I'm new to all this as well, but seem to have had some decent luck.

The solution I took to was using NetBeans, which made it trivial to make and 
deploy .jsp stuff.  It can send 'em to TomCat or JBoss, which I discovered were 
using a different ports -- so make sure you're using the right URL.

If I understand things correctly, you do not have a directory you drop JSP 
files into, but rather you create a WAR file (NetBeans does it for you) and 
move it to JBoss's server/default/deploy directory (which NetBeans also does 
for you).

The JBoss log files are large because they are also capturing DEBUG and INFO 
log items -- in other words, the system is deliberately being extremely verbose 
so you can see everything at a very granular level.

I believe there was a typo in the last reply, and that the file to turn this 
logging down a notch is log4j.xml.

But I understand your frustration, you're expecting to see a file get accessed 
and a 404 if it isn't there.  Instead, I think it's looking inside the WAR 
file, and if it can't find the deployment, it just tells the browser it has no 
idea what you've requested.  I'm not sure this appears in the log, though I 
suspect it does, only as some other message and not a 404.  Perhaps something 
like no web application by that name?

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