Re: Tomcat on Leopard

2008-03-17 Thread Gareth Howells
The OP should use either vi (if they're brave or have experience in it) nano is available on OS X too - To start a new topic, e-mail: users@tomcat.apache.org To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands,

Re: Tomcat on Leopard

2008-03-17 Thread Steve Ochani
Date sent: Mon, 17 Mar 2008 12:46:03 + From: Gareth Howells [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject:Re: Tomcat on Leopard To: Tomcat Users List users@tomcat.apache.org Send reply to: Tomcat Users List users@tomcat.apache.org

Re: Tomcat on Leopard

2008-03-16 Thread Pid
Alan Chaney wrote: I'd guess that you copied the text in the tutorial using an editor which converted it to an RTF (Rich Text Format). The text you show in your email is rtf markup. The startup_tomcat file is a shell script which is setting the following environment variables JAVA_HOME -

Re: Tomcat on Leopard

2008-03-16 Thread David Smith
I can't speak for the OP, but as a long time Mac user, I know TextEdit's default output is richtext. It's a really annoying behavior of TextEdit. The OP should use either vi (if they're brave or have experience in it) or a developer IDE like NetBeans or Eclipse to write the initial file.

Re: Tomcat on Leopard

2008-03-16 Thread jarrod
David Smith-2 wrote: I can't speak for the OP, but as a long time Mac user, I know TextEdit's default output is richtext. It's a really annoying behavior of TextEdit. The OP should use either vi (if they're brave or have experience in it) or a developer IDE like NetBeans or Eclipse

Re: Tomcat on Leopard

2008-03-15 Thread Hassan Schroeder
On Sat, Mar 15, 2008 at 8:08 PM, maxchoc [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I'm trying to install Tomcat 6.0.16 on Leopard. I'm following a tutorial on http://swetnam.wordpress.com/2007/12/15/installing-apache-tomcat-6-on-os-x/ Not sure why you'd use that instead of the real docs, and there's no

Re: Tomcat on Leopard

2008-03-15 Thread Alan Chaney
I'd guess that you copied the text in the tutorial using an editor which converted it to an RTF (Rich Text Format). The text you show in your email is rtf markup. The startup_tomcat file is a shell script which is setting the following environment variables JAVA_HOME - where you have