It's not form commercial use. It's for my research project for getting my 
master's degree in Electrical Engineering ... I'm not concered about securety 
right now.

[]s
Guilherme Ceschiatti
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

On Sunday 12 November 2000 12:41, you wrote:
> This sounds dangerous. Why would you want to do it?
>
> I mean it's showed to the user a HTML form that the user of the application
> can select I file to upload. It can be any file, to store in the
> application database, or even a java class. In the last case, instead of
> putting it into the database, the application will execute some methods of
> the class. I wish I'm more clear now....
>
> Thanks.
> Guilherme Ceschiatti
>
> On Friday 10 November 2000 19:24, you wrote:
> > Sorry..not sure I understand? Do you mean "deploy" it into an application
> > server, so that it immediately takes affect and then you can use it right
> > away? If so, look at the .WAR format, or .EAR format. Its a J2EE standard
> > format and most app servers should provide some sort of hot-swap
> > application deployment capability. You simply upload the .war or .ear,
> > and the app server serializes all HttpSession objects to disk (or some
> > place), then reloads the app with the new class(es), then reads the
> > serialized objects back into the HttpSession. This makes it appear to
> > clients that nothing is different, but your new class(es) will be
> > available.
> >
> > > -----Original Message-----
> > > From: Storm Linux User [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> > > Sent: Friday, November 10, 2000 10:46 AM
> > > To: Orion-Interest
> > > Subject: Web upload of a Java class
> > >
> > >
> > > Hi...
> > >
> > > I need to upload a compiled class to my Orion application and
> > > then execute
> > > some methods of it. Anybody knows how can I do it?
> > >
> > > []s
> > > Guilherme Ceschiatti
> > > [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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