Chris - you didn't stick in the <vendor> tags! <grin>

The key thing to point out here is that the JSP 1.0 nor 1.1 spec address
accessing EJBs directly from JSP. You can do it, but you have to put in all the
code that you would normally need to get the home and bean interface, which is
messy and best (IMHO) put inside a normal Java Bean. Alternatively you could use
taglibs, but since no-one seems to support these yet (IMHO, they haven't been
clearly defined enough) and there supposedly _will_ be a standard, I think that
you should again, keep it in a normal Java Bean.

But there is no easy 1-2-3 "model 3" mechanism yet for EJB. Whether there ever
will be one is questionable...

Richard

Chris Hansen wrote:

> Pankaj -
>
> There are several vendors which implement JSP, Servlet and EJB
> today.  J2EE rolls these standards up into a nice package but
> if you're mainly interested in JSP and EJB, there are Java
> application servers which support them now.  GemStone/J is an
> example.  Sun has a list of EJB vendors, some of which also
> implement JSP.

--
Richard Vowles, Senior Systems Engineer,
Inprise New Zealand
MAIL: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
HTTP: http://www.esperanto.org.nz
[my messages contain my own opinions, not those of my employer]

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