Sorry I didn't mean to say ActionServlet or ModuleConfig objects...these are
struts based objects.. more generally, from within a Tomcat web
application... how do you access the Context object?
Thanks
Jamie
jamieb wrote:
>
> Hi There
>
> I had a look at Tomcat's Manager application the rel
Hi There
I had a look at Tomcat's Manager application the reload(..) function
reveals a hint:
..
Context context = (Context) host.findChild(path);
..
context.reload();
This should do the trick? Any idea on how to get the tomcat context
object... from ActionServlet or ModuleConfig objects...?
jamieb wrote:
Hi
Thanks for the tip. While I am very grateful for your advice, I am not sure
I like either of the approaches. I was hoping just to call a Tomcat API
function directly from my web application.
Tomcat provides an API, in the form of JMX.
Is'nt there a method called restart() o
Hi
Thanks for the tip. While I am very grateful for your advice, I am not sure
I like either of the approaches. I was hoping just to call a Tomcat API
function directly from my web application. Is'nt there a method called
restart() or something? JMX seems like overkill since I do not need to
con
jamieb wrote:
Hi there
I am busy implementing an auto update facility for a Tomcat web application.
As part of the auto update process, the auto update code needs to unpack the
changed class files and reload the Tomcat web application.
I am aware that you can configure Tomcat to automatically
Jamie-
yes there is a way if you register SimpletonAgent in the registry as a
Managed Bean
http://java.sun.com/developer/technicalArticles/J2SE/jmx.html
perhaps if you have a simple test webapp we could suggest a test harness?
Martin-
- Original Message -
From: "jamieb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED