I've never actually used mergewebxml before, we've always added all servlets
manually to our web.xml so far.

I've given it a try now, but it fails saying it can't find my Module.gwt.xml
file. I think the problem is that the Module.gwt.xml is in a jar dependency,
not in the current project, but the plugin is only looking in the current
project.  Sounds possible?

Thanks

Mirko


2008/9/5 Charlie Collins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

>
> GWT-Maven uses a naming convention based on whats in your GWT module
> file.  It inspects every servlet element there, and during the war
> phase, creates servlet and servlet-mapping entries in your
> distrubution web.xml (not the source web.xml, it doesn't touch that -
> that's the idea).
>
> Here is a full Maven example (using the snapshot branch build of GWT-
> Maven) with a source web.xml and client code that calls RPC:
>
> http://gwt-maven.googlecode.com/svn/branches/cc_20080814_automaticrefactor/simplesample/
> .
>
> Also, for the record, GWT in "Practice" has some web.xml examples that
> work with Maven, get that one, I hear it's fantastic ;).
>
>
> On Sep 4, 6:39 pm, Jeff Bowman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I'm reading the book GWT In Action and trying to setup the
> > ServerStatus RPC example. I have created my web.xml to look like this:
> >
> > <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
> > <web-app>
> >   <servlet>
> >     <servlet-name>ServerStatusServlet</servlet-name>
> >     <servlet-class>org.gwtbook.server.ServerServiceImpl</servlet-
> > class>
> >   </servlet>
> >   <servlet-mapping>
> >     <servlet-name>ServerStatusServlet</servlet-name>
> >     <url-pattern>/org.gwtbook.ServerStatusApp/server-status</url-
> > pattern>
> >   </servlet-mapping>
> > </web-app>
> >
> > however after mvn package, the web.xml file looks like this:
> >
> > <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
> > <web-app>
> >   <servlet>
> >     <servlet-name>ServerStatusServlet</servlet-name>
> >     <servlet-class>org.gwtbook.server.ServerServiceImpl</servlet-
> > class>
> >   </servlet>
> >   <!--inserted by gwt-maven-->
> >   <servlet>
> >     <servlet-name>org.gwtbook.server.ServerServiceImpl/
> > org.gwtbook.ServerStatusApp/server-status</servlet-name>
> >     <servlet-class>org.gwtbook.server.ServerServiceImpl</servlet-
> > class>
> >   </servlet>
> >   <servlet-mapping>
> >     <servlet-name>ServerStatusServlet</servlet-name>
> >     <url-pattern>/org.gwtbook.ServerStatusApp/server-status</url-
> > pattern>
> >   </servlet-mapping>
> >   <!--inserted by gwt-maven-->
> >   <servlet-mapping>
> >     <servlet-name>org.gwtbook.server.ServerServiceImpl/
> > org.gwtbook.ServerStatusApp/server-status</servlet-name>
> >     <url-pattern>/org.gwtbook.ServerStatusApp/server-status</url-
> > pattern>
> >   </servlet-mapping>
> > </web-app>
> >
> > you'll notice the additional <servlet> and <servlet-mapping> stanzas
> > which "duplicate" what I had originally (ie, same class-name and url-
> > pattern - just a different name).
> >
> > When I try to deploy this war to jetty or tomcat5.5, it doesn't work -
> > I get 404 errors when I try to go to org.gwtbook.ServerStatusApp/
> > ServerStatusApp.html which is the path I "know" since it is the one I
> > typed in.
> >
> > Is this intended? Perhaps I didn't specify my web.xml correctly for
> > use with GWT? (finding examples of other web.xml files that work is
> > like splitting atoms.) Any guidance would be appreciated.
> >
> > Jeff
> >
>

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