Use CR version 9+ -- it provides a tag library and supporting files that allow you to
include your report in a jsp or servlet. You'll still need an ODBC definition to
create the report against but this should not be a problem as long as the ODBC def and
the JNDI resource share the same name.
Now, if someone has a fix/answer to the problem I've been banging my head against of
only being able to run the report once (subsequent attempts cause something along the
lines of a ZipExtraction exception), I'd certainly appreciate a clue or three....
Brent Sims
Systems Analyst 2
KC Human Services
-------------------------------------------------
Road rage, air rage. Why should I be forced to divide my rage into separate
categories? To me, it's just one big, all-round, everyday rage. I don't have time
for fine distinctions. I'm too busy screaming at people.
- George Carlin
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 8/31/2004 12:02:09 AM >>>
Hi! I'm triying to configure Tomcat 5 and Crystal Reports. What I want to do is
reading from a database to a report made with CR using a Tomcat datasource. The
problem is that CR can't find it (using jndi); i get a message saying that CR is
unable to find the resource. The datasource is well defined (i think so because a jsp
can use it correctly).
Does anybody know if is there problem between Tomcat 5 and Crystal Reports? Is there
any one that have configured it yet?
Thanks in advance,
Javier Polo.