Ah ha!

As it turns out, the </web-app> end tag in my web.xml
file got chopped off during the merge of web.xml
fragments.  I put this back on and everything seems to
work... except one thing:

We have some JSP files that get autogenerated by a
development tool we're using.  Most of these JSPs
compile fine, but there are a number that end up as
zero length .java files after compiling them with
jspc.  Is there any reason why jspc might create 
empty .java files for what look to be relatively
simple, but correct, .jsp files?


--- Jason Palmatier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello everyone,
> 
> I am attempting to deploy pre-compiled jsps in
> Tomcat
> 4.1.18 (I can't upgrade, I'm stuck with 4.1.18). 
> I've
> searched the archive extensively and found that I am
> doing all the things suggested, but I still cannot
> seem to find any of my web pages.  I'm wondering if
> any of my steps are wrong and I'm just missing
> something.  This is what I've accomplished so far:
> 
> 1. Used JSPC to precompile all my jsp's and include
> their subdirectory in their package statements (i.e.
> if a jsp exist in myApp/myDir I create a package
> statement of "package com.mycompany.myApp.myDir;"
> for
> that jsp.
> 
> 2. I compile the generated .java file into a class
> file.  I make the output directory for the compile
> my
> WEB-INF/classes directory so the javac command takes
> care of creating all the subdirectories based on the
> package statement of each .java file.
> 
> 3. I copy the contents of the generated web.xml
> fragments, merge them into one file (with proper
> ordering, servlet declarations first, servlet
> mapping
> after them, etc.) and then merge this into my
> existing
> web.xml file.
> 
> 4. I then remove all my .jsp files, wipe out
> everything under my work/Standalone/localhost
> directory, and restart Tomcat.
> 
> When I try to access my first page
> (http://myserver:8080/pt/logon.jsp) I get a 404:
> Requested resource is not available.
> 
> Here are a few things I've noticed and have
> questions
> about:
> 
> 1. In my servlet declaration statement can I name my
> servlet the same as the class name?  i.e. if my jsp
> compiles to
> com.mycompany.myApp.subDir.anotherSubDir.myclass_jsp
> can my servlet declaration look like this:
> 
> <servlet>
>
<servlet-name>com.mycompany.myApp.subDir.anotherSubDir.myclass_jsp
> </servlet-name>
>
<servlet-class>com.mycompany.myApp.subDir.anotherSubDir.myclass_jsp
> </servlet-class>
> </servlet>
> 
> 2. Just to make sure (since I know all the examples
> show this already), you DO NOT want to include your
> applications name in the url-pattern of a servlet
> mapping, correct?  In other words, if my application
> is under webapps/myApp then I want my servlet map to
> say:
> 
> <servlet-mapping>
>
<servlet-name>com.mycompany.myApp.subDir.anotherSubDir.myclass_jsp
> </servlet-name>
>
<url-pattern>/subDir/anotherSubDir/myclass.jsp</url-pattern>
> </servlet-mapping>
> 
> NOT
> 
> <servlet-mapping>
>
<servlet-name>com.mycompany.subDir.anotherSubDir.myclass_jsp
> </servlet-name>
>
<url-pattern>/myApp/subDir/anotherSubDir/myclass.jsp</url-pattern>
> </servlet-mapping>
> 
> I feel like I'm really close to getting this
> running,
> so this last stuff is very frustrating.  Any help
> would be greatly appreciated.
> 
> Thanks,
> Jason
> 
> 
>       
>               
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