an already
successful project.
--
Martin Cooper
FYI, currently the commons-httpclient is using it.
Any comments?
Or any +1, -1?
Sung-Gu
P.S.: If the requirement is very weak, I want to put the new package into
commons-sandbox even for a long while in my opinion
strongly rejected, for a number of reasons, among them being the
facts that there is no archive of an IRC chat for others to refer to, and
that it is not possible for people in all corners of the world to
participate in the same conversation.
--
Martin Cooper
Jandalf wrote:
I think its
be.
--
Martin Cooper
Everyone stays
informed, everyone has choice and the work converges towards the
completion of a goal, the release. I spend a fair amount of
time trying
to keep bugzilla in good order and people generally cooperate
with this.
It does make release targets difficult to meet
obtained fresh from CVS using the relevant
tag. If so, I'd like to suggest the latter, since it's more reliable, and
ensures that everything necessary is tagged in CVS.
--
Martin Cooper
Other than these it looks good to go.
Mike
Jeffrey Dever wrote:
Ok, new rc2 package available
retrieving the source based on the correct tag.
This is the approach I use for releasing Struts, Commons FileUpload and
Commons Validator.
--
Martin Cooper
-Original Message-
From: Oleg Kalnichevski [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, February 24, 2003 11:36 AM
To: Commons HttpClient
The usual mechanism for uploading files is to use the POST method with an
encoding type of multipart/form-data. HttpClient will help you with
sending the data this way, and Commons FileUpload will help you with
accessing it from within your servlet.
--
Martin Cooper
-Original Message
. Both Struts and Turbine rely on Commons
FileUpload for their multipart/form-data handling.
--
Martin Cooper
Mike
Eric Johnson wrote:
I missed that the problem lies with the server the first
time I read
this post as well. Tomcat does not support multipart/form-data
requests
) to do side-by-side colourised diffs. That becomes a real pain when
the line lengths go much over 80, because you end up having to do a lot of
horizontal scrolling to make sure you've seen all the changes.
--
Martin Cooper
-Original Message-
From: Mike Bowler [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED