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Hi Ben 

I've not sure if this helps you with respect to JServ, but under JavaWebserver 1.x and 
2.0 you could have modified the webserverservice properties to point to the servlet 
properties files in any directory you like.

On JServ it seems to me you could do the same.. 

Chris


On Fri, 28 Apr 2000 09:48:25 -0500, Ben Ricker wrote:

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>BEFORE YOU POST, search the faq at <http://java.apache.org/faq/>
>WHEN YOU POST, include all relevant version numbers, log files,
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>
>Thank you for your very helpful post, Garrison! Your idea is intriguing and
>may be what we need since we may just run BOTH states from the one
>production Apache/Jserv instance using the Virtual Host scheme.
>
>Let me add some kickers in it. One advantage I see with this setup lies in
>the fact that the servlets can work for BOTH states; the only difference is
>the properties file the java calls to make DB connections, default numerical
>values, etc.  One problem is that the call to the properties file is
>something like /propertyname.properties. When we ran this setup on Sun's
>Java Web Server, it defaulted to the root directory of of the Java Web
>Server subdirectory. When we ported everything to Redhat Apache/Jserv, I had
>to put the properties file in the root directory of the file system. So, the
>only differnce I can see is that I may have to somehow redirect the java
>embedded property calls for state1 to the state1.properties file (not the
>servlet properties, mind you, but the java properties) and state2 java
>properties calls to the state2.properties file.
>
>Does this sound possilble on a server side configuration change rather than
>changing the classes (thereby losing one advantage of the Virtual Host
>setup)? I was thinking of some sort of URL redirect or mod_rewrite (maybe?
>not sure).
>
>Ben Ricker
>US-Rx
>
>
>
>
>
>
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