[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index] [Home]

(No Subject)


Why not use Jakarta-Tomcat Servlet/JSP engine (100% Java) with Apache?
Check it out at:
   http://jakarta.apache.org/
HTH,
Arun.

--------------------------------------------------------------
Robin Walker wrote:

It looks like you have all the necessary packages.  There is no JServ 1.3
- it's 1.1b3, which isn't a final release but I would imagine is probably
fine.

You need to either compile JServ into Apache or set it up to dynamically
link in as a DSO at run time.  After you have that working, setting up
GNUJSP should be pretty straightforward.

Check out http://www.robin.net/guide.txt for another take on setting this
all up.

-Robin

On Wed, 12 Jan 2000, Darko wrote:

> Hello,
> 
> I have Jdk117_v1a from blackdown, Apache_JServ 1.3, JSDK2.0 from sun,
> Apache-ssl web server.
> Now, I need to enable my server to support JSP, and I am not sure how.
> Platform I am using is linux red hat 6.1I have read that there is GNU JSP but
> it says it is not fully compatible with JSP, so I am not sure if I should use
> this one.
> If there is anything else I need to implement support for JSP on my server,
> please let me know, and also if there is JSP package (.tar or .rpm), could you
> please point me to, and if there is any documentation about this specific
> platform, please let me know.
> 
> Thanx in advance, your help is greatly apreciated.
> 
> Regards,
> 
> Stojko
> 
> Robin Walker wrote:
> 
> > I just got some help from the people on this list with regards to this
> > same subject a few days ago.  You many want to go back and read what they
> > had to say.
> >
> > Basically, I wouldn't use an application scope DB connection for any web
> > application unless there was some unusual requirement that called for it.
> > I've even decided to stay away from session scope connections.  I like the
> > idea of having a session scope bean that talks to a static instance of a
> > connection pool class, and that session scope bean grabs and gives back
> > connections with every request.  It's not as much overhead as it may sound
> > like because everything's passed by reference.  The overhead is in opening
> > a db connection, not in passing it around.  It's a flexible model because
> > if later on you *really* want a session scope connection, you can modify
> > that session scope bean accordingly.
> >
> > -Robin
> >
> > On Tue, 11 Jan 2000, Pablo J. wrote:
> >
> > > Hi chaps,
> > >
> > > i have a very big ploblem and it is not my horrible english.
> > >
> > > I am working with jsp's and jdbc with oracle 8. I want a DB conection
> > > for the entire aplication. I open  a BD conection open when the server
> > > is launched, but i do not when to close it.
> > >
> > > Could you help me, please
> > >
> 




LYCOShop is now open. On your mark, get set, SHOP!!!
http://shop.lycos.com/