Paul, I just use the -compile option and have jspc do the compilation from .java to .class for me. It seems to work fairly well. Once all the fully compiled (ie .class) files are placed in you applications WEB-INF/classes directory you just need to place the generated web.xml file in WEB-INF. There is an option to create a complete web.xml file that you can place in WEB-INF or, if you already have a web.xml file you want to keep, you can have jspc create an xml fragment that just contains the servlet definitions and mappings that you then add (in the appropriate place) to your existing web.xml. Then just war up you application directory in the normal way (you can even delete the jsps once your certain the servlet mappings are working). If you try to put the generated files in your working directory you won't be able to war them up and deploy them in the normal "put war file under webapps directory and tomcat will expand it when it starts" way. You'd have to ship a complete tomcat directory structure with the work directory already filled in with your compiled jsps. Does that make sense?
Jason --- Paul Wallace <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hello, > I have compiled my JSPs thus: > > jspc -webapp C:\src\site -d C:\src\site\classes -s > -l -uriroot > C:\src\site > > this builds the Java source files to the specified > location, but how > might I deploy them? > > What is a typical deployment after a JSP > compilation? Compilation of > Java source files, then WAR/JAR? Can I not define > the JSP compile to go > under my work directory? > > The purpose of my efforts is to try and speed up / > make TC less memory > consumptive. > > cheers > > Paul. > > > __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail Address AutoComplete - You start. We finish. http://promotions.yahoo.com/new_mail --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]