st"
Sent: Saturday, August 25, 2007 4:33 PM
Subject: Re: java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError
just do, jar -tvf MyJar.jar and see whether it lists the class.
--
Manivannan Palanichamy
http://mani.gw.googlepages.com/index.html
On 8/25/07, Dave Sailer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
it does. And
it does. And if it didn't "jar uf" is broken, I would think.
On Fri, 2007-08-24 at 15:20 -0600, Filip Hanik - Dev Lists wrote:
> better check your Jar to make sure it has the MyServletException.class
> file still in it.
>
> Filip
>
> Dave Sailer wrote:
> >
I have a webapp that is working but I wanted to update a servlet jar so:
jar uf MyJar.jar net/whohah/portal/servlet/MyServlet.class
cp MyJar.jar $CATALINA_HOME/webapps/ROOT/WEB-INF/lib
No I get the exception shown below. I have MyServlet stripped down so
the only imports are:
import java.io.*;
i
I can't do that because, well, you know how this business is. I will
just run on port 80.
Caldarale, Charles R wrote:
From: Dave Sailer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: port problem
more detail: we have a customer 404 error page with...
:http://www.blahblah.net/mypage.html&qu
file maps test.blahblah.net to
127.0.0.1, this to keep all links pointing to the local tomcat.
Dave Sailer wrote:
I'm running tomcat 5.5 and sniffing out problems with a somewhat
complex web site. After deploying the war into the running tomcat, I
go to the home page and get some ex
I'm running tomcat 5.5 and sniffing out problems with a somewhat complex
web site. After deploying the war into the running tomcat, I go to the
home page and get some exceptions. Looking at the sniffer output, most
of the requests are to localhost:8080, but some are to just localhost,
which cau