Hi Guenther,
good guess, but it doesnt work. !!.   any other way???
Any URL jon ??
Riaz

********************
Guenther wrote

>Maybe the url request has to be
>http://your_server/zone_x/mypackage.Servlet ????

Mohamed Riaz wrote:
>
> Hi Guenther,
> My servlet was in a zone, and i had included in that repository the way
you
> had mentioned below for wrapper.classpath.  Just in case, did i include in
> wrapper.classpath.  It is not a jar file.  Probably i made a mistake doing
> the right way or i did not do the right way itself. ??
> Thanks
> Riaz
>
> ************************
> Guenther wrote
>
> Hmm. I'm not sure if you have your servlets in ajar file or "stand
> alone".
> If stand alone, and your servlet is called mypackage.Servlet, than your
> warpper.classpath hast to be e.g. /usr/local/jserv/zone_x/, and in this
> zone_x dir you have to have a dir called mypackage, and in this dir
> there has to be the File Servlet.class. This is standard java convention
> and works with any java programs.
>
> If you have a jar file, than wrapper.classpath has to be
> /usr/local/jserv/zone_x/your_package.jar.
>
> I guess you can't put a servlet in wrapper.classpath instead into the
> repository. JServ can't know to which zone this servlet belongs.
> Is this true?
> *****************
>
--
Guenther Wieser
creative-it/Guenther Wieser Software KEG
Student of Telematik at Graz University of Technology
http://www.creative-it.com        mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-> In A World Without Walls And Fences, Who Needs Windows And Gates? <-





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