Two configuration. Put everything you need for your web services into a webapp, spring config and all.
Then use a separate app context to set up and launch embedded jetty. On Wed, Dec 9, 2009 at 8:24 AM, Glen Mazza <[email protected]> wrote: > > Probably a better answer around, but some possibilities: > > 1.) Use an embedded Tomcat instance: > http://www.jroller.com/gmazza/entry/writing_junit_test_cases_for (Step #3) > 2.) Have the embedded Jetty instance run in a separate JVM, separate > application with Jetty-specific configuration (basically, make it > standalone). > > HTH, > Glen > > > Christian.Priebe wrote: >> >> Hi, >> >> I have a web application that provides a web service running on a >> Tomcat. >> While executing a service request the application calls other web >> services asynchronously, providing a callback service on an embedded >> Jetty. >> >> As far as I understand, I can't include both the cxf-servlet.xml (for >> the CXFServlet in Tomcat) and cxf-extension-http-jetty.xml (for the >> callback service in Jetty) in my Spring configuration. >> >> How is it possible to make it work anyway? >> >> Thanks in advance, >> >> Christian >> >> > > -- > View this message in context: > http://old.nabble.com/How-to-use-CXFServlet-and-embedded-Jetty-in-one-application-tp26709470p26710089.html > Sent from the cxf-user mailing list archive at Nabble.com. > >
