oh no! even more work for me now... thanks anyway for your help guys!
Len Popp wrote:
You can't override the 503 error page using an
declaration. :-( The only way I know of to change it is to replace
org.apache.catalina.valves.ErrorReportValve with your own version,
which you specify in the "e
You can't override the 503 error page using an
declaration. :-( The only way I know of to change it is to replace
org.apache.catalina.valves.ErrorReportValve with your own version,
which you specify in the "errorReportValveClass" attribute of the
element in server.xml. I haven't tried this, but
Peter Stavrinides wrote:
Unfortunately this solution doesn't solve it, I can only override 404
pages?, for 503 pages it simply ignores the override in web.xml, anybody
got any other suggestions?
I thought used to be possible to customise the built in error pages with
XSL, but I can't seem to
Unfortunately this solution doesn't solve it, I can only override 404
pages?, for 503 pages it simply ignores the override in web.xml, anybody
got any other suggestions?
Peter Stavrinides wrote:
Oh thanks! that sounds quite simple... so I just add my error page
descriptor in the ROOT applicati
Oh thanks! that sounds quite simple... so I just add my error page
descriptor in the ROOT applications web.xml and it will override.
David Delbecq wrote:
The easiest way i found out here was to use the 404 of the ROOT web
application ^^ to display a 'site under maintenance'.
You could also cre
The easiest way i found out here was to use the 404 of the ROOT web
application ^^ to display a 'site under maintenance'.
You could also create a ROOT//index.html to get same result
En l'instant précis du 19/03/08 11:55, Peter Stavrinides s'exprimait en
ces termes:
Hi all,
How do I display