Thanks. I got it going by copying one of the demo applications. That's OK
since I'm eventually going to build a web application, although it does seem
like I should be able to deploy an individual EJB without having to set up
an entire application hierarchy.

Connecting to an EJB from a Java client (not a servlet, and not in a jar
file) was also difficult to figure out. My opinion of Orion is that it could
use some better documentation and tutorials, the ones they provide are very
narrowly-focused on producing a specific type of web application, and don't
address the numerous other ways that people can use EJBs.


----- Original Message -----
From: "Ashok Banerjee" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Orion-Interest" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, March 31, 2001 6:02 PM
Subject: Re: ejb-jar file location


> Put the ear file path or directory path in orion/config/server.xml.
> This will enable orion to find your server class.
>
> Now for the client to find it use application.xml and
orion-application.xml.
> These files are under META-INF just below client root directory.
>
> If orion server is in a remote box modify jndi.properties accordingly.
>
> Cheers,
> Ash
>
> Frank LaRosa wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> > I'm just getting started with Orion, but I have experience with Weblogic
> > server.
> >
> > I created a simple EJB jar file which I'd like to deploy on Orion and
access
> > via an external client. I'm stuck trying to figure out where I need to
place
> > my jar file in the server's directory structure and which, if any, of
the
> > configuration files I need to update to let Orion know it's there.
> >
> > I tried a variety of locations, but all I am able to get is a JNDI
not-found
> > error when I try to look up the home interface. I am not even sure where
I
> > specify the JNDI name? In Weblogic this is done through a
weblogic-specific
> > deployment file.
> >
> > Thanks.
>
>


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