On Fri, Mar 28, 2008 at 7:10 PM, Craig Bennett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> > UniSOAPServer is built on top of Jetty (it is embedded). So, it won't
> > work under Tomcat, unless it has some kind of "servlet" mode hidden
> > under the covers.
> >
>

It depends on how IBM have done it.  Developing on Jetty and then deploying
on tomcat is a pretty common use-case.  Jetty is great because you can run
it in Eclipse with the debugger on and step through your program as it
answers requests.  Of course jetty is pretty good in production as well.
Eclipse does have some amazing Tomcat plugins as well but the Jetty one is
simpler and faster.

The usual process is to develop a main method that starts jetty and point it
at your webapp.  Your webapp should be just that, i.e. something that can be
deployed on any app server.

Looking at the log above, the UniSoapServer.main starts jetty, the jetty
HttpHandler then starts UniSoapServerMonitor so it may be possible that the
UniSoapServerMonitor stuff can be dragged out and deployed on Tomcat.

As David and Ray have said, the people at IBM who developed this should be
able to answer in 5 minutes flat.  I thought it odd when they presented at
U2 University that they had tied to a particular server and not let us
choose.

Please let us know if you hear from IBM.

Regards,

Adrian,
Auckland, NZ.
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