Thanks! But I dug around and it seems I don't have this book. Would you
mind posting the relevant code? I'd really appreciate it

On Thursday, June 14, 2001, at 11:12 AM, Penner Matt wrote:

> Jason Hunter has a great example of using the HttpSessionBindingListener
> interface.  This way you can create a method, which is automatically called
> when a session is closed whether it's by physically closing it or when it
> expires.
> In this method you can return the session to a session pool to make sure
> this really happens and you can also perform some clean up work.  His
> example also does a rollback for any uncommitted transactions.
> If you have the book (Java Servlet Programming 2nd Ed.) the code starts on
> page
> 290.
>
> Matt
>
> Quoting Brad Cox <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
>> I've been storing JDBC connections from the connection pool in a named
>> session attribute under the assumption that they would be automatically
>> returned to the pool when the session expires. But on examining the code
>> it
>> now seems that they are just closed and deleted, thus draining the
>> connection pool.
>>
>> Handling this manually when users log off explicitly is no problem. But
>> how
>> do I know when users just wander away? E.g. is there a way to be
>> notified
>> when sessions expire?
>>
>> How do others ensure that connections get returned to the pool?
>>
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>
> ___________________________________________________________________________
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---
For industrial age goods there were checks and credit cards.
For everything else there it http://virtualschool.edu/mybank
Brad Cox [EMAIL PROTECTED] 703 361 4751

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