I'm using the following setup: Windows/2000 Pro - latest patches IIS 5 jdk 1.3.1_04
Tomcat 4.1.12 (binary, installed as a service) mod_jk 1.20 Various other packages (Cocoon 2.1-dev, Jetspeed, Xindice) are installed and working well. However, the Tomcat index.jsp page seems to want to call the following: <%= application.getServerInfo() %> which does not appear to exist. IE 6.0.28 does the normal Microsoft thing and ignores whatever it doesn't understand or considers to be an error. The line appears in the title of the page, and not in the body. Talk about consistant . . . Opera 6.05 prints the <%= application.getServerInfo() %> on the page. Netscape 7 considers this page to be an application/octet-stream and asks if I would like to download it. However, other jsp pages with tags work fine in Netscape 7. I have tried commenting the lines out in index.jsp, but Netscape continues to treat this as an application/octet-stream. I've also tried turning on and off the documents setting for the virtual directory (sets up a series of files to serve up if localhost/tomcat/ is requested). Each time I made a change, I made sure to clean out the work directory and my cache so that I wouldn't be getting a cached value. Netscape still considers this to be an application/octet-stream when going throw IIS. However, Netscape 7 appears to work fine with this page when going at the default Tomcat port (8080). My first guess is that the mime type really is application/octet-stream since the tag is not being found. That would mean that Netscape is doing the correct thing. However, since index.jsp works on port 8080 for Netscape, it appears that jk 1.20 is setting the mime type? So - where is application.getServerInfo() ? /mde/ just my two cents . . . . __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? New DSL Internet Access from SBC & Yahoo! http://sbc.yahoo.com -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> For additional commands, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>