thanx again :-)

On 11/15/05, Tim Funk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> A filter can trap all requests before the servlet is invoked. Thats why I
> like them better for this situation (in the root webapp). You can use a
> filter to rewrite the request to another context with the same code as you
> would do it with a servlet. (Via a cross context forward)
>
> -Tim
>
> Leon Rosenberg wrote:
> > thanks tim.
> >
> > What is the benefit of using Filter instead of servlet?
> > The only thing I see, is that I can reconfigure it without changing
> > the web.xml and therefore without restarting the server. Anything
> > else?
> >
> > I wanted to keep this functionallity out of the root webapp, not to
> > save the server from a restart, but to keep the release process
> > simplier. It's quite easy to release a one servlet webapp, as to
> > release our root webapp with all the tagging, testing and so.
> > But I think, I have no other choice :-)
> >
> > Btw. can I rewrite url with a filter, so that the request goes to
> > another webapp?
> >
> > regards
> > Leon
> >
> > On 11/15/05, Tim Funk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >>If the servlet is that simple. I would
> >>1) rewrite it as a filter
> >>2) Put it in the root webapp
> >>3) Map the filter to all requests
> >>4) Use a config file to handle all your mappings
> >>5) make the filter smart enough to re-read the config file
> >>(servletContext.getResourceAsStream()) to detect changes so you don't have 
> >>to
> >>restart the webapp. Timing on how often to detect for changes is your call.
> >>6) Done
> >>
> >>If you can keep the config file used by the filter as a file outside of the
> >>webapp root - then you can replace the config file without touching the 
> >>webapp.
> >>
> >>-Tim
> >>
> >>Leon Rosenberg wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >>>asking again...
> >>>any ideas, anyone?
> >>>
> >>>thanx
> >>>leon
> >>>
> >>>On 11/15/05, Leon Rosenberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>>Hi,
> >>>>
> >>>>I have following situation:
> >>>>
> >>>>Business wishes (God knows why) to have a proxy proxying 6 different
> >>>>context's on our server and fetching context from another server:
> >>>>
> >>>>http://ourserver/foo/bla.html (internally fetched from )
> >>>>http://anotherserver/ourname/foo/bla.html
> >>>>http://ourserver/bar/bla.html -> http://anotherserver/ourname/bar/bla.html
> >>>>...and so on.
> >>>>
> >>>>I wrote a small webapp (1 servlet, 1 url-fetcher) which maps the
> >>>>context and path, fetches the content of the url and delivers it to
> >>>>the user. Let's say it's xxx webapp. I didn't want to make a copy of
> >>>>it for any of foo,bar, etc context's, so I droped following xml files
> >>>>into my $catalina_home/conf/Catalina/localhost:
> >>>>foo.xml with content:
> >>>><Context path="/foo" docBase="xxx"/>,
> >>>>bar.xml with content:
> >>>><Context path="/bar" docBase="xxx"/>,
> >>>>and so on, for each context.
> >>>>
> >>>>Everything is working fine, except, that the webapp is loaded once per
> >>>>context which makes 6 times for now and probably 60 in half year. I
> >>>>think it's a waste of resources and am searching for another solution.
> >>>>
> >>>>Note that I already have a ROOT webapp (otherwise I'd place it under
> >>>>root with servlet mapping instead of contexts) which I'd like not to
> >>>>touch, because of different release cycles of both applications.
> >>>>
> >>>>What is the best strategy to achieve my goal (having multiple context
> >>>>mappings to one instantiated webapp) ?
> >>>>
> >>>>Virtual hosts?
> >>>>URL Rewriting Filter in ROOT webapp?
> >>>>Something else?
>
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