----------------------------------------------------------------
BEFORE YOU POST, search the faq at <http://java.apache.org/faq/>
WHEN YOU POST, include all relevant version numbers, log files,
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Dude Servlets are not magic. It is either souce or a class path or cache
it it still lives after a reboot.

try 

java -verbose servlet.class 

and see what java is looking at when it runs your servlet.

Chris

On Mon, 01 May 2000 17:27:02 +0200, Javier Iglesias wrote:

>----------------------------------------------------------------
>BEFORE YOU POST, search the faq at <http://java.apache.org/faq/>
>WHEN YOU POST, include all relevant version numbers, log files,
>and configuration files.  Don't make us guess your problem!!!
>----------------------------------------------------------------
>
>
>> Chances are that your browser is cacheing things on the client side.
>> Browsers can be very aggressive about cacheing.  Try twiddling the prefs to
>> reduce the cacheing.
>
>No... the servlet takes some html document, parses it, and replaces some
>fields with data. One of those fields is a random number.
>
>Believe me : each time you hit the reload button, you receive a
>different page.
>
>I tried to modify the html documents too : result shows the
>modifications.
>
>Just in case, I tried with browser that never accessed that page before
>and should not use the same proxy. Servlet answers even if .class is not
>on server anymore...
>
>I've been testing ways to solve that problem for 3+ hours, and reading
>FAQ for half a day ;)
>
>Still, I'm pretty sure their's something I didn't think about.
>
>I trully apreaciate your suggestions,
>
>  --javier
>
>
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