Questions about the use of WTP are best posted on the newsgroup. This
mailing list is for discussing development of WTP itself. Please follow up
on the newsgroup if you have any more questions.
http://www.eclipse.org/newsportal/thread.php?group=eclipse.webtools
That tutorial you are following is a bit out of date. There are updated
tutorials here:
http://www.eclipse.org/webtools/community/new/new.php (look for the WS
tutorials)
Your service is deployed on the tomcat server that you install. WTP is
meant to help you develop and test your web service. When you are ready to
deploy your service for use you can export your service as a war or ear
file and deploy it on your server outside of eclipse.
Mark Hutchinson, IBM Toronto Lab
Software Developer, Rational Java Web Services Tools
[email protected] wrote on 02/13/2009 07:39:28 AM:
> Hi,
>
> i followed this tutorial http://www.eclipse.org/webtools/initial-
> contribution/IBM/evalGuides/WebServicesToolsEval.html to build a web
> service in eclipse:
>
> I have some doubts now, that i hope you could clarify:
> Eclipse uses an internal tomcat server. Why do i need to install a
> new one? Where are the files of the web service i built if i wanted
> to deploy them to another web server?
> Do i have to open Eclipse every time i need to access my web service
> via IE? I am having this need because Eclipse is the one that starts
> Tomcat? Can i start tomcat from the command line withou opening
> Eclipse? This leads again to the first question? Which is the tomcat
> being used: the internal one or the one I installed?
> Is it possible to build web services with IIS in this platform?
> Thanks in advance for the clarifications.
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> [email protected]
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