Thank you for the help.

I need to find out other solution ...

Do you know any way to distinguish if the one session is invalidated by
timeout or because the server have been shutdown?
One of the ways is to use  session.getMaxInactiveInterval with the current
timestamp and the session.getLastAccessedTime, and make some calculations
... but this not seems me  very reliable, do you know another way to do
that?

Thanks in advance,
Rui Pereira


On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 12:20 PM, Jess Holle <je...@ptc.com> wrote:

> Last I checked the Tomcat source code neither activation nor passivation
> listeners were ever called.
>
> I believe I provided a patch for this but a glance at the source code will
> make the issue rather obvious (it's not hard to find or understand).
>
> [I'd provide a patch for this but we have a number of patches to this
> particular area of source that overlap.  Others are of a bit more
> controversial nature and I have not kept them separate.]
>
> --
> Jess Holle
>
>
> Rui Pedro wrote:
>
>> Hi!
>>
>> I'm implementing one tomcat cluster solution (tomcat 5.5-20). One of the
>> things that I need to know is when the session jumps from one node to the
>> other.
>> I read that I can use the HttpSessionActivationListener listener to detect
>> that type of occurence. To do so, I put one object in the users session
>> that
>> implements the HttpSessionActivationListener interface, the problem is
>> that
>> when I kill one of the clusters node the methods sessionDidActivate an
>> sessionWillPassivate never occurr ...
>>
>>
>> Is HttpSessionActivationListener supported by tomcat?
>> Can you help me?
>>
>>
>>
>> Thanks in advance,
>> Rui Pereira
>>
>>
>>
>
>
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