Dear Mon Cab,

Yes.  That fixed it.  Thankyou Kees.

Glad to help.

For some reason, the issue was with my  WinSCP client.

When I edited a jsp and then looked at the jsp file timestamp on the remote machine with WinSCP it showed the timestamp as my the current time (local and remote system times are the same). However, when I looked up the timestamp of the same edited JSP on the remote box it was stamped an hour ealier than the current time.

I reconfigured WinSCP not to preserve the timestamp, and that fixed the issue. The wierd thing is that now WinSCP is showing the remote JSP files as being timestamped an hour later. Since the system time on my local machine is correct, I'm a bit confused as to what WinSCP is doing here.

I have yet to meet a developer who truly understands working with time zones and who can write code that deals with multiple time zones correctly. I have met loads of developers who think they can, though. ;-)

Also, NTP is your friend.
--
Kees Jan

http://java-monitor.com/
kjkos...@kjkoster.org
06-51838192

Human beings make life so interesting. Do you know that in a universe so full of wonders, they have managed to invent boredom. Quite astonishing... -- Terry Pratchett


---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tomcat.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tomcat.apache.org

Reply via email to