Re: Documentation

2002-09-30 Thread TOMITA_ALEX_NONLILLY

It would be great to have a website with all the documentation and I 
would love to help building this website...

regards,
Alex






Robert L Sowders <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
30/09/2002 04:01 p.m.
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To: Tomcat Users List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
cc: 
Subject:Documentation


Since most of the questions to tomcat-users list concern installation and 
configuration issues it demonstrates that there is a real need for Tomcat 
to have a "documentation project" that it's users can contribute to. Right 

now most of the documentation consists of the xdocs which are pretty good, 

but can be so much more.  The developers obviously have little time to 
maintain the present documentation and there is such an apparent need that 

I wonder why a project for the documentation has not been started.

There are many "doc-projects" out there to emulate.  I especially like the 

one that the apache folks have running, the new xml documentation for 
Apache 2.0 is probably the best I've seen. 

I'm sure that many people would be willing to devote some time to 
organizing and maintaining input from the community into a resource that 
would benefit everyone.  I for one would be willing to contribute, but 
right now there is nothing an nowhere to submit to.

Should the developers of Tomcat initiate a project for the documentation? 
Or should we?  The Apache folks seem to have solved this issue, it remains 

to be solved for Tomcat.
 
Have a look at some examples of opensouce projects which have solved their 

documentation problems:

http://httpd.apache.org/docs-project/
http://www.freebsd.org/docproj/
http://www.debian.org/doc/ddp
http://developer.gnome.org/projects/gdp/
http://www.mulberrytech.com/dsssl/dsssldoc/index.html
http://pm-doc.sourceforge.net/
http://zdp.zope.org/
http://www.tldp.org/

rls

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RE: Is Tomcat just an add-on?

2002-09-04 Thread TOMITA_ALEX_NONLILLY

but when Tomcat is integrated with Apache, what happens with the webserver 
that comes with Tomcat???  Are ports 80 and 8080 working when both of 
them are integrated???...

Alex






Andy Eastham <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
04/09/2002 04:49 p.m.
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Subject:RE: Is Tomcat just an add-on?


Ben,

It's both, depending on how you configure it.  It's pretty efficient
standalone, or you can integrate with a web server to serve static content
if you've got high traffic levels.

Andy

> -Original Message-
> From: Ben Austin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: 04 September 2002 22:16
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Is Tomcat just an add-on?
>
>
> Is Tomcat a web server or is it just an add-on for web servers
> that are not
> servlet-enabled?
>
>
>
>
> _
> MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos:
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RE: Apache & Tomcat

2002-09-04 Thread TOMITA_ALEX_NONLILLY

Hi John, I was reading your post and it seems very interesting, I'm a 
newbie with these tomcat stuff... 

I read a lot of emails in the past about the connectors, but what I don't 
understand is what is the function of these connectors... I know that 
Apache and Tomcat use these connectors for integrating jsp technology 
under apache... that's ok, but  what happens internally with Apache and 
Tomcat when I use these connectors???...
The webserver that comes with tomcat, what happens with it? is it 
still working...

thanks
Alex







"Turner, John" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
04/09/2002 11:40 a.m.
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Subject:RE: Apache & Tomcat



Nothing.

Tomcat is great at what it does.  Apache is great at what it does.  Some
people have situations that require both, for various reasons.  Maybe 
there
is an existing site, and dynamic content via Tomcat is a retrofit.  Maybe
their application has a large amount of static content (an image library 
or
other digital asset library, for example).  Any number of things.

There are also security concerns, and usability concerns with running 
Tomcat
stand-alone.  To bind to port 80, Tomcat runs as root.  This is unwise in 
a
production environment.  Apache does not run as root on port 80.  Also, 
many
people do not like to see "8080" or some other port number on their URL, 
and
many corporate firewalls restrict outbound access to ports that are not
email, HTTP, or FTP related (8080 is not one of those). 

There are also problems with CGIs, and other extensions.  Perhaps you have 
a
need for mod_rewrite, or some other Apache module, before the request gets
to Tomcat.  Perhaps you have a significant amount of CGIs (perl, whatever)
that need to run, and only one IP address (and hence, only one port 80). 
So
you would setup Apache name-based virtual hosts on the single IP address,
and direct Tomcat-related requests to Tomcat and let Apache do it's thing
for the others.

There are all sorts of scenarios where Tomcat in stand-alone mode wouldn't
be the optimal choice.

John Turner
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

> -Original Message-
> From: Rui Fernandes [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Wednesday, September 04, 2002 12:24 PM
> To: Tomcat Users List
> Subject: Apache & Tomcat
> 
> 
> Why not to use Tomcat alone? What offers the integration of 
> Apache with Tomcat for a pure Java/XML/HTML web site?
> 

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Re: Apache 2.0.40 + mod_jk + Tomcat 4.1.9 + Load Balancing

2002-09-04 Thread TOMITA_ALEX_NONLILLY

I will appreciate it too.

thanks..
Alex





bwinders <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
03/09/2002 07:41 p.m.
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Subject:Re: Apache 2.0.40 + mod_jk + Tomcat 4.1.9 + Load Balancing


I think it would be great if you were to provide the howto!  When might 
you update your web site?

Brenda

Pascal Forget wrote:

> Hi All,
>
> Last January I wrote up a document on how to set up Apache 1.3 with
> mod_jk and tomcat 4.0.2 on Linux with load balancing.
> (see www.ubeans.com/tomcat).
>
> Last week I suceeded in setting up Apache 2.0.40 with mod_jk and
> Tomcat 4.1.9 beta on Linux.
>
> Is there any interest in this group for me to write up a howto for this
> new setup?
>
> Pascal
>
>
>
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RE: Enterprise Java Beans (EJB)

2002-08-15 Thread TOMITA_ALEX_NONLILLY

Thanks for the information !!...






John Naldoza <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
14/08/2002 10:20 p.m.
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Subject:RE: Enterprise Java Beans (EJB)



Hi,


Perhaps you may want to look into Jboss+Tomcat (http://www.jboss.org) :)


Cheers,


John Clark

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, August 15, 2002 7:01 AM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Enterprise Java Beans (EJB)


Hi 

Does Tomcat support EJB?.
if not, is there a project to migrate tomcat to support EJB?... it will be 

a very nice feature...

Alex


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Re: Setting up web pages with tomcat

2002-08-14 Thread TOMITA_ALEX_NONLILLY

Hi, 

it's very simple, you need to create a context in webapps directory under 
tomcat

Tomcat_Home/webapps/yourweb/index.html or index.jsp

then you should go to http://localhost:8080/yourweb/index.html

this is what you need to do

Alex






Gavin Alexander <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
14/08/2002 06:10 p.m.
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Subject:Setting up web pages with tomcat



Hi,

Simple Question:
I'm just starting out with Tomcat 4.0, using it as a standalone on 
Win2000. 
I cannot find any reference to which directory my own HTML pages should be 

located in and what URLs to use to reach them.
Could somebody advise me?

Gavin


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Enterprise Java Beans (EJB)

2002-08-14 Thread TOMITA_ALEX_NONLILLY

Hi 

Does Tomcat support EJB?.
if not, is there a project to migrate tomcat to support EJB?... it will be 
a very nice feature...

Alex




RE: Access Parameter

2002-08-14 Thread TOMITA_ALEX_NONLILLY

thanks for the advice...
Actually I need to learn java servlet Does anyone can recommend me a 
good java servlet book in amazon?

thanks again
Alex







"Shapira, Yoav" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
14/08/2002 08:13 a.m.
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Subject:RE: Access Parameter



Hi,

>As JSP are "compiled" as servlets, you can do with JSP everything you
can
>do
>with servlets.

... but you shouldn't. 

JSPs are designed mostly for presentation and some associated logic.
Stuff like "if this field in the database is this value, then show these
values in HTML." 

Servlets are designed for more powerful and involved processing,
back-end "stuff", and not as much presentation. 

Sometimes knowing the conceptual differences between the technologies
and their intended uses can save you a ton of headaches down the road.
While Cedric's comment above has merits, I would say be very careful
before venturing down that path.

Yoav Shapira
Millennium ChemInformatics
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Re: Connection pooling using Jakarta commons

2002-08-14 Thread TOMITA_ALEX_NONLILLY

Hi,

I think you can add those parameters in your web.xml file...

something like this:


  factory
  org.apache.commons.dbcp.BasicDataSourceFactory



please, correct me if I'm wrong...

Alex






Capr1ce <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
14/08/2002 05:47 a.m.
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cc: 
Subject:Connection pooling using Jakarta commons



Hi,

I'm new here. My name's Mel. Hi!

Anyway, I have a question that I cannot find an answer for anywhere.
I've implemented connection pooling using Tomcat 4.0 and the required 
projects from Jakarta commons as instructed in the JNDI resources how to 
that can be found with in the Tomcat documentation. 
(http://jakarta.apache.org/tomcat/tomcat-4.0-doc/jndi-resources-howto.html)
I have edited my server.xml and web.xml files and it works perfectly. How 
comes the time for my project to be transferred onto the new web hosting 
companys web site. This is where I have hit a problem. I cannot edit their 

server.xml. Only my own web.xml. So i've added the  element 
to web.xml:


 jdbc/ocb_clients
 javax.sql.DataSource
 Container


However, server.xml contains many parameters:


 
   factory
   org.apache.commons.dbcp.BasicDataSourceFactory
 
 
  username
  username here
 
 
  password
  password_here
 
 
driverClassName
org.gjt.mm.mysql.Driver
 
 
   url
   jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/ocb_clients
 


Can these be included in web.xml somehow? Or do I need to take a different 

approach?
Thanks very much for any help,
Mel.




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Re: Bean on Tomcat

2002-08-14 Thread TOMITA_ALEX_NONLILLY

I'm using java beans in Tomcat (not EJB), and I just put them in 
WEB-INF/classes...

regards
Alex







Cédric Viaud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
14/08/2002 07:59 a.m.
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Subject:Re: Bean on Tomcat



Hi,

may you precise what your aiming at ?

If you want tu use EJBs, Tomcat is not en EJB container. You then should
find one (JBoss is free).

Regards,

   Cédric

- Original Message -
From: "Vishal Mukherjee" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Tomcat Users List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, August 14, 2002 10:51 AM
Subject: Bean on Tomcat


> Hi all
>
> Can anyone tell me how to configure beans om Tomcat 4.0.4
>
> Thanks & Regards
> Vishal Mukherjee
>
>
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Re: Access Parameter

2002-08-14 Thread TOMITA_ALEX_NONLILLY

thanks to all...

finally I resolved my problem, to get a parameter I used 
"application.getIniParameter("parameter name")  in my jsp page..


thanks again
Alex





Cédric Viaud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
14/08/2002 07:57 a.m.
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Subject:Re: Access Parameter



As JSP are "compiled" as servlets, you can do with JSP everything you can 
do
with servlets.

Check for the exact syntax.

Regards,

   Cédric

- Original Message -
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Tomcat Users List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, August 13, 2002 6:32 PM
Subject: Access Parameter


> Can I use something like this in my jsp page (instead of a java sevlet) 
to
>
> get the parameter name?,
> before that I set the parameter in my web.xml file like this:
>
> 
>   parameter name
>   localhost
> 
>
> String value =  getServletContext().getInitParameter("parameter name");
>
> is it only works in a sevlet or will it work in a jsp page too???
>
> thanks again
> Alex Tomita
>



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Re: Re[4]: Quick Question

2002-08-13 Thread TOMITA_ALEX_NONLILLY

thanks for the information, I'm going to test it out.







"Michael E. Locasto" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
13/08/2002 12:34 p.m.
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Subject:Re: Re[4]: Quick Question



Check out the API too.

http://jakarta.apache.org/tomcat/tomcat-4.0-doc/servletapi/index.html


Regards,
Michael

- Original Message -
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, August 13, 2002 1:08 PM
Subject: Re: Re[4]: Quick Question


>
> Hi, Alex.
>
>  Since JSP's are turned into servlets before they are executed, I
don't
> see why you couldn't do this.  For your convenience, JSP's have some
common
> objects already available for use.  The "application" object is 
equivalent
to
> the javax.servlet.ServletContext object you would get by doing a
> getServletContext() call.  So, application.getInitParameter("key") 
should
do
> the trick, too.
>
> HTH,
> -Jeff
>
>
>
>
> Jacob Kjome
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]To: "Tomcat Users List"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> m>   cc:
>  Subject: Re[4]: Quick
Question
> 08/13/02
> 12:00 PM
> Please
> respond to
> Jacob Kjome
>

>
>
>
>
>
> Hello TOMITA,
>
> I know next to nothing about JSP.  Haven't touched it.  I use XMLC and
> Barracuda to do presentation.  However, I would think that you should
> be able to use getServletContext() or something analogous in JSP.
>
> Jake
>
> Tuesday, August 13, 2002, 11:13:44 AM, you wrote:
>
> TLC> Can I use something like this in my jsp page (instead of a java
sevlet)
> to
> TLC> get the parameter name?,
> TLC> before that I set the parameter in my web.xml file like this:
>
> TLC> 
> TLC>   parameter name
> TLC>   localhost
> TLC> 
>
> TLC> String value =  getServletContext().getInitParameter("parameter
name");
>
> TLC> because I'm confusing here because of the name
"getServletContext".
> is
> TLC> it only works in a sevlet or it will work too in a jsp page???
>
> TLC> thanks again
> TLC> Alex Tomita
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> TLC> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> TLC> 13/08/2002 10:54 a.m.
> TLC> Please respond to Tomcat Users List
>
>
> TLC> To: Tomcat Users List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> TLC> cc: Tomcat Users List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> TLC> Subject:Re: Re[2]: Quick Question
>
>
>
> TLC> My bean is WEB-INF/classes
>
>
>
>
>
>
> TLC> Jacob Kjome <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> TLC> 13/08/2002 10:43 a.m.
> TLC> Please respond to Tomcat Users List
>
>
> TLC> To: Tomcat Users List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> TLC> cc:
> TLC> Subject:Re[2]: Quick Question
>
>
>
> TLC> Hello TOMITA,
>
> TLC> Where does your Bean exist?  Is it in one of Tomcat's classloaders,
or
> TLC> is it running out the WEB-INF/classes or WEB-INF/lib folder of your
> TLC> webapp.  I'm geussing the it is in one of Tomcat's classloaders
> TLC> meaning $CATALINA_HOME/common/lib, server/lib, or lib (shared/lib 
in
> TLC> Tomcat-4.1.x).
>
> TLC> Those classloaders can't see the individual webapp classloaders.
> TLC> However, libraries in your webapp *can* see Tomcat's plublic
> TLC> classloaders (all bug server/lib, server/classes).
>
> TLC> You may have to rearrange the location of your libraries.
>
> TLC> Jake
>
> TLC> Tuesday, August 13, 2002, 9:29:19 AM, you wrote:
>
> TLC>> Hi all,
>
> TLC>> I'm trying to resolve this problem with all the solutions that you
> TLC> gave
> TLC>> me,  but it doesn't work...
> TLC>> This is what I did:
>
> TLC>> in my java bean (not a servlet), I have this code:
>
>
> TLC>> public class DbBean {
> TLC>>public  int Connect()  {
> TLC>>InputStream is =
> TLC>>
> TLC> Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader().getResourceAsStream
> ("config.txt");
> TLC>> if (is == null) {
> TLC>> return 0;
> TLC>> }
> TLC>> else {
> TLC>> return 1;
> TLC>> }
> TLC>> }
>
>
> TLC>> then in my jsp, I called this method, and then I write the value 
(0
> TLC> or
> TLC>> 1)..
>
> TLC>> The txt file is in "WEB-INF/classes/beans...", because "DbBean" is
in
>
> TLC> a
> TLC>> package called "beans", and I start tomcat from TOMCAT_HOME/bin..
> TLC>> When I load the jsp, the method Connect of the DbBean (java bean)
> TLC> returned
> TLC>> 0, which means the InputStream is null, but if I put the txt file 
in
> TLC>> TOMCAT_HOME/bin, I had no problem, the method returned 1
why
>
> TLC> is
> TLC>> that??.. I'm using Tomcat 3.2
> TLC>> Do I need to set something else in Tomcat??
>
> TLC>> thanks again
> TLC>> Alex Tomita
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> TLC>> "Drinkwater, GJ (Glen)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> TLC>> 13/08/2002 08:11 a.m.
> TLC>> Please respond to Tomcat Users List
>
>
> TLC>> To: Tomcat Use

Access Parameter

2002-08-13 Thread TOMITA_ALEX_NONLILLY

Can I use something like this in my jsp page (instead of a java sevlet) to 

get the parameter name?,
before that I set the parameter in my web.xml file like this:


  parameter name
  localhost


String value =  getServletContext().getInitParameter("parameter name");

is it only works in a sevlet or will it work in a jsp page too???

thanks again 
Alex Tomita



Re: Re[2]: Quick Question

2002-08-13 Thread TOMITA_ALEX_NONLILLY

Can I use something like this in my jsp page (instead of a java sevlet) to 
get the parameter name?,
before that I set the parameter in my web.xml file like this:


  parameter name
  localhost


String value =  getServletContext().getInitParameter("parameter name");

because I'm confusing here because of the name "getServletContext". is 
it only works in a sevlet or it will work too in a jsp page???

thanks again 
Alex Tomita








[EMAIL PROTECTED]
13/08/2002 10:54 a.m.
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To: Tomcat Users List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
cc: Tomcat Users List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:Re: Re[2]: Quick Question



My bean is WEB-INF/classes






Jacob Kjome <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
13/08/2002 10:43 a.m.
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To: Tomcat Users List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
cc: 
Subject:Re[2]: Quick Question



Hello TOMITA,

Where does your Bean exist?  Is it in one of Tomcat's classloaders, or
is it running out the WEB-INF/classes or WEB-INF/lib folder of your
webapp.  I'm geussing the it is in one of Tomcat's classloaders
meaning $CATALINA_HOME/common/lib, server/lib, or lib (shared/lib in
Tomcat-4.1.x).

Those classloaders can't see the individual webapp classloaders.
However, libraries in your webapp *can* see Tomcat's plublic
classloaders (all bug server/lib, server/classes).

You may have to rearrange the location of your libraries.

Jake

Tuesday, August 13, 2002, 9:29:19 AM, you wrote:

TLC> Hi all,

TLC> I'm trying to resolve this problem with all the solutions that you 
gave 
TLC> me,  but it doesn't work...
TLC> This is what I did:

TLC> in my java bean (not a servlet), I have this code:


TLC> public class DbBean {
TLC>public  int Connect()  {
TLC>InputStream is = 
TLC> 
Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader().getResourceAsStream("config.txt");
TLC> if (is == null) {
TLC> return 0;
TLC> }
TLC> else {
TLC> return 1;
TLC> }
TLC> }


TLC> then in my jsp, I called this method, and then I write the value (0 
or 
TLC> 1)..

TLC> The txt file is in "WEB-INF/classes/beans...", because "DbBean" is in 

a 
TLC> package called "beans", and I start tomcat from TOMCAT_HOME/bin..
TLC> When I load the jsp, the method Connect of the DbBean (java bean) 
returned 
TLC> 0, which means the InputStream is null, but if I put the txt file in
TLC> TOMCAT_HOME/bin, I had no problem, the method returned 1  why 

is 
TLC> that??.. I'm using Tomcat 3.2
TLC> Do I need to set something else in Tomcat??

TLC> thanks again
TLC> Alex Tomita













TLC> "Drinkwater, GJ (Glen)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
TLC> 13/08/2002 08:11 a.m.
TLC> Please respond to Tomcat Users List

 
TLC> To: Tomcat Users List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
TLC> cc: 
TLC> Subject:RE: Quick Question




TLC> tomcats default directory is where ever you called the startup.sh/bat 


TLC> file.
TLC> So if you dont use another script to call the startup.sh/bat file 
tomcats
TLC> default will be the bin directory.

TLC> Use this code to find the directory where WEB-INF is.  Then you can 
TLC> traverse
TLC> your directory structure from there. 

TLC> //get context path
TLC> ServletConfig scon = null ;
TLC> String workingDir = null;
 
TLC> public void init(ServletConfig config) {
TLC> scon = config ;
TLC>  }
TLC>  public void doPost(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse
TLC> response)
TLC> throws ServletException, IOException {
 
TLC> //get working dir
TLC> ServletContext sc = scon.getServletContext();
TLC> workingDir = sc.getRealPath("");


TLC> --
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Re: Re[2]: Quick Question

2002-08-13 Thread TOMITA_ALEX_NONLILLY

My bean is WEB-INF/classes






Jacob Kjome <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
13/08/2002 10:43 a.m.
Please respond to Tomcat Users List

 
To: Tomcat Users List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
cc: 
Subject:Re[2]: Quick Question



Hello TOMITA,

Where does your Bean exist?  Is it in one of Tomcat's classloaders, or
is it running out the WEB-INF/classes or WEB-INF/lib folder of your
webapp.  I'm geussing the it is in one of Tomcat's classloaders
meaning $CATALINA_HOME/common/lib, server/lib, or lib (shared/lib in
Tomcat-4.1.x).

Those classloaders can't see the individual webapp classloaders.
However, libraries in your webapp *can* see Tomcat's plublic
classloaders (all bug server/lib, server/classes).

You may have to rearrange the location of your libraries.

Jake

Tuesday, August 13, 2002, 9:29:19 AM, you wrote:

TLC> Hi all,

TLC> I'm trying to resolve this problem with all the solutions that you 
gave 
TLC> me,  but it doesn't work...
TLC> This is what I did:

TLC> in my java bean (not a servlet), I have this code:


TLC> public class DbBean {
TLC>public  int Connect()  {
TLC>InputStream is = 
TLC> 
Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader().getResourceAsStream("config.txt");
TLC> if (is == null) {
TLC> return 0;
TLC> }
TLC> else {
TLC> return 1;
TLC> }
TLC> }


TLC> then in my jsp, I called this method, and then I write the value (0 
or 
TLC> 1)..

TLC> The txt file is in "WEB-INF/classes/beans...", because "DbBean" is in 
a 
TLC> package called "beans", and I start tomcat from TOMCAT_HOME/bin..
TLC> When I load the jsp, the method Connect of the DbBean (java bean) 
returned 
TLC> 0, which means the InputStream is null, but if I put the txt file in
TLC> TOMCAT_HOME/bin, I had no problem, the method returned 1  why 
is 
TLC> that??.. I'm using Tomcat 3.2
TLC> Do I need to set something else in Tomcat??

TLC> thanks again
TLC> Alex Tomita













TLC> "Drinkwater, GJ (Glen)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
TLC> 13/08/2002 08:11 a.m.
TLC> Please respond to Tomcat Users List

 
TLC> To: Tomcat Users List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
TLC> cc: 
TLC> Subject:RE: Quick Question




TLC> tomcats default directory is where ever you called the startup.sh/bat 

TLC> file.
TLC> So if you dont use another script to call the startup.sh/bat file 
tomcats
TLC> default will be the bin directory.

TLC> Use this code to find the directory where WEB-INF is.  Then you can 
TLC> traverse
TLC> your directory structure from there. 

TLC> //get context path
TLC> ServletConfig scon = null ;
TLC> String workingDir = null;
 
TLC> public void init(ServletConfig config) {
TLC> scon = config ;
TLC>  }
TLC>  public void doPost(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse
TLC> response)
TLC> throws ServletException, IOException {
 
TLC> //get working dir
TLC> ServletContext sc = scon.getServletContext();
TLC> workingDir = sc.getRealPath("");


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RE: Quick Question

2002-08-13 Thread TOMITA_ALEX_NONLILLY

Hi all,

I'm trying to resolve this problem with all the solutions that you gave 
me,  but it doesn't work...
This is what I did:

in my java bean (not a servlet), I have this code:


public class DbBean {
   public  int Connect()  {
   InputStream is = 
Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader().getResourceAsStream("config.txt");
if (is == null) {
return 0;
}
else {
return 1;
}
}


then in my jsp, I called this method, and then I write the value (0 or 
1)..

The txt file is in "WEB-INF/classes/beans...", because "DbBean" is in a 
package called "beans", and I start tomcat from TOMCAT_HOME/bin..
When I load the jsp, the method Connect of the DbBean (java bean) returned 
0, which means the InputStream is null, but if I put the txt file in
TOMCAT_HOME/bin, I had no problem, the method returned 1  why is 
that??.. I'm using Tomcat 3.2
Do I need to set something else in Tomcat??

thanks again
Alex Tomita













"Drinkwater, GJ (Glen)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
13/08/2002 08:11 a.m.
Please respond to Tomcat Users List

 
To: Tomcat Users List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
cc: 
Subject:RE: Quick Question




tomcats default directory is where ever you called the startup.sh/bat 
file.
So if you dont use another script to call the startup.sh/bat file tomcats
default will be the bin directory.

Use this code to find the directory where WEB-INF is.  Then you can 
traverse
your directory structure from there. 

//get context path
ServletConfig scon = null ;
String workingDir = null;
 
public void init(ServletConfig config) {
scon = config ;
 }
 public void doPost(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse
response)
throws ServletException, IOException {
 
//get working dir
ServletContext sc = scon.getServletContext();
workingDir = sc.getRealPath("");


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Quick Question

2002-08-12 Thread TOMITA_ALEX_NONLILLY

Hi all,

I wrote a simple java bean that reads a txt file, the problem is where do 
I need to put the txt file??...
What is the default directory in Tomcat??

when I put something like this in my java bean : 
FileReader("config.txt") 
Where does tomcat look for that file?

thanks
Alex



Re: Reading from files in servlet from Tomcat-4.0.4

2002-08-12 Thread TOMITA_ALEX_NONLILLY

Hi,

you need to put the file in /TOMCAT_HOME/bin

I had the same problem and first I made a simple servlet code that writes 
a txt file, then I look for that file and Tomcat put it in 
/TOMCAT_HOME/bin

regards
Alex Tomita






khozaima shakir <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
10/08/2002 04:30 p.m.
Please respond to Tomcat Users List

 
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cc: 
Subject:Reading from files in servlet from Tomcat-4.0.4



Hi all,
I am trying to read from a file : filename
Where should i put this file in tomcat 4.0.4 directory structure?
I tried putting the file in directories:
webapps/ROOT, webapps/ROOT/WEB-INF, webapps/ROOT/WEB-INF/classes  in each 
instance i get the error message
"The system cannot find the file specified"

I used following statement in servlet code.
bufferin = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(new 
FileInputStream(fileName)));

Thanks
Khozaima


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