, you wrote:
> >It sounds like there is another servlet/filter/?? setting the content
type
> >to text/xml.
> >
> >-Tim
> >
> >Andrew Shirk wrote:
> >
> >>Despite having set a mime mapping for the .faces extension in my
web.xml,
> >>Tomcat 5 still insists on returning a JSP 2 documents with the .faces
> >>extension as text/xml.
> >>Am I doing something wrong?
> >><mime-mapping>
> >>   <extension>faces</extension>
> >>   <mime-type>text/html</mime-type>
> >></mime-mapping>
> >
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