Greetings!
I've been looking for a web host that provides JSP along with Beans.
I came across one that mentioned it uses Enhydra. I've looked at the Enhydra
web page and was left wondering if Enhydra is a replacement Servlet engine
for Tomcat? Or, does it need Tomcat to run?
Thanks,
Eric
Enhydra uses Tomcat internally. the version of tomcat is very old,
though. It depends on what version of Enhydra the ISP is using. If it is
the open source one, then it is likely very old indeed. If it is the now
defunct Lutris Enhydra EAS, then it would be something like Tomcat-3.2.x.
Jake,
Thanks for the info. I'll download Enhydra and play with it.
They are using Enhydra 3.1.
Eric
On Saturday 03 August 2002 09:59, Jacob Kjome wrote:
Enhydra uses Tomcat internally. the version of tomcat is very old,
though. It depends on what version of Enhydra the ISP is using. If
On Fri, 2 Aug 2002, Milt Epstein wrote:
On Sat, 3 Aug 2002, Markus Bengts wrote:
On Fri, 2 Aug 2002 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If webmail isn't a directory under qvdintra, then I don't see a
problem.
webmail is not under qvdintra. It is possible to use it like this with
servlet/
I am no expert on tomcat but as far as I know the tomcat server needs to
be restarted each time the contents of one of the web application source
code files changes. If something like UserDir really can be set so that
$CATALINA_HOME is different for every user, then there should probably
be a
I have put some servlet classes in my web applications classes directory, however when
I try to access it via the url http://localhost:8080/myapp/servlet/myservlet it does
not work. It seems to only work when I put the classes in the default ROOT web app and
access it via
hi,
I want to deny users to see the content of a folder under webapps\ROOT.
What should I do?
Thanks,
Serdar
Seriously, why not use Apache with a connector...
Because there is many problems.
I tested it. I has standard installation of Tomcat and Webapps from RPM
(full edition). I dont know how to generate jkconf data as described in
HOWTO. There is use parameter jkconf when start tomcat. Where? I
Mona,
I'm assuming you are running Tomcat 4.04 standalone, on :8080. Not quite
sure
exactly what the issue is here, but I have some suggestions:
Just for fun, try a different browser to see if the problem is client side.
Does the user Tomcat is installed as have permissions to read those
And you've provided appropriate servelet and servlet-mapping entries in
your web.xml?
-Michael
- Original Message -
From: Daliso Zuze [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Tomcat Users List [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, August 03, 2002 4:51 AM
Subject: Servlet directory
I have put some servlet
The following servlet code throws nullpointer (on forward) in tomcat
(both 3.3.1 3.3.2). Any ideas where to start looking?
Jeff W. Boring
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-- code -
public void forwardToNextPage(String nextPage, HttpServletRequest req,
Jeff,
The Javadocs for ServletContext.getRequestDispatcher( String pathname ):
The pathname must begin with a / and is interpreted as relative to the
current context root. Use getContext to obtain a RequestDispatcher for
resources in foreign contexts. This method returns null if the
I am almost done configuring my site, but I have just a few more
question (for now). I am using ajp13 to connect tomcat 4 with apache
1.3. Apache is running on port 81 and I want to know if have to do
anything different when configuring server.xml as a result of my web
site running on the
Right you are - I'm used to an environment (VAJ, WSAD) where the '\' doesn't
matter. Now I have to research how session is handled in Tomcat.
Jeff Boring
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Hi,
nobody knows how to solve it, or is it too simple for an answer?
best regards,
Hans
Hello all!
Is this list a closed one? I tried to post a message to the list, without
being subscribed, but that failed (I think so, I couldnĀ“t see the mail on
the
archives)
I will go on directly
There are various ways to deny directory listing.
Valid for both Tomcat 3.x and Tomcat 4.x.x:
You could add a welcome file to your web.xml. Something like this:
welcome-file-list
welcome-fileindex.html/welcome-file
/welcome-file-list
See conf/web.xml for further information.
Valid for
I have done alot of work with Apache 1.3/Tomcat 4.1.X setting up virtual hosting
in a web hosting environment. Please see my attached document.
Regards,
Glenn
Hans Kaiser wrote:
Hi,
nobody knows how to solve it, or is it too simple for an answer?
best regards,
Hans
Hello all!
Is
Answers are intermixed.
Hans Kaiser
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
AJP is configured in Service name=Tomcat-Standalone. But you could
move this Connector element to Tomcat-Apache. Also remember to disable the
Warp connector under Tomcat-Apache. Have you configured Apache to send
requests containing examples to Tomcat? You might need something like this:
Yes Micheal, I have added those entries When I try to use the servlet
mapping name it gives me a CLASS NOT FOUND exception.
- Original Message -
From: Michael E. Locasto [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Tomcat Users List [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, August 03, 2002 2:44
The way you are trying to access this servlet implies a couple of assumptions:
1. Your servlet is in the default package. That is to say that it exist
in WEB-INF/classes and not some directory deeper inside of that.
2. Your class is all lower case myservlet since that is how it is
written
Hi there,
I've downloaded Tomcat 4 for the first time and have been pouring over
these documents at the jakarta site trying to make sense of it all. I
was able to set a context for a new webapp in server.xml and I'm able to
navigate with Netscape to the web app with
Hi !
I'm new to J2EE, and therefore I am trying each and every example
of the programming book I've bought.
Now I am learning session handling w/ the servlet API, and would
like to use the URL-encoding style for keeping sessions, when the
browser's configuration does not allow to use cookies.
On Sat, 3 Aug 2002, Alan Shiers wrote:
was able to set a context for a new webapp in server.xml and I'm able to
navigate with Netscape to the web app with
http://localhost:8080/mytest/index.html
That part works just fine. I have a simple servlet sitting in my
WEB-INF directory and my
Thanks, I got it working now, I had misplaced the classes directory.
Daliso
- Original Message -
From: Jacob Kjome [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Tomcat Users List [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, August 03, 2002 7:18 PM
Subject: Re: Servlet directory
The way you are trying to access this
On 3 Aug 2002, Dominique Deleris wrote:
Date: 03 Aug 2002 22:00:33 +0200
From: Dominique Deleris [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Tomcat Users List [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: tomcat-user-list [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Tomcat4 and encodeURL
Hi !
I'm new to J2EE, and therefore I am trying each
Hi Markus,
Does a servlet name always have to start with an uppercase letter?
The reason I wrote the URL like this:
http://localhost:8080/mytest/servlet/sqlnames
is only because of how I wrote the web.xml file which looks like this:
?xml version=1.0 encoding=ISO-8859-1?
!DOCTYPE web-app
On Sat, 3 Aug 2002, Alan Shiers wrote:
Does a servlet name always have to start with an uppercase letter?
A java class name usually starts with uppercase. I don't know if it has
to. Try if you're intrested. You can use different url-patterns.
The reason I wrote the URL like this:
I have been working on my current project for past four month on TC4.0. Due to JSTL
performance issue and the fmt
message tag memory usage issue, I would like to try the 4.1 version. The application
is runing fine on TC4.0. After I put
the application on TC4.1.7b, I encounter the following
Robert,
Is the JAVA_HOME/conf directory the correct place to put
jk2.properties file, because I do not have a conf file in my JAVA_HOME
directory? Thanks Trask
-Original Message-
From: Robert L Sowders [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Saturday, August 03, 2002 12:18 AM
To:
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