Few days ago, I managed myself to configure Tomcat to serve XML-XSL files through Cocoon. As Cocoon ( http://xml.apache.org ) is itself a servlet, I treated it as another web application and created a new context to place Cocoon into (as documentation suggested).
But I also found inside Cocoon web a reference to the book "Java and XML" by Brett McLaughlin (partly available free online at O'Reilly, http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/javaxml/chapter/ch09.html ). In the "Installation" section, it says:
"The Cocoon framework is built to operate at an engine level rather than as another servlet in your engine. Therefore, we need to add Cocoon and its dependencies to the core servlet engine class path rather than in a particular servlet zone or context."
I really find this approach more indicated than treating Cocoon as simply another web application, because I want to use XSLT transformations provided by Cocoon throughout my site, and not per-context basis. (yes, I can define a context for my document root path, but this seems not elegant for me...)
Well, the problem is that, although I think I followed all the indications of the aforementioned book, I cannot set Cocoon up to work as a system-wide servlet.
Has anyone done this and want to share his/her experience with me?
Thanks in advance
Orestes
begin:vcard n:Mas i Casals;Orestes tel;fax:+34.93.401.72.00 tel;work:+34.93.401.70.72 x-mozilla-html:TRUE org:Universitat Polit�cnica de Catalunya;TSC version:2.1 email;internet:[EMAIL PROTECTED] title:Dr. adr;quoted-printable:;;Campus Nord - UPC=0D=0Ac/Gran Capit=E0 s/n=0D=0AM=F2dul D4;BARCELONA;;08034;Spain x-mozilla-cpt:;0 fn:Orestes Mas i Casals end:vcard
--------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
