In fact, the OL servlet accept on the file system any lzx file.
Then, via HTTP, on the first acces it become compiled and the HTTP deliver the swf content.
So, there is nothing to do.
You "just" write your lzx file under the web root folder (in that great LISP language for eg), then, you compute the URL corresponding to this file and from HTTP client you get the SWF result (or DHTML).


Henry Minsky wrote:
I don't know if there's anything that does exactly what you need, but
it wouldn't
be too hard to write it. The first thing that comes to mind is maybe
you could use a .jsp script or some servlet of your own
to accept LZX code in a POST'ed document,  maybe write a tmp file on
the server,
invoke the compiler via the same entry point as lzc,  and return the
output file.



On 11/1/07, Volkan YAZICI <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Elliot Winard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
It sounds like you might want to build a CGI that wraps lzc
command-line compiler to compile LZX into SWF or DHTML.
Yep, that is a possible solution. But I'm just curious if there exists
a more application server like environment to avoid from the redundant
overhead of repetitive calls to lzc.


Regards.




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