Hello,
you can find more details about connectors here:
http://wiki.restlet.org/docs_2.0/13-restlet/37-restlet.html
Best regards,
Thierry Boileau
Hello,
> Le 22/06/2010 18:14, webp...@tigris.org a écrit :
> > I've searched the mailing list archive and the documentation but didn't
> find a satisf
Hello,
Le 22/06/2010 18:14, webp...@tigris.org a écrit :
> I've searched the mailing list archive and the documentation but didn't find
> a satisfactory answer to my question.
>
> If I have a ServerResource, what's the proper way to make it available as a
> handler to Jetty? I've included the Jet
Hello Martin,
One way is to put the jar of the desired connector before the others in
the classpath.
You can also set the list of servers connectors registered on the
current Engine instance: Engine.getInstance().getRegisteredServers().
In order to use the Jetty connector, instantiate the serv
Hi,
If for any reason (let say for comparing performances) I want to have both
Jetty and Simple on my path, how should I force the selection of one server
among all avaialble server?
Regards,
Martin
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http://restlet.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage
Thanks, Jerome. After my first posting, I was able to experiment and
resolve this (using 2.0m3). One thing that slowed me down is that my
IDE automatically created a couple of imports for Server and another
class I no longer remember that were not Restlet classes. I also
didn't understand that h
Hi Tony,
Do you have the "org.restlet.ext.jetty.jar" and all its dependencies (see
the "lib/readme.txt" file) in your classpath? If so, it should be detected
by the engine and used instead of the internal HTTP server. There is really
nothing much to do... Which version of Restlet are you using?
B
Hello Tony,
using a special connector is not a matter of code. It should work by
completing the classpath, as mentionned in the user
guide:http://wiki.restlet.org/docs_1.2/37-restlet.html.
In your case, add the following jar to the classpath:
- org.restlet.ext.jetty.jar (jar of the jetty exten
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