I don't think that JES provides a servlet engine, so you'd have to add one. JES was designed to allow you to more easily deploy embedded applications into a device. JES wasn't designed to work like what most people think of as an application se3rver. It doesn't provide support for multi-users, session management, etc. The core system doesn't include an HTTP server, although you can add one easily enough. Anne Thomas Manes CTO, Idoox > -----Original Message----- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On > Behalf Of Jason Novotny > Sent: Tuesday, September 18, 2001 5:15 PM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: soap and JES > > > > Hi, > > I've been looking briefly at the the Java Embedded Server (JES) as a > possible lightweight alternative to Tomcat/Apache for deploying web > services and am wondering if anyone has had any experience getting the > Apache soap examples or rpc router servlet working with JES. > > Thanks, Jason > > -- > Jason Novotny [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Home: (510) 610-8360 Work: (510) 486-8662 > NERSC Distributed Computing http://www-itg.lbl.gov/Grid > > >
