At 02:21 PM 12/7/01 -0800, you wrote:
>Hi Micael,
>
>Let's make sure we're talking about the same thing. If I include a file
>like:
>
><jsp:include page="./testTxt.sum" flush="true" />
>
>Why does it matter what the file extension of the included file is? Isn't
>the container just supposed to open the file and output it's contents at
>that particular spot in my JSP? Now, I agree that the contents of the
>included file will be affected by the MIME type of the response -- how the
>browser views those contents. If you include a file that doesn't match the
>MIME type of your response, it may not appear correctly in your browser. But
>that's not the point.
>
>The JSP spec says the "page" attribute must evaluate to a String that is a
>relative URL specification. When I pull up the testTxt.sum file in my
>browser, it displays correctly (it's only one line of text...). So, I should
>be able to include it in my JSP with the jsp:include directive. When I
>change the extension to .txt, .html, or .jsp it works. Anything else, even
>other registered MIME types like .doc, and it doesn't. (ok, I didn't try
>them ALL... :)
>
>I think this is a bug. The old Java Web Server used to have a similar bug
>where it would only include .htm and .html files.
>
>--jeff
Before I look further, have you looked at the source code to see why this
is happening?
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