Hi Greyson,
 
Sorry if the links did not work. Try these:
 
http://www.bitmechanic.com/ (connection pool)
 
http://castor.exolab.org/index.html (JDO/XML)
 
http://www.ambysoft.com/persistenceLayer.html 
(links and info on persistence strategies)
 
Dave
 
----- Original Message -----
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 3:08 PM
Subject: Re: How to use JDBC in JSP & servlet

>
> Dave, I tried the link you supplied, and it didn't resolve, do you have a
> different link by chance?
>
>
>
>                                                                                                  
>                     "Dave Smith"                                                                 
>                     <
sat-guru@hom        To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]                  
>                     e.com>               cc:     (bcc: Greyson Smith/CCMG/CVG)                   
>                                          Subject:     Re: How to use JDBC in JSP & servlet       
>                     04-11-00                                                                     
>                     01:41 PM                                                                     
>                     Please                                                                       
>                     respond to                                                                   
>                     tomcat-user                                                                  
>                                                                                                  
>                                                                                                  
>
>
>
>
>
> Viet,
>
> When you are learning the API, obviously
> your first projects will use sql Connections
> inside servlets and JSP. This is not very
> maintainble code, though. A better plan is to
> encapsulate all the JDBC code in a layer
> between the JSP and the DB:
>
>     DB --> Persistence layer --> JSP --> User.
>
> There is no cut and dried way to do this,
> however. Yes, Connection Pooling is
> essential. Again, there is no one way to do it.
> For stand-alone systems you can use code from
> Bitmechanics. In some environments (e.g.,
> Websphere) connection pooling is built in.
>
> A cool persistence layer can be found at
>
http://castor.exolabs.org/
>
>
> Regards,
>
> Dave
>
>
>
>
>
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