In fact, sessions are maintained by default, so you will get sessions even
by doing nothing.

Scott Nichol

----- Original Message -----
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, September 19, 2002 9:59 AM
Subject: RE: Using sessions


> One way to do it is to have your client object ask the call object to do
it
> as follows:
>
> if(doSession)
>       {
>           shc = new SOAPHTTPConnection ();
>           shc.setMaintainSession (true);
>           setSOAPTransport (shc);
>       }
>
> I assume there are other ways to do it.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: dovle [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Friday, June 21, 2002 12:51 AM
> To: Apache SOAP
> Subject: Using sessions
>
>
> Hello to all,
> I realize this topic was already discussed for several times but I don't
> have the related mails. So if someone knows about a good tutorial or
sample
> on how to keep sessions active for an Apache Soap service, please email
me.
>
> (rpcrouter is a servlet, so it must somehow manage the sessions. I don't
> want to implement my own session tracking meckanism.)
>
> thanks alot
> dovle
>
>
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