Thanks, I've tried that. Including with a full path still makes the
included file relative to the directory in which the jsp resides.
On Apr 25, 2008, at 1:02 PM, David Smith wrote:
I see the problem. You could use absolute paths in jsp includes and
the servlet container would understand them as relative to the
webapp's root as opposed to the server's root:
Say you have this file layout
webapp
| index.jsp
| article1
| index.jsp
| article1.html
| article2
| index.jsp
| article1.html
article2/index.jsp could simply have <jsp:include file="/article1/
article1.html" /> and it would find article1.html in the article1
folder.
--David
DIGLLOYD INC wrote:
I previously asked about remapping URLs and got some helpful
responses. In a nutshell, this was recommended:
http://tuckey.org/urlrewrite/
Looks very good for some purposes.
But I also want to solve a much simpler problem--
I have a very large amount of static content (articles), with each
article in its own directory. A main Table of Contents links to
the start page in each directory, which is *not* index.html (eg
some-main-page.html). I don't want to rename or change those pages
as they have world-wide direct links to them--they have to stay as-
is. But I do want to insert an index.jsp page without altering any
content.
For many of these folders inserting a trival index.jsp solves the
index-page problem:
<%@ include file="the-main-page.html" %>
(though I do wonder if google consider this unacceptable duplicate
content)
My pages all use relative links eg "..", "./", etc. So this works
***when the page being included is in the same directory**.
But when the include page is in another directory, none of the
relative links work. None of these variants do the right thing;
any referenced images cannot be found.
<%@ include file="../ReviewInfo.html" %>
<jsp:include file="../ReviewInfo.html" %>
<jsp:forward page="../some-other-page.html" />
The jsp:forward directive seems perfect, but the flaw of not
changing the current location (eg no "cd" is done first) makes it
useless for this purpose. Or does it? Is there something I'm
missing here?
Alternately, is there some other trivial solution?
URL-rewriting is not appropriate in this case; there is no
particular pattern, just a fair number of specific cases. I was
hoping for a simple 1-line index.jsp in each directory.
Lloyd
Lloyd Chambers
http://diglloyd.com
[Mac OS X 10.5.2 Intel, Tomcat 6.0.16]
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Lloyd Chambers
http://diglloyd.com
[Mac OS X 10.5.2 Intel, Tomcat 6.0.16]
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