Yes, that is. Xalan never "calls home" if there is no DTD/schema reference
in the doc.

BTW, wouldn't it be wise to add a validation option to the command line
options list for "org.apache.xalan.xslt.Process" ?

Regards,
Sergey



----- Original Message -----
From: "David Sheldon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, April 30, 2002 6:30 PM
Subject: Re: Xalan phone home


> On Tue, Apr 30, 2002 at 09:46:27AM -0400, Joseph Kesselman/CAM/Lotus
wrote:
> >
> > >I saw W3C-WEB3.MIT.EDU there also.
> >
> > In that case, it's definitely not anything we're doing; that string
exists
> > nowhere in our code.
>
> However
>
> $ host -t any www.w3.org
> www.w3.org. has address 18.29.1.34
> www.w3.org. has address 18.29.1.35
> www.w3.org. has address 18.7.14.127
>
> $ host -t any 18.7.14.127
> 127.14.7.18.in-addr.arpa. domain name pointer W3C-WEB3.MIT.EDU.
>
> So that is one of the aliases for www.w3.org (and its many aliases).
>
> > Check your source document for a DTD or Schema reference.
>
> This however is possible. I have found that if you include a DTD in an
> schema (and possibly and instance document) parsed by Xerces-J, then it
> will get http://www.w3.org/XMLSchema/datatypes.dtd  using the standard
> Java class.getResourceAsStream method, without using your custom entity
> resolver to have the chance of resolving it locally.
>
> David
> --
> David Sheldon, Client Services        DecisionSoft Ltd.
> Telephone: +44-1865-203192            http://www.decisionsoft.com
>

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