Hi,
Look at any of the freely-available servlet response caching filters out
there.  They all capture the response output completely anyhow.  You'd
have to make minimal modifications (if any) to fit your use-case.

Yoav Shapira
Millennium Research Informatics


>-----Original Message-----
>From: David Wall [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Sent: Wednesday, October 06, 2004 6:10 PM
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Capturing HTML using Tomcat 4
>
>I've been looking through archives and such for examples of how to
capture
>the HTML output from a given JSP programmatically so I can archive or
do
>other things with that HTML.  For example, we might do this to record
the
>text of an agreement that was displayed to a user, in which a JSP
generated
>the agreement HTML page.  The pages may be generated from either HTTP
GET
>or
>POST.
>
>It would be nice to perhaps just have a servlet "include" the response
from
>a JSP, passing along the GET/POST request to that JSP, but then have
the
>servlet capture the JSP's response in a string for processing/storage.
>O'Reilly has a caching servlet that may help, but I was wondering if
>anybody
>had come out with an elegant way to do this.
>
>Thanks,
>David
>
>
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