If I'm not mistaken, Tomcat is also not J2EE compliant.
Drew Falkman
----- Original Message -----
From: "Eitzenberger Thomas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "JRun-Talk" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2001 4:50 PM
Subject: Re: bean newbie question
> Hi all !
>
> Sorry for the "enemy" posting but tomcat (www.apache.org -> jakarta ->
tomcat)
> has what you want. It does reload modified class files unless you change
the API of the bean.
> However it (v3.2.x) is quite slow for commercial use.
>
> mfg ET
>
> "Haseltine, Celeste" wrote:
>
> > Jay,
> >
> > To answer your question, I don't think you can. The server loads all
your
> > classes into memory, along with your compiled JSP pages. If your in a
> > development mode, JRUN will compile your JSP's to servlets the first
time
> > you request the JSP, and subsequently when it see's that the "saved"
date is
> > newer than the compile date. But not so for class files. In order to
> > replace an old class file with a new class file in memory, you have to
stop
> > and restart the server. Although this is not usually required for JSP
> > pages, but I have had times where minor changes in a JSP did NOT cause
JRUN
> > to recompile the JSP to a servlet, and I had to stop/restart the server
in
> > order to reflect the changes in the JSP page also.
> >
> > If you are using JRUN studio as your IDE, you can stop and restart the
> > server from within the IDE using hotkeys. If not, you can assign a
shortcut
> > to your desktop and stop/restart the server from the shortcut.
> >
> > Celeste
> >
>
>
>
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