Hi guys, I ended up using StreamResponse from the jumpstart example http://jumpstart.doublenegative.com.au/jumpstart/examples/navigation/returntypes1 along with JAXB. This appears to be working perfectly.
On Tue, Jun 3, 2014 at 3:52 AM, Magnus Kvalheim <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi. > Yes, you can generate the sitemap and place it an arbitrary location - > another domain even. > > You provide a path to the sitemap in the robots.txt (which is located on > our real domain) > > By doing so you have proven ownership of the domain and can basically host > the sitemap on any path/domain. > http://www.sitemaps.org/protocol.html#location > > For google you can also use the webmaster tools for domain verification and > can also upload the sitemap. > > best > Magnus > > > > On Tue, Jun 3, 2014 at 8:30 AM, Lance Java <[email protected]> > wrote: > > > Another couple of options : > > > > 1. Assuming you're building with maven and you don't have an Index page > at > > root, save sitemap.xml to src/main/webapp and maven will add it to the > root > > of your war. Note that this file is considered read only one your app has > > started. > > > > 2. Use an index page. If the page activation context is sitemap.xml, > return > > a textstreamresponse containing the sitemap (classpath?). > > On 3 Jun 2014 03:01, "George Christman" <[email protected]> > wrote: > > > > > Hi guys, I'm trying to automatically generate my sitemaps and I'm > having > > a > > > difficult time trying to figure out how to read/write to it. I > currently > > > have it in the root of my class path, is this the correct location? If > > so, > > > how do I read/write to it? > > > > > > I'm using sitemapgen4j and this example > > > http://www.codingpedia.org/ama/generate-sitemaps-with-sitemapgen4j/ > > > > > > -- > > > George Christman > > > www.CarDaddy.com > > > P.O. Box 735 > > > Johnstown, New York > > > > > > -- George Christman www.CarDaddy.com P.O. Box 735 Johnstown, New York
