Pritam, Try using "classpath:" instead of "file:". I've only used this when specifying the entire relative path to the file, I'm not sure about referencing a directory.
<change-set xmlns='http://drools.org/drools-5.0/change-set' xmlns:xs='http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance' xs:schemaLocation='http://drools.org/drools-5.0/change-set.xsd' <add> <resource source='classpath:rules/...' type='DRL' /> </add> </change-set> Steve Ronderos rules-users-boun...@lists.jboss.org wrote on 01/15/2010 09:27:05 AM: > [image removed] > > [rules-users] how to provide a relative path using file: in change- > set and FileResource > > Pritam > > to: > > rules-users > > 01/15/2010 09:35 AM > > Sent by: > > rules-users-boun...@lists.jboss.org > > Please respond to Rules Users List > > > Consider a change-set.xml, > > <change-set xmlns='http://drools.org/drools-5.0/change-set' > xmlns:xs='http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance' > xs:schemaLocation='http://drools.org/drools-5.0/change-set.xsd' > > > <add> > <resource source='file:rules/' type='DRL' /> > </add> > </change-set> > > I have a rules folder under WebRoot in my web application but the above > source url doesn't work as I get a > java.net.UnknownHostException: rules > > The same is true while providing a file path resource using > ResourceFactory.newFileResource("path"); > > In Spring, one can provide ant-path style regular expressions and it looks > on a relative path. Is there something similar for drools? > -- > View this message in context: http://n3.nabble.com/how-to-provide-a- > relative-path-using-file-in-change-set-and-FileResource-tp122036p122036.html > Sent from the Drools - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com. > _______________________________________________ > rules-users mailing list > rules-users@lists.jboss.org > https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/rules-users
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