thanks for all your suggestions on this. it seems that an exploded
format is what most people deploy with just to make configuration
easier??
anyway, i'll think through some of these ideas.
much appreciated,
patrick
On 8/27/05, QM <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 26, 2005 at 11:47:54PM
Hi Patrick,
On 26 Aug 2005 at 17:24, QM wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 26, 2005 at 02:16:26AM +0800, Patrick Lacson wrote:
> : I know that's typically where they go, but if the file is inside the
> : .war, how is the file going to be configured by the sysadming folks?
Our approach to this problem has been
I have a small database application that I am developing. I have set up a
JNDI resource in order to access it in the application. This is defined just
inside level in server.xml (password changed)
Patrick,
Sorry for the late response. You have received quite a few ideas, but I
did not see one quite like what we do.
We use the deployer utility to deploy our application and have
customized (just added a task actually) the build.xml file to make
system-specific changes to our war and then re-
Where can I find specs for all the tags in server.xml
In particular, trying to find out why I used to be able to access a JNDI
datasource and now can't. All I did was move the tag from the
local to the . Move it back and it
starts working again.
--
Alan Chandler
http://www.chandlerfamily.
Hi,
I installed Apache Tomcat/5.0.28 and got it running, when i visit
localhost:8080, i get the standard 'If you're seeing this page via a web
browser, it means you've setup Tomcat successfully. Congratulations!' message.
So far so good.
Then it says:
'As you may have guessed by now, this is t
> From: Arjan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: very strange 'documentroot' problems
>
> BUT when i edit the file, or even completely
> remove it, i still get to see 'If you're seeing this page via
> a web browser, it means you've setup Tomcat successfully.
The .jsp files of the ROOT app (a
I saw this interesting request show up in my log file:
2005-08-28 20:11:08 RequestDumperValve[catalina]: REQUEST URI
=/cgi-bin/jud.cgi
2005-08-28 20:11:08 RequestDumperValve[catalina]: authType=null
2005-08-28 20:11:08 RequestDumperValve[catalina]: characterEncoding=null
2005-08-
Caldarale, Charles R wrote:
> The .jsp files of the ROOT app (as well as those of most
> of the other sample apps) is precompiled. What's
> actually being executed is
> org/apache/jsp/index_jsp.class, which can be found in
> webapps/ROOT/WEB-INF/lib/catalina-root.jar. You should
> be able to just
On 8/29/05, Alan Chandler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Where can I find specs for all the tags in server.xml
I use these pages. it explains the elements used in the server.xml.
http://jakarta.apache.org/tomcat/tomcat-5.5-doc/config/index.html
--
rgds
Anto Paul
--
Hi.
I have a domain resolving to a tomcat box.
I have set up a virtual host. No probs.
/~
www.albino.info
\
That all works well.
However the or
Hassan,
How do I add an instance of the listener to each session? Can you please
provide an example?
I forgot to mention that I already have the following in the first JSP after
the login is validated:
<%
session.setAttribute("sessionListener", listener);
%>
What you say, "...and that ob
Hassan,
Also, I don't understand the difference between a "global" and a "non-global"
listener approach. Can you explain? Thanks.
Thanks.
Hassan Schroeder wrote:
Franklin Phan wrote:
I'm trying to code a method to clean up specifically named files
inside a working dir (in Windows XP) whe
Hi.
I solved this myself by placing the database resource tag in the server.xml
instead of in a separate context.xml file in the META-INF directory.
I don't know why that has to be that way.
KR.
Luke.
29Aug2005 @ 15:39 [EMAIL PROTECTED] thusly spake
> Hi.
>
> I have a domain resolving to a tom
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