sorry if this is faq - i checked and couldn't find it except basic info about how tomcat caching works. can't figure out why jsp pages do not get re-compliled after changes are made. (server is NT 4.0 with apache 1.3.14/tomcat 1.0) i've done seemingly everything - deleting the class files in the tomcat/work directory, restarting apache/tomcat. seems like there's only two ways to make it update - reboot the machine or deleting the class file, removing the .jsp files - restarting tomcat, accessing the page (to get a 404) then moving the .jsp file back. very bizzare and un-fun way to write jsp pages. any ideas...? much thanks, -- Jason Hinkle Developer helus, inc. http://www.helus.com/ sorry if this is faq - i checked and couldn't find it except basic info about how tomcat caching works. can't figure out why jsp pages do not get re-compliled after changes are made. (server is NT 4.0 with apache 1.3.14/tomcat 1.0) i've done seemingly everything - deleting the class files in the tomcat/work directory, restarting apache/tomcat. seems like there's only two ways to make it update - reboot the machine or a bizzare sequence of events that includes temporarily removing the jsp files, deleting class files, rebooting apache/tomcat. gots to be a better way. any ideas...? much thanks, -- Jason Hinkle Developer helus, inc. http://www.helus.com/ sorry if this is faq - i checked and couldn't find it except basic info about how tomcat caching works. can't figure out why jsp pages do not get re-compliled after changes are made. (server is NT 4.0 with apache 1.3.14/tomcat 1.0) i've done seemingly everything - deleting the class files in the tomcat/work directory, restarting apache/tomcat. seems like there's only two ways to make it update - reboot the machine or a bizzare sequence of events that includes temporarily removing the jsp files, deleting class files, restarting apache/tomcat. gots to be a better way. any ideas...? much thanks, -- Jason Hinkle Developer helus, inc. http://www.helus.com/
