Java servlet and JSP cookbook

With literally hundreds of examples and thousands of lines of code, the Java Servlet and JSP Cookbook yields tips and techniques that any Java web developer who uses JavaServer Pages or servlets will use every day, along with full-fledged solutions to significant web application development problem...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Perry, Bruce W. (-)
Formato: Libro electrónico
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Beijing : O'Reilly 2004.
Edición:First edition
Materias:
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull:https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009627338106719
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Table of Contents; Preface; What's in the Book; BEA WebLogic Recipes; Audience; What You Need to Know; Organization; Conventions Used in This Book; Using Code Examples; Comments and Questions; Acknowledgments; Chapter 1. Writing Servlets and JSPs; 1.0 Introduction; 1.1 Writing a Servlet; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 1.2 Writing a JSP; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 1.3 Compiling a Servlet; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 1.4 Packaging Servlets and JSPs; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 1.5 Creating the Deployment Descriptor; Problem; Solution; Discussion
  • See AlsoChapter 2. Deploying Servlets and JSPs; 2.0 Introduction; 2.1 Deploying an Individual Servlet on Tomcat; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 2.2 Using a Context Element in Tomcat's server.xml; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 2.3 Deploying an Individual Servlet onWebLogic; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 2.4 Deploying an Individual JSP on Tomcat; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 2.5 Deploying an Individual JSP on WebLogic; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 2.6 Deploying a Web Application on Tomcat; Problem; Solution; Discussion
  • Using Ant for deploymentSee Also; 2.7 Deploying a Web Application on WebLogic UsingAnt; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 2.8 Using the WebLogicAdministrationConsole; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 2.9 Using WebLogic Builder to Deploy a Web Application; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 2.10 Using the weblogic.Deployer Command-Line Tool; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; Chapter 3. Naming Your Servlets; 3.0 Introduction; 3.1 Mapping a Servlet to a Name in web.xml; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 3.2 Creating More Than One Mapping toaServlet; Problem
  • SolutionDiscussion; See Also; 3.3 Creating a JSP-Type URL for a Servlet; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 3.4 Mapping Static Content to a Servlet; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 3.5 Invoking a Servlet Without a web.xml Mapping; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 3.6 Mapping All Requests Within a Web Application to a Servlet; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 3.7 Mapping Requests to a Controller and PreservingServletMappings; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 3.8 Creating Welcome Files for a Web Application; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also
  • 3.9 Restricting Requests for Certain ServletsProblem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 3.10 Giving Only the Controller Access to Certain Servlets; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; Chapter 4. Using Apache Ant; 4.0 Introduction; 4.1 Obtaining and Setting Up Ant; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 4.2 Using Ant Targets; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 4.3 Including Tomcat JAR files in the Build File Classpath; Problem; Solution; Discussion; See Also; 4.4 Compiling a Servlet with an Ant Build File; Problem; Solution; Discussion
  • Using the command line to declare the target servlet