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Thanks, Dagan,
You are right, actually what you write is absolutely correct but Jserv
does it differently and logs printStackTrace() and
System.out.println() at least from within init() on Linux anyway!
All this is very confusing and should be cleaned up IMHO.
I am suggesting that the logging methods and ServletException do the
work and that System.out and System.err should not be needed, possibly
not even be considered by application programmers.
Regards,
Bernie
On Fri, 25 Aug 2000 20:08:02 -0700 (PDT), you wrote:
>
>> I would expect that getMessage() and possibly
>> printStackTrace() is
>> printed in jserv.log or apache error_log but I have
>> never seen
>> anything there.
>
>printStackTrace() prints messages to System.err and
>System.out.println() prints messages to System.out. To
>capture those messages from JServ, you have to start
>the JServ manually and redirect the system error
>stream and system output stream to a log file.
>
>My setup is Linux with Apache 1.3.11 and JServ 1.1.1,
>I have wrote scripts to start/stop Apache and JServ.
>The logic is:
>
># ... start Apache Web Server details ...
># ... rotate the old JServ system out log files
>CLASSPATH=
>your_classpath:your_apache_path/libexec/ApacheJServ.jar
>PROPS=your_jserv_properties_file
>JLOG= your_system_out/err_log_file
>
>nohup java -classpath $CLASSPATH
>org.apache.jserv.JServ ${PROPS}>${JLOG} 2>&1 &
># ... script details to capture your Java VM's process
>id such that your stop-apache script can KILL -TERM
>this VM
>
>But the downside of start JServ manually is:
>whenever your VM hang/loop for some reasons (e.g. your
>program errors) , no one will help you to restart it.
>
>Please let me know if I am wrong.
>
>Thx & regards,
>
>Dagan
>
>
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