Cold fusion provides a way to set the classpath and I have added the four jars to it.
I'll update you if I can get it to work
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 08/16/00 09:45AM >>>
Brandon,
I'm taking a shot at this out of the blue, but Cold Fusion runs as a
service??? You might need to set the CLASSPATH variable for the service,
then stop and restart it. To my knowledge, only jboss-client.jar is needed.
We use ColdFusion here, so it would be cool if you can get this to work and
share it with us...
Wes
-----Original Message-----
From: Brandon Campbell [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, August 16, 2000 11:22 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [jBoss-User] Cold Fusion
Is anybody out there using Cold Fusion as the presentation layer for EJB.
My company(Trainseek.com) is trying for prove out a migration path away from
Cold Fusion, but the steps we are required to go through involve Cold Fusion
for at least the short term.
We are excited about the development speed of jBoss, (we were afraid we'd
get stuck with weblogic). But I need to prove that we can connect to an EJB
with Cold Fusion.
I have a bean deployed and can connect a Java client to it no problem but
Cold fusion gives the exception
Cannot instantiate class: org.jnp.interfaces.NamingContextFactory
I have included in my classpath the following jars
jboss-client.jar
jndi.jar
jnp-client.jar
deploy.jar
Aren't these the only client jars needed?
Any help would be appreciated, I really want to move away from cold fusion
and need to prove this out to make the first step.
TIA
Brandon
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