I've seen some transfer clients (like winscp) default to setting the
date/time on the remote copy the same as the local. If the local system
time isn't in sync with the server, it could cause issues like this.
When the jsp is compiled, tomcat uses the server's date, time and time
zone. In your specific case, it may be either your local system or the
server doesn't have the right time zone or maybe hasn't handled the
daylight savings time transition correctly.
--David
loredana loredana wrote:
winscp is a tool...like windows commander or total commander, . is just to view
the files in an organized matter. :) i'm sure the problem is not winscp :)
----- Original Message ----
From: Hassan Schroeder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Tomcat Users List <users@tomcat.apache.org>
Sent: Tuesday, April 8, 2008 5:33:44 PM
Subject: Re: tomcat cache wierd behaviour
On Tue, Apr 8, 2008 at 7:12 AM, loredana loredana
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I run a "date" command on the server (which is ubuntu) and got Tue Apr 8
15:50:01 CEST 2008
Using winscp, I see ...
So it sounds like your problem is with "winscp", whatever that is, not
Tomcat :-) Maybe this is a question for the winscp user list?
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