My advice: don't use it. We "geeks" who take the time to LEARN about the technologies we use will go about our business, using Tomcat. If you do not like it, please find another list to flame-bait on.
Btw, I am running an App that has roughly 20k hits per day using a 99% dynamically generated web app (this is a rather small web app compared to others out there on the list) and I rely on it in a "life or death situation" (i.e., I get fired if I cannot keep up a 99% uptime requirement for 24/7/365). Tomcat works perfectly. Ben Ricker On Mon, 2002-12-09 at 16:04, Mike DiChiappari wrote: > You're correct. There is lots of documentation out there. > Unfortunately, it belongs with most things that are open sourse - in > the trash. Jakarata/tomcat is particularly bad. The people that > manage it should be ashamed of themselves (I hope they are not > building software I have to rely on in life and death situations). > > Mike > > > >I disagree. There's lots of documentation out there. > > > >It's just not blasted into peoples' faces, nor is it bound into a nice > >little book and shrinkwrapped. You have to go find it, and you have to read > >it. Most people are too lazy to do either, they want everything handed to > >them. > > > >John > > > > -- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > For additional commands, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -- Ben Ricker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Wellinx.com -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> For additional commands, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>