Tim's solution is the easiest, but allow me to explain why your application is behaving that way.
By specifying the following
<url-pattern>/</url-pattern>
You are saying that all requests that come into your application are to be forwarded to the servlet. Thus when you redirect to "/jsp/index.jsp" it is taking back into the servlet. My guess is that you are trying to force everyone to the /jsp/index.jsp" page no matter which "url" they use to get to your application. I do not know of an easy way to do this. I like Tim's solution and hopefully that will fulfill your needs. HTH On 9/12/06, Tim Funk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
If I am reading this correctly, an "easier" solution would be to create an index.jsp at the root level that forwards to "/jsp/index.jsp" -Tim Romain Quilici wrote: > Hi all, > this question seems simple, but I did not figure out how to answer it. > > In my web.xml I have defined a default servlet. So it can handle > requests that does not match other servlets pattern. > <servlet-mapping> > <servlet-name>DefaultServlet</servlet-name> > <url-pattern>/</url-pattern> > </servlet-mapping> > > Then in my DefaultServlet, I want to redirect to a jsp page, so I use > RequestDispatcher dispatcher = > getServletContext().getRequestDispatcher("/jsp/index.jsp"); > if(dispatcher != null){ > dispatcher.forward(request,response); > } > > But doing that, I reenter in my default servlet's doGet method. > > What I want is rather simple, when a user connect to the site > http://server/myapp/, then the request is handled by the default > servlet and the jsp page is displayed --------------------------------------------------------------------- To start a new topic, e-mail: users@tomcat.apache.org To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-- Marc Farrow