Author: buildbot
Date: Tue Apr 28 12:57:30 2015
New Revision: 949491
Log:
Staging update by buildbot for olingo
Modified:
websites/staging/olingo/trunk/content/ (props changed)
websites/staging/olingo/trunk/content/doc/odata4/tutorials/read/tutorial_read.html
Propchange: websites/staging/olingo/trunk/content/
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- cms:source-revision (original)
+++ cms:source-revision Tue Apr 28 12:57:30 2015
@@ -1 +1 @@
-1676523
+1676524
Modified:
websites/staging/olingo/trunk/content/doc/odata4/tutorials/read/tutorial_read.html
==============================================================================
---
websites/staging/olingo/trunk/content/doc/odata4/tutorials/read/tutorial_read.html
(original)
+++
websites/staging/olingo/trunk/content/doc/odata4/tutorials/read/tutorial_read.html
Tue Apr 28 12:57:30 2015
@@ -806,17 +806,13 @@ If you donât have any server config
If you have installed a Tomcat server on your local file system, you can use
it here.<br />
If not, you can use the <em>Basic -> J2EE Preview</em> option, which is
should be enough for our tutorial. </p>
<p><img alt="runOnServer" src="runOnServer.png" title="The Eclipse dialog for
deploying web apps to a server" /></p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Note:
+<p><strong>Note:</strong>
You might have to first execute maven build and also press F5 to refresh the
content of the Eclipse project</p>
-</blockquote>
<p>After pressing "run", Eclipse starts the internal server and deploys the
web application on it.
Then the Eclipse internal Browser View is opened and the index.jsp file that
has been generated into our Example project is opened.<br />
We ignore it. Instead, we open our OData service in our favorite browser.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Note:
+<p><strong>Note:</strong>
If you face problems related to the server, it helps to restart your Eclipse
IDE.</p>
-</blockquote>
<h3 id="the-service-urls">The service-URLs</h3>
<p>Try the following URLs:</p>
<p><strong>Service Document</strong></p>