Hi,
I'll apologize in advance if this is the wrong place to post this, or
if this has been covered before. I had a good read through the
Tomcat docs and faqs, searched the bug database, and googled around
on the topic, but could not really find anything.
I've been using Tomcat for a while, and in general have found it as
good a servlet/JSP container as any I've used. With one exception
(no pun intended). A long time ago I started out using WebLogic, and
the one thing that I loved about WebLogic, that is missing from
Tomcat, is that when an Exception occurred in a JSP it would tell you
what line number *in the JSP* generated the exception, and show you a
snippet of code around the offending line.
For quite a while I'd figured that the way Tomcat was built prevented
this from being easy/possible, but I didn't look. Well, I finally
got around to looking, and it only took me a couple of hours to
implement it. Which makes me wonder if there is some other reason
that this isn't done in Tomcat/Jasper?
At any rate, I have code that will do this now, and I think it'd be a
great productivity boost for anyone else developing JSPs on Tomcat.
It amounts to small patches to two files. The first is
org.apache.jasper.compiler.Compiler to make it hang on to the parse
tree (pageNodes) if in development mode, and a getter to make this
accessible. The second is to
org.apache.jasper.servlet.JspServletWrapper to do the grunt work of
mapping a stack frame from the exception back to the line in the JSP
that it came from.
It's all coded up to function only when in development mode, and is
reasonably well commented. Would any of the committers be interested
in taking a look at this if I put together a patch and posted it
here? Cheers,
-Tim Fennell
http://stripes.mc4j.org
---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]