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Created by Dr. Xi on April 19, 2012 10:10:08
Last update: April 19, 2012 10:11:06
The default servlet for Tomcat is declared in $CATALINA_HOME/conf/web.xml :
<servlet>
<servlet-name>default</servle...
Therefore, static content is rendered by the default configuration unless you override it with your own definitions.
If you want to allow directory listing, just change the listing parameter to true :
<init-param>
<param-name>listings</para...
Change the welcome-file-list to display a default page in lieu of a directory listing:
<welcome-file-list>
<welcome-file>home.xhtml</...
Welcome pages are defined at the Web application level.
Created by Fang on March 30, 2012 10:23:21
Last update: March 30, 2012 10:23:21
These bean types are essential for the Spring MVC framework. I copied them here from the Spring Documentation for quick reference. Bean type Explanation HandlerMapping Maps incoming requests to handlers and a list of pre- and post-processors (handler interceptors) based on some criteria the details of which vary by HandlerMapping implementation. The most popular implementation supports annotated controllers but other implementations exists as well. HandlerAdapter Helps the DispatcherServlet to invoke a handler mapped to a request regardless of the handler is actually invoked. For example, invoking an annotated controller requires resolving various annotations. Thus the main purpose of a HandlerAdapter is to shield the DispatcherServlet from such details. HandlerExceptionResolver Maps exceptions to views also allowing for more complex exception handling code. ViewResolver Resolves logical String-based...
Created by venky on March 05, 2012 13:36:41
Last update: March 05, 2012 13:36:41
Thanks Dr.Xi, I was having a tough time changing the deployment context path of my web-app using the
so-called context.xml file under /META-INF, it dint work (tomcat documentation at http://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-6.0-doc/config/context.html , seemed pretty sure it would :()
But I have one question, as changing server.xml is too instrusive for every web-app you build, is there any other way of pushing this configuration to one of the application specific files ?
thanks,
Venky
Created by Fang on February 23, 2012 14:25:57
Last update: March 01, 2012 13:53:59
Some example snippets for Spring message configuration and usage.
To configure a message source in Spring context (basename=messages):
<bean id="messageSource"
class="org.springf...
Locale change interceptor can also be setup with:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<beans x...
The messages file should be named messages.properties (or messages_en.properties , etc.) and located on CLASSPATH , for example: WEB-INF/classes .
To use a message resource in JSP:
<%@ taglib prefix="spring" uri="http://www.springf...
Created by James on February 02, 2012 16:00:15
Last update: February 02, 2012 16:00:15
Video for Everybody seems to be a generic way to embed video in a web page, even without flash. This code snippet comes from that site.
<!-- first try HTML5 playback: if serving as XML, ...
Created by Dr. Xi on February 01, 2012 12:55:28
Last update: February 01, 2012 12:55:28
You can define environment variables in the Tomcat context.xml file like this:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<Context...
which is equivalent to the following in web.xml :
<env-entry>
<env-entry-name>varName</env-entr...
In Java code, the variable can be looked up like this:
// import javax.naming.Context;
// import javax...
Created by Fang on January 10, 2010 00:19:30
Last update: January 31, 2012 16:28:42
Maven is a powerful yet complex tool. When I started learning Maven, the first obstacle was, of course, its complexity. The second, was the lack of documentation that can get me off the ground quickly. This tutorial is an attempt to create a pragmatic guide that aims to get you familiar with Maven in the quickest way possible. The main theme is to get you on some hands on experience to start out and lead you through the creation of a simple Java EE project as quickly as possible. Instead of trying to give you a good read, I try to get you on the journey right away. The topics are roughly ordered by the logical sequence but you can jump around in any way...
Created by Fang on January 31, 2012 13:57:56
Last update: January 31, 2012 15:04:29
These are the minimum steps to configure Spring MVC in web.xml :
Bootstrap Spring MVC by registering ContextLoaderListener :
<listener>
<listener-class>
org.springfra...
Register the DispatcherServlet :
<servlet>
<servlet-name>spring</servlet-name>
...
Add servlet-mapping :
<servlet-mapping>
<servlet-name>spring</servle...
Configure DispatcherServlet with WEB-INF/spring-servlet.xml , which configures WebApplicationContext specific to this servlet.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<beans x...
Optionally, use context-param in web.xml to configure the global WebApplicationContext :
<!-- XmlWebApplicationContext is the default, so t...
If you omit this section, you have to create file WEB-INF/applicationContext.xml , even if it's empty.
This is the full web.xml :
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<web-app...
Created by Dr. Xi on January 20, 2012 15:05:14
Last update: January 20, 2012 15:06:15
Tomcat documentation states:
If the web application is packaged as a WAR then /META-INF/context.xml will be copied to $CATALINA_BASE/conf/ [enginename] / [hostname] / and renamed to match the application's context path .
For a Maven project, put context.xml in src/main/webapp/META-INF/ .
Created by Fang on January 04, 2012 09:54:05
Last update: January 04, 2012 09:54:05
There are two ways to validate a form with JSF: jsf validation on the page with <f:validate...> tags (for example: <f:validateLength> , <f:validateRegex> , etc.), or JSR303 bean validation. This note is about how to customize messages for JSR303 bean validation. The validation message is specified in the message attribute for each validation annotation type. The mesage attribute is not a literal string, but a string that is interpolated in various ways. For example, the default validation message for AssertFalse is {javax.validation.constraints.AssertFalse.message} , which is replaced with the corresponding string in ValidationMessages.properties (or ValidationMessages_tr.properties , ValidationMessages_es.properties , depending on the locale). This is the contents of ValidationMessages.properties in the hibernate validator reference implementation:
javax.validation.constraints.AssertFalse.message =... To customize the messages, just provide the new value in...