> Mark,
>
> On 10/16/19 04:41, Mark Thomas wrote:
>>> On 10/15/19 09:37, Mark Thomas wrote:
>>> Isn't there a magic ${property} that can be used to mean "the
>>> context's root" so you don't have to use ${catalina.base}
>>> instead? I browsed through the document a bit and didn't find
>>>
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Mark,
On 10/16/19 04:41, Mark Thomas wrote:
>> Mark,
>>
>> On 10/15/19 09:37, Mark Thomas wrote:
>>> On 14/10/2019 20:29, André Warnier (tomcat) wrote:
From a long-time (occasional) list contributor : That's a
nice post, in many ways, and
> Mark,
>
> On 10/15/19 09:37, Mark Thomas wrote:
>> On 14/10/2019 20:29, André Warnier (tomcat) wrote:
>>> From a long-time (occasional) list contributor : That's a nice
>>> post, in many ways, and a good way to get quick and useful
>>> answers. I only regret that my own knowledge is not
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Mark,
On 10/15/19 09:37, Mark Thomas wrote:
> On 14/10/2019 20:29, André Warnier (tomcat) wrote:
>> From a long-time (occasional) list contributor : That's a nice
>> post, in many ways, and a good way to get quick and useful
>> answers. I only
Hi!
On Tue, 2019-10-15 at 14:37 +0100, Mark Thomas wrote:
> Generally, no. You've done it in what I'd consider to be the "safer" way
> by exposing all the JARs visible to the client to the application's
> class loader rather than the other way around.
Ok, good to hear, we will try this and
On 14/10/2019 20:29, André Warnier (tomcat) wrote:
> From a long-time (occasional) list contributor :
> That's a nice post, in many ways, and a good way to get quick and useful
> answers.
> I only regret that my own knowledge is not sufficient to provide such an
> answer.
> (We regularly complain
From a long-time (occasional) list contributor :
That's a nice post, in many ways, and a good way to get quick and useful
answers.
I only regret that my own knowledge is not sufficient to provide such an answer.
(We regularly complain at people posting to this list, when their post is "not
Hi!
Some background:
We are currently running tomcat (9.0.26) and we serve data to
both html/webapp and to our java application. The java application
uses a lot of the same jar files that our servlets use.
We have had tomcat setup with two directories:
1) webapps//WEB-INF/lib (as usual for