Call me when you find that island..!!!(;-)
Geeta
Michael Weller wrote:
> yes, that's really a good option and it propably would work the way i want
> it, but i don't want no workaround, i want to know why resin behaves like
> that and (most important) i want to know how i can change it!
> the funny part about all this is that i have another webapplication on resin
> 2.0.1 with exactly the same entries in web.xml (the kind of entries is the
> same, their values are different, i.e. mapped other servlets to other URIs),
> and it does what i want it to do (i can request every file that exists)...
> i didn't change anything in resin's configuration (except setting the
> server's port to 80 instead of 8080, but if this is really causing the
> problem, i'm going to sell my computer, drop off school and find myself an
> island to life on ;-)
>
> michael weller
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Pierre-Yves Saumont" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Thursday, July 12, 2001 2:03 PM
> Subject: Re: url mapping
>
> > Or you might use your servlet to display the static file, using the extra
> > path information.
> >
> > This technique can be use to map a directory to a servlet. You can then
> > access all document in this directory (and subdiretories) with their
> static
> > path, altough the document are served by the servlet. For example, when a
> > user request :
> >
> > http://www.mydomain.com/jgr/mydoc.html
> >
> > he gets exactly what he asked for (document mydoc.html in directory jgr),
> > but trough the servlet. The user never know he is accessing a servlet,
> > altough you can use it to parse the contain of the file and do whatever
> you
> > want.
> >
> > With the addition of filters, this can be very powerfull.
> >
> > Pierre-Yves
> >
> > -----Message d'origine-----
> > De : A mailing list for discussion about Sun Microsystem's Java Servlet
> > API Technology. [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]De la part de Mark
> > Galbreath
> > Envoy� : jeudi 12 juillet 2001 01:04
> > � : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Objet : Re: url mapping
> >
> >
> > I haven't used Resin, but in general, when you map a directory to a
> servlet
> > instance in web.xml, the webserver/container is going to send every HTTP
> > request to the servlet to which that directory is mapped. You need to put
> > the static HTML file into the webserver document root.
> >
> > Cheers!
> > Mark
> >
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: "Michael Weller" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Sent: Wednesday, July 11, 2001 1:54 PM
> > Subject: url mapping
> >
> >
> > > hi everybody,
> > >
> > > i have a servlet mapped to http://localhost/jgr and a static html file
> > > which should be displayed if i request
> > > http://localhost/jgr/aStaticFile.html. but if i request this static file
> > > all i receive is http://localhost/jgr i.e. the URI the servlet is mapped
> > > to. same thing happens if i put the static file in another subdirectory,
> > > e.g. http://localhost/jgr/aDir/aStaticFile.html, still
> > > http://localhost/jgr is shown. all i can receive are servlets that i
> > > mapped to an URL.
> > > i have another webapplication with almost the same web.xml (only other
> > > servlets are defined and mapped to other URIs), but here i CAN reach any
> > > static file.
> > > how is that possible?
> > >
> > > as servlet container i use caucho resin 2.0.1 and i already asked this
> > > question to the resin list at caucho.com but i didn't get any replies,
> > > now i hope to get some here.
> > >
> > > thanks in advance.
> > >
> > > Michael Weller
> > >
> > >
> >
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