Howdy,

>Yes, but soon you're going to pitch a HTTP-server-in-100k, complete
with
>its own proprietary API ;)
>The embedded distribution is IMO good for a minimal distribution.

;)  Not, I don't want a proprietary anything as in the Jetty world.
That's no good for any organization that wants long-term maintenance
costs to stay low.

But every time I install tomcat, I go through a set of steps that is
always the same:
- Unzip the distribution
- Remove all its webapps
- Strip server.xml down to a minimum

I suppose I could just write some scripts to do the above, but a
distribution that does it is relatively easy to build.  While we had one
major distribution really, I didn't want to bring this up as much,
because it's adding overhead and another task for the release manager.
But now that we already have the main, embedded, and deployer distros
for every release, the marginal cost of a minimal distro is
significantly lower.

All that said, I reiterate my original point that I don't have a huge
objection to bringing WebDAV back in.  It's definitely -0, not a -1.
Just another webapp for me to remove as part of my normal tomcat
installation.

Yoav Shapira



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