thanks a lot... that will solve a whole bunch of problems....
 
.:| Christian J. Dechery
.:| FINEP - Depto. de Sistemas
.:| [EMAIL PROTECTED]
.:| (21) 2555-0332

>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 29/05/02 16:41 >>> 

In server.xml: 
<Context path="/examples" docBase="examples" debug="0" reloadable="true" 
crossContext="true"/> 
The crossContext attribute "true" implies that servlets/jsps in other 
contexts can access resources from this context with the help of a 
RequestDispatcher. 

RS 





"Christian J. Dechery" < [EMAIL PROTECTED] > on 05/29/2002 04:21:05 PM 

Please respond to "Tomcat Users List" < [EMAIL PROTECTED] > 

To: < [EMAIL PROTECTED] > 
cc: 

Subject: Re: creating global context 

sorry, I'm kinda newbie to web.xml... could u exemplify? 

thanks 


.:| Christian J. Dechery 
.:| FINEP - Depto. de Sistemas 
.:| [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
.:| (21) 2555-0332 

>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 29/05/02 16:20 >>> 

You could set the attribute crosscontext=true. And then access resources 
across various contexts. 

RS 





"Christian J. Dechery" < [EMAIL PROTECTED] > on 05/29/2002 03:57:13 PM 


Please respond to "Tomcat Users List" < [EMAIL PROTECTED] > 

To: < [EMAIL PROTECTED] > 
cc: 

Subject: creating global context 

How do I create a global context? 

I want to able to include JSP files (as well as images, etc) from this 
context across all my webapps. This is possible right? 

thanks 

.:| Christian J. Dechery 
.:| FINEP - Depto. de Sistemas 
.:| [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
.:| (21) 2555-0332 










-- 
To unsubscribe, e-mail: < mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> 
For additional commands, e-mail: < 
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > 












-- 
To unsubscribe, e-mail: < mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > 
For additional commands, e-mail: < mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > 



Reply via email to