Johannes I tried both of those suggestions, but to no avail. (I am not using cookies.) I found that even when I deleted the file, and replace it by a new one with a new name, Cocoon continued to use the "old" version, until a Tomcat restart was performed. Derek
>>> Johannes Textor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 2007/11/10 01:08 PM >>> From my experience the situation is like this: - if you have an active http session, log out (or delete the cookie using crl+shift+del in firefox or whatever) and the new script should be used. - if you have a "main" flow script file which includes other scripts, changes in the included scripts are not noticed by cocoon unless you touch the main script. Cheers, Johannes Carsten Ziegeler wrote: > Grzegorz Kossakowski wrote: > >> Derek Hohls pisze: >> >>> Working with Cocoon 2.1.8 and Tomcat 5 on >>> a Linux box. It appears that changes to flowscript >>> files are not reflected in Cocoon which continues to >>> work with a previous version. How do I ensure >>> that the new version/s are used - without restarting >>> Tomcat? >>> >>> (I do not see the same effect on my local machine... >>> but there I am running Jetty). >>> >> I don't know how flowscipt management works exactly but a quick guess: >> have you tried to touch a sitemap referencing modified flowscript? >> >> > I don't remember the details, but for some reason the flowscripts are > linked to the current user session. So if you have a session and change > the flowscript, logging out of the session and logging in again should > load the new flow script. > > Carsten > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- This message is subject to the CSIR's copyright terms and conditions, e-mail legal notice, and implemented Open Document Format (ODF) standard. The full disclaimer details can be found at http://www.csir.co.za/disclaimer.html. This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean. MailScanner thanks Transtec Computers for their support.
