Howdy, >I don't think small market shares or lack of clients is a reason for >exclude >a server feature. They are separate. If the WebDAV app added some negative >impact to the tomcat server, then take it out, but if not, then lets add it >back in.
Even if WebDAV is useful in the general sense (I tend to agree with Senor Holle that it's not, I don't feel strongly either way), I think it's telling that no one complained when we removed it. Anything we add that's not used is bloat by definition, and more for us to maintain. Of course, we already do have a WebDAV servlet shipping with tomcat5, and that's the main part. What else did you (Mark T.) think of adding to the distribution? This gets me thinking again of the idea of a minimal build: no webdav, no CGI, no examples, no docs, no balancer, minimal server.xml as the default, etc, so as to minimize download size and cater to those users who know what they're doing and just want to drop their webapp into tomcat. Yoav Shapira This e-mail, including any attachments, is a confidential business communication, and may contain information that is confidential, proprietary and/or privileged. This e-mail is intended only for the individual(s) to whom it is addressed, and may not be saved, copied, printed, disclosed or used by anyone else. If you are not the(an) intended recipient, please immediately delete this e-mail from your computer system and notify the sender. Thank you. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]