As I said. It is not a web app that I have created. It is generated by a third party development environment. If I want my stuff to play nice with their stuff then I have to wedge my stuff into their stuff. Which is located under the classes directory. I don't make the rules I just try to bend them to solve my problems. I can't change the development environment. I have to figure out how to get around it. Do you have any idea on how I can accomplish this. I know it is weird but it is what it is.
Thanks, Susan -----Original Message----- From: Hassan Schroeder [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Wednesday, June 17, 2009 12:10 PM To: Tomcat Users List; [email protected] Subject: Re: Serving images from classes directory On Wed, Jun 17, 2009 at 9:04 AM, Susan G. Conger <[email protected]>wrote: > The web app is made by another company that screen scrapes/translates a > mainframe app and then makes a web app out of it. They store this in their > classes directory. So in order to keep everything together and make > maintenance and deployment easier, I would like to have all of the > generated > code and custom code in one location. That way I don't have to pull things > from everywhere when I deploy to the web app to our customers. That makes no sense at all. A web app is a web app, and the "classes" directory is only one part of it. Pretty much any normal web app includes exposed content like images, stylesheets, javascript. Are you saying you deploy *only* a classes directory to customers? Again, that makes no sense. -- Hassan Schroeder ------------------------ [email protected] --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected]
