But in my case, the client would like to update its software and I have about 200 clients with different databases on different locations. If I understood well your solution, I would generate 200 hundred wars , one for each client? PS: I don't deploy the application on internet, only on my customer's intranet

Will Glass-Husain escreveu:
I generate site-specific war files.  I used to do this with an ant
script but now I use Maven.  With ant you can specify system variables
with the -D option (I do -Ddeploy=sitename) and with Maven you can
choose profiles with the -P option.  I keep setting files for each
server in source control and my build script downloads those and
copies them into the war.

WILL

On Thu, Jul 9, 2009 at 3:11 PM, carlson weber filho<cwe...@cdm.com.br> wrote:
I always had a question that no one had answered me in a satisfactory
manner. We are a comapny that develop desktop applications, using Delphi,
and now we are migrating some products to Tomcat, using Wicket. When I want
to update our software on a client, we replace the executable and run some
scripts on the database automatically, all the settings like report
templates, connection settings, stays the same on the software folder. How
would I do this on a Java-ish way? When I generate the .WAR file and put it
on the tomcat webapps folder, it will overwrite all my app files, including
settings and etc. What is the best way to do this?

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