> Why would you want to use a Java Servlet Container > to do proxying? It's like > using a Space Shuttle to do door-to-door delivery. > If you need proxying, use > Squid or Apache.
The reason I have to do this is to make the best of a rather brain dead product deployment. This is not a long term fix but it is only a temporary fix to keep customers happy for two months until we can change everything. I got thrown into the whole mix after the fact. Unfortunately installing Apache or Squid (my first suggestion) on the clients site is not an option. > If you want to have pieces of other sites inside > your webapp, the it is a whole > new ball game. Ultimately this is the idea. Basically we need to use our webapp to get a page from another server and pass it back to the user but make it appear that it came from our webapp. It is an ugly thing to do but I need to find a quick fix before I can work on a real fix. If you have any ideas, suggestions or links I would appreciate it. __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? HotJobs - Search Thousands of New Jobs http://www.hotjobs.com -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> For additional commands, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>