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The following page has been changed by ChuckCaldarale: http://wiki.apache.org/tomcat/FAQ/Miscellaneous The comment on the change is: Fixing typos. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1. [#Q16 Why do I get java.lang.IllegalStateException ?] 1. [#Q17 How do I make a scheduled event on Tomcat?] 1. [#Q18 What is Element "web-app" does not allow "servlet" here?] - 1. [#Q19 How do open a file for reading in my webapp?] + 1. [#Q19 How do I open a file for reading in my webapp?] 1. [#Q20 Can I run tomcat with the JRE, or do I need the full JDK?] 1. [#Q21 Is tomcat an EJB server? Can I use EJBs with tomcat?] 1. [#Q22 Can I access Tomcat's JNDI provider from outside tomcat?] @@ -31, +31 @@ 1. [#Q25 Help! Even though I run shutdown.sh (or shutdown.bat), Tomcat does not stop!] 1. [#Q26 How do I debug JSP errors in the Admin web application?] 1. [#Q27 What order do webapps start (or How can I change startup order)?] - 1. [#Q28 What's the different between a Valve and Filter? + 1. [#Q28 What's the different between a Valve and Filter?] == Answers == [[Anchor(Q1)]]'''I am unable to compile my JSP!''' @@ -252, +252 @@ 6. If you haven't already, define an admin user in %CATALINA_HOME%\conf\tomcat-users.xml. 7. Start Tomcat, navigate to http://localhost:8080 (or your actual server:port if you have modified the default values), and access the admin web application. It will run slower because Tomcat is now compiling the JSPs on-demand the first time you access them, but should otherwise appear normal. - [[Anchor(Q27)]]'''What order do webapps start (or How can I change startup order)?''' + [[Anchor(Q27)]]'''What order do webapps start (or how can I change startup order)?''' There is no expected startup order. Neither the Servlet spec nor Tomcat define one. You can't rely on the apps starting in any particular order. [[Anchor(Q28)]]'''What's the different between a Valve and Filter?''' - A Filter lives in the webapp space and it's behavior is defined by the Servlet spec. It will work across all Servlet containers. + A Filter lives in the webapp space and its behavior is defined by the Servlet spec. It will work across all Servlet containers. A Valve can do everything a Filter can do but is Tomcat specific, and potentially not portable across Tomcat versions. A Valve can be executed earlier in the lifecycle of a request, access Tomcat internals, and do other "interesting" decorations to your webapp in the chance you cannot change your deployed webapp. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@tomcat.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@tomcat.apache.org