Hi,
thanks for the advice,
But I want to avoid harcoded links such as $APACHE_HOME\httpdocs\images
or <a href="http://yourdomain/images/1.jpg"> in my jsp.
Indeed I don't want to modify these values if I decide Tomcat to run on
another port, or to install Tomcat in another directory or even OS. That
is why I am looking for an approach using
the webapp context, so I don't have to worry about the OS, or the port,
or whatever configuration.
Anyway thanks for your help
Regards
Romain
Li wrote:
Hi,
Here are few steps of achieving it (just tested, and it works):
1. use FileOutputStream or any output streaming object to write a
image file
into the directory
in Windows, the path string should look like:
"c:\apache_home\httpdocs\images\1.jpg"
in unix/linux, the path should look like
$APACHE_HOME\httpdocs\images\1.jpg"
(assume, you had defined APACHE_HOME, make sure the images folder
is read/write
only for the user/group that runs tomcat
2. Make sure apache is on ...
3. in your jsp: use
e.g. <a href="http://yourdomain/images/1.jpg">click to view</a>
Wish it helps
On 8/7/06, Romain Quilici <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Thanks for the answer,
this solution was part of my investigation, and was actually the first
idea I had.
The problem with this approach is I don't know how to access the
/image_dir/ from within my web application.
Maybe using something like
String path = servletContext.getRealPath("/");
String imagePath = path+"../image_dir/"
and use the imagePath to create my images, then in my jsp something like
<request.getContextPath()/../image_dir/image1.jpg>
But I am not sure this approach works in all configurations,
particularly if my webapp is deployed inside a war.
Thanks
Romain
Li wrote:
> if you have apache server, you can write file to its home dir, and
> then use
> http://<youdomain>/<image_dir>/image_name.suffix to view.
>
> On 8/7/06, Romain Quilici <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Hi all,
>> I have been reading several messages about writing files inside a web
>> application, but I found no answer regarding my problem.
>>
>> I need to write files on the file system that can be accessible
with a
>> browser(I write images).
>>
>> - The most reliable solution I found was to use the webapp's tmp
>> directory, unfortunately this directory is not accessible with a URL.
>>
>> - Another solution would be to write these images under my webapp
>> root(or in another place under my webapp). But it seems that this
>> approach does not work with webapps deployed in a war file.
>> Indeed you cannot write inside wars like this.
>>
>> I don't want to rely on some hardcoded solutions. There is still the
>> possibility to pass the absolute path to the directory (let's say
>> TOMCAT_HOME/webapps/myimages/) and later, use inside my JSP
>> <request.getContextPath()/../myimages/image1.jpg>, but I think this
>> solution won't work in many configurations
>>
>> Thanks a lot for your help
>> Regards
>> Romain
>>
>>
>>
>>
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>
>
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