NOTE that for step 4 below, using the Tomcat "Monitor" program, turn your Tomcat server off, then confirm that Eclipse can start up Tomcat inside of its own environment. Eclipse uses its own configuration of Tomcat when it starts Tomcat inside of its IDE, all of your applications running under the "real" Tomcat installation directory such as the Axis or jUDDI home page will not be functional if Tomcat is brought up by Eclipse. Eclipse does this by default to ensure that it does not mess up your "real" Tomcat environment.
avinh wrote: > > ********************************** > > 1) Install and configure the Tomcat Application Server, Axis, jUDDI and > MySql on your target platform/machine, i.e. where your Web Services > Application will finally reside. > > 2) Install and configure the Tomcat Application Server and Axis on your > development machine. You will need them for integrating with Eclipse. > > 3) Install and configure Eclipse and WTP on your development machine. > > 4) Create a Tomcat server in the Eclipse workbench by following the > instructions at the following link: > > http://help.eclipse.org/help32/index.jsp?topic=/org.eclipse.jst.ws.axis.ui.doc.user/tasks/ttomcatserv.html > > Test and make sure that the installations from steps 1-4 work properly > before continuing. > > -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/Creating-and-publishing-Web-Services-to-jUDDI-tf2128286.html#a6760774 Sent from the jUDDI - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]