Oracle9iAS Containers for J2EE Support for JavaServer Pages Developer's Guide Release 2 (9.0.3) Part Number A97679-01 |
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This chapter covers basic issues in your JSP environment, including key support files, key OC4J configuration files, and configuration of the JSP container. It also discusses initial considerations such as application root functionality, classpath functionality, security issues, and file naming conventions.
Before getting started, it is assumed that you can do the following on your system:
The following topics are covered here:
This section discusses some initial considerations you should be aware of before you begin coding or using JSP pages:
The servlet 2.2 and 2.3 specifications provide for each Web application to have its own servlet context. Each servlet context is associated with a directory path in the server file system, which is the base path for modules of the Web application. This is the application root. Each Web application has its own application root. For a Web application in a servlet 2.2 or 2.3 environment, servlets, JSP pages, and static files such as HTML files are all based out of this application root. (By contrast, in servlet 2.0 environments the application root for servlets and JSP pages is distinct from the doc root for static files.)
Note that a servlet URL has the following general form:
http://host[:port]/contextpath/servletpath
When a servlet context is created, a mapping is specified between the application root and the context path portion of a URL. The servlet path is defined in the application web.xml
file. The <servlet>
element within web.xml
associates a servlet class with a servlet name. The <servlet-mapping>
element within web.xml
associates a URL pattern with a named servlet. When a servlet is executed, the servlet container will compare a specified URL pattern with known servlet paths, and pick the servlet path that matches. See the Oracle9iAS Containers for J2EE Servlet Developer's Guide for more information.
For example, consider an application with the application root /home/dir/mybankapp/mybankwebapp
, which is mapped to the context path /mybank
. Further assume the application includes a servlet whose servlet path is loginservlet
. You can invoke this servlet as follows:
http://host[:port]/mybank/loginservlet
The application root directory name itself is not visible to the end-user.
To continue this example for an HTML page in this application, the following URL points to the file /home/dir/mybankapp/mybankwebapp/dir1/abc.html
:
http://host[:port]/mybank/dir1/abc.html
For each servlet environment there is also a default servlet context. For this context, the context path is simply "/
", which is mapped to the default servlet context application root. For example, assume the application root for the default context is /home/dir/defaultapp/defaultwebapp
, and a servlet with the servlet path myservlet
uses the default context. Its URL would be as follows:
http://host[:port]/myservlet
The default context is also used if there is no match for the context path specified in a URL.
Continuing this example for an HTML file, the following URL points to the file /home/dir/defaultapp/defaultwebapp/dir2/def.html
:
http://host[:port]/dir2/def.html
The JSP container uses standard locations on the Web server to look for translated JSP pages, as well as.class
files and .jar
files for any required classes (such as JavaBeans). The container will find files in these locations without any Web server classpath configuration, and has the ability to automatically reload classes in these locations, depending on configuration settings.
The locations for dependency classes are as follows and are relative to the application root:
/WEB-INF/classes/... /WEB-INF/lib
The location for JSP page implementation classes (translated pages) is as follows:
.../_pages/...
The /WEB-INF/classes
directory is for individual Java .class
files. You should store these classes in subdirectories under the classes
directory, according to Java package naming conventions. For example, consider a JavaBean called LottoBean
whose code defines it to be in the oracle.jsp.sample.lottery
package. The JSP container will look for LottoBean.class
in the following location relative to the application root:
/WEB-INF/classes/oracle/jsp/sample/lottery/LottoBean.class
The lib
directory is for .jar
files. Because Java package structure is specified in the .jar
file structure, the .jar
files are all directly in the lib
directory (not in subdirectories). As an example, LottoBean.class
might be stored in lottery.jar
, located as follows relative to the application root:
/WEB-INF/lib/lottery.jar
The _pages
directory is under the J2EE home directory in OC4J. In Oracle9iAS, OC4J directory paths are configurable; in OC4J standalone, by default it would be as follows:
[Oracle_Home]/j2ee/home/application-deployments/app-name/web-app-name/temp
The app-name
is determined through an <application>
element in the OC4J server.xml
file; the web-app-name
, which corresponds to the WAR file name, is mapped to the app-name
through a <web-app>
element in the OC4J default-web-site.xml
file (or other Web site XML file). See the Oracle9iAS Containers for J2EE User's Guide and the Oracle9iAS Containers for J2EE Servlet Developer's Guide for more information.
Generated page implementation classes for translated JSP pages are placed in subdirectories under the _pages
directory according to the locations of the original .jsp
files. See "Generated Files and Locations" for information.
With respect to application security, be aware of the following:
debug_mode
parameter has its default false
setting if you want to suppress the display of the physical file path when nonexistent JSP files are requested. This parameter is described in "JSP Configuration in OC4J".
Beginning with Oracle9iAS release 2 (9.0.3), the OC4J JSP container by default imports the following packages into any JSP page, in accordance with the JSP specification. No page
directive import
settings are required:
javax.servlet.* javax.servlet.http.* javax.servlet.jsp.*
In previous releases, the following packages were also imported by default:
java.io.* java.util.* java.lang.reflect.* java.beans.*
The default list of packages to import was reduced to minimize the chance of a conflict between any unqualified class name you might use and a class by the same name in any of the imported packages.
However, this might result in migration problems for applications you have used with previous versions of OC4J. Such applications might no longer compile successfully. If you need imports beyond the default list, you have two choices:
page
directive import
settings. For more information, see the page
directive under "Directives", and see "Page Directive import Settings Are Cumulative".
For multiple pages, you can accomplish this through global includes functionality. See "Oracle JSP Global Includes".
extra_imports
configuration parameter, or by using the ojspc -extraImports
option for pre-translation. Syntax varies between OC4J configuration parameter settings, JServ configuration parameter settings, and ojspc
option settings, so refer to the following as appropriate:
The file name extension .jsp
for JSP pages is required by the Sun Microsystems Java Servlet Specification, Version 2.3. The servlet 2.3 specification does not, however, distinguish between complete, translatable pages and page fragments, such as files brought in through an include
directive (as described in "Directives").
The JSP 1.2 specification recommends the following:
.jsp
extension for top-level pages--pages that are translatable on their own.
.jsp
for page fragments brought in through include
directives. No particular extension is mandated for such files, but .jspf
or .jsf
is recommended.
This section summarizes JAR and ZIP files that are used by the JSP container or JSP applications. These files are installed on your system and into your classpath with OC4J.
ojsp.jar
--classes for the JSP container
ojsputil.jar
--classes for tag libraries and utilities provided with OC4J
xmlparserv2.jar
--for XML parsing; required for the web.xml
deployment descriptor and any tag library descriptor files and XML-related tag functionality
xsu12.jar
/ xsu111.jar
--for XML functionality on the client (for JDK 1.2.x or higher, or 1.1.x, respectively)
ojdbc14.jar
/ classes12.jar
/ classes111.jar
--for the Oracle JDBC drivers (for JDK 1.4, 1.2 or higher, or 1.1, respectively)
translator.jar
--for the Oracle SQLJ translator
runtime12.jar
/ runtime12ee.jar
/ runtime11.jar
/ runtime.jar
/ runtime-nonoracle.jar
--for the Oracle SQLJ runtime (respectively: for JDK 1.2.x or higher with Oracle9i JDBC, JDK 1.2.x or higher enterprise edition with Oracle9i JDBC, JDK 1.1.x with Oracle9i JDBC, any 1.1.x or higher JDK with any Oracle JDBC version, or any JDK environment with non-Oracle JDBC drivers)
jndi.jar
--for JNDI service for lookup of resources such as JDBC data sources and Enterprise JavaBeans
jta.jar
--for the Java Transaction API
There are also files relating to particular areas, such as particular tag libraries. These include the following:
mail.jar
--for e-mail functionality within applications (standard javax.mail
package)
activation.jar
--Java activation files for e-mail functionality
cache.jar
--for the Oracle9i Application Server Java Object Cache (which is the default back-end repository for the OC4J Web Object Cache)
This section covers the following topics regarding configuration of the JSP environment:
Notes:
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The JSP container is appropriately preconfigured in OC4J. The following settings appear in the OC4J global-web-application.xml
file to map the name of the front-end JSP servlet, and to map the appropriate file name extensions for JSP pages:
<orion-web-app ... > ... <web-app> ... <servlet> <servlet-name>jsp</servlet-name> <servlet-class>oracle.jsp.runtimev2.JspServlet</servlet-class> ... init_params ... </servlet> ... <servlet-mapping> <servlet-name>jsp</servlet-name> <url-pattern>/*.jsp</url-pattern> </servlet-mapping> <servlet-mapping> <servlet-name>jsp</servlet-name> <url-pattern>/*.JSP</url-pattern> </servlet-mapping> <servlet-mapping> <servlet-name>jsp</servlet-name> <url-pattern>/*.sqljsp</url-pattern> </servlet-mapping> <servlet-mapping> <servlet-name>jsp</servlet-name> <url-pattern>/*.SQLJSP</url-pattern> </servlet-mapping> ... </web-app> ... </orion-web-app>
See the Oracle9iAS Containers for J2EE Servlet Developer's Guide for more information about the global-web-application.xml
file.
The JSP front-end servlet in OC4J, oracle.jsp.runtimev2.JspServlet
, supports a number of configuration parameters to control JSP operation. This section describes those parameters. There is a summary table, followed by more complete descriptions, and documentation of how to set them in the OC4J global-web-application.xml
or orion-web.xml
file.
Table 3-1 summarizes the configuration parameters supported by JspServlet
. For each parameter, the table notes any equivalent ojspc
translation options for pages you are pre-translating, and whether the parameter is for runtime or compile-time use.
Notes:
See "The ojspc Pre-Translation Utility" for a description of the |
This section describes the JSP configuration parameters for OC4J in more detail.
(boolean; default: false
)
For OC4J environments, set this parameter to true
to enable Oracle-specific page-scope checking by the JspScopeListener
utility. It is false
by default for performance reasons.
This parameter is not relevant for non-OC4J environments. For JServ, Oracle-specific page-scope checking is always enabled. For other environments, the Oracle-specific implementation is not used and you must use the checkPageScope
custom tag for JspScopeListener
page-scope functionality. See "JspScopeListener for Event-Handling" for a brief overview of this utility. See Oracle9iAS Containers for J2EE JSP Tag Libraries and Utilities Reference for detailed information.
(boolean; default: false
)
Use the default true
setting to print a stack trace whenever a runtime exception occurs. A false
setting disables this feature.
(boolean; default: false
)
During development, set this flag to true
to instruct the JSP translator to generate a line map to the original .jsp
file for debugging. Otherwise, lines will be mapped to the generated page implementation class .java
file.
(boolean; default: false
)
Set this flag to true
to instruct the JSP translator to place generated static content (the Java print commands that output static HTML code) into a Java resource file, instead of into the service method of the generated page implementation class.
The resource file name is based on the JSP page name, with the .res
suffix. With Oracle9iAS release 2, translation of MyPage.jsp
, for example, would create _MyPage.res
in addition to normal output. (The exact implementation might change in future releases.)
The translator places the resource file into the same directory as generated class files.
If there is a lot of static content in a page, this technique will speed translation and may speed execution of the page. For more information, see "Workarounds for Large Static Content in JSP Pages".
(import list; default: null
)
As described in "Default Package Imports", as of Oracle9iAS release 2 (9.0.3), the OC4J JSP container has a smaller default list of packages that are imported into each JSP page. This is in accordance with the JSP specification. You can avoid updating your code, however, by specifying package names or fully qualified class names for any additional imports through the extra_imports
configuration parameter. See "Setting JSP Configuration Parameters in OC4J" for general syntax, and be aware that the names can be either comma-delimited or space-delimited. Either of the following is okay, for example:
<init-param> <param-name>extra_imports</param-name> <param-value>java.util.* java.beans.*</param-value> </init-param>
or:
<init-param> <param-name>extra_imports</param-name> <param-value>java.util.*,java.beans.*</param-value> </init-param>
Note:
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(forgive duplicate directive attributes; default: false
)
Set this boolean to true
to avoid translation errors in JSP 1.2 (or higher) if you have duplicate settings for the same directive attribute within a single JSP translation unit (a JSP page plus anything it includes through include
directives).
The JSP 1.2 specification directs that a JSP container must verify that directive attributes, with the exception of the page
directive import
attribute, are not set more than once each within a single JSP translation unit. See "Duplicate Settings of Page Directive Attributes Are Disallowed" for more information.
The JSP 1.1 specification does not specify such a limitation. OC4J offers the forgive_dup_dir_attr
parameter for backward compatibility.
(compiler executable and options; default: null
)
This parameter is useful during development in any of the following circumstances:
javac
command-line options (although default settings are typically sufficient)
javac
(optionally including command-line options)
Specifying an alternative compiler results in that executable being spawned as a separate process in a separate JVM, instead of within the same JVM as the JSP container. You can fully specify the path for the executable, or specify only the executable and let the JSP container look for it in the system path.
For example, set javaccmd
to the value javac -verbose
to run the compiler in verbose mode.
(mode switch for reloading or recompilation; default: recompile
)
This is a flag to direct the mode of operation of the JSP container, particularly for automatic recompilation of JSP pages and reloading of Java classes that have changed.
Here are the supported settings:
justrun
--The runtime dispatcher will not perform any timestamp checking, so there is no recompilation of JSP pages or reloading of Java classes. This mode is the most efficient mode for a deployment environment, where code will not change.
reload
--The dispatcher will check if any classes have been modified since loading, including translated JSP pages, JavaBeans invoked from pages, and any other dependency classes.
recompile
(default)--The dispatcher will check the timestamp of the JSP page, retranslate it and reload it if has been modified since loading, and execute all reload
functionality as well.
(disabling of XML validation of TLD files; default: false
)
Set this to true
to disable XML validation of the tag library descriptor (TLD) files of the application. By default, validation of TLD files is performed.
See "Overview of TLD File Validation and Features" for related information.
(backward compatibility for include
; default: false
)
This is for backward compatibility with Oracle JSP versions prior to Oracle9iAS release 2, for functionality of include
directives. If set to true
, page locations in nested include
directives are relative to the top-level page. If set to false
, page locations are relative to the immediate parent page. This complies with the JSP 1.2 specification.
(jsp_precompile
checking; default: false
)
Set this to true
to check the HTTP request for a standard jsp_precompile
setting. If precompile_check
is true
and the request enables jsp_precompile
, then the JSP page will be pre-translated only, without execution. Setting precompile_check
to false
improves performance and ignores any jsp_precompile
setting in the request.
For more information about jsp_precompile
, see "Standard JSP Pre-Translation without Execution", and the Sun Microsystems JavaServer Pages Specification, Version 1.2.
(flag for size reduction of custom tag code; default: false
)
The Oracle JSP implementation reduces the size of generated code for custom tag usage, but setting reduce_tag_code
to true
results in even further size reduction. There may be performance consequences regarding tag handler reuse, however. See "Tag Handler Code Generation".
(flag for request-time introspection; default: false
)
A true
setting enables request-time JavaBean introspection whenever compile-time introspection is not possible. When compile-time introspection is possible and succeeds, this parameter is ignored and there is no request-time introspection.
As an example of a scenario for use of request-time introspection, assume a tag handler returns a generic java.lang.Object
instance in VariableInfo
of the tag-extra-info class during translation and compilation, but actually generates more specific objects during request-time (runtime). In this case, if req_time_introspection
is enabled, the JSP container will delay introspection until request-time. (See "Scripting Variables, Declarations, and Tag-Extra-Info Classes" for information about use of VariableInfo
.)
(SQLJ translator executable and options; default: null
)
This parameter is useful during development in any of the following circumstances:
Specifying a SQLJ translator executable results in its being spawned as a separate process in a separate JVM, instead of within the same JVM as the JSP container.
You can fully specify the path for the executable, or specify only the executable and let the JSP container look for it in the system path.
For example, to run SQLJ with online semantics checking as user scott/tiger
, and to generate ISO standard SQLJ code, set sqljcmd
to the following value:
sqljcmd=sqlj -user=scott/tiger -codegen=iso
Appropriate SQLJ libraries must be in the classpath, and any front-end utility (such as sqlj
in the example) must be in the system path. For Oracle SQLJ, the translator
ZIP or JAR file and the appropriate SQLJ runtime ZIP or JAR file must be in the classpath. See "Key Support Files Provided with OC4J".
(flag to generate static text as characters; default: false
)
A true
setting directs the JSP translator to generate static text in JSP pages as characters, instead of bytes. Enable this flag if your application requires the ability to change the character encoding dynamically during runtime, such as in the following example:
<% response.setContentType("text/html; charset=UTF-8"); %>
(See "Dynamic Content Type Settings" for related information.)
The false
default setting improves performance in outputting static text blocks.
(setting for tag handler reuse; default: runtime
)
Use this parameter to specify the mode of tag handler reuse (tag handler instance pooling), as follows:
none
to disable tag handler reuse. (You can override this in any particular JSP page by setting the JSP page context attribute oracle.jsp.tags.reuse
to a value of true
.)
runtime
to enable the runtime model of tag handler reuse. (You can override this in any particular JSP page by setting the JSP page context attribute oracle.jsp.tags.reuse
to a value of false
.)
compiletime
to enable the compile-time model of tag handler reuse in its basic mode.
compiletime_with_release
to enable the compile-time model of tag handler reuse in its "with release" mode, where the tag handler release()
method is called between usages of a given tag handler within a given page.
See "Disabling or Enabling Runtime or Compile-Time Tag Handler Reuse" for more information about tag handler reuse.
(location for shared tag libraries; default: see description)
This specifies a directory where tag library JAR files can be placed for sharing across multiple Web applications. The default value is the following:
j2ee/home/jsp/lib/taglib/
This is under [Oracle_Home]
if [Oracle_Home]
is defined. If [Oracle_Home]
is not defined, then this default location is under the current directory.
Important: Additional steps are also required for tag library sharing to work. See "Oracle Extension for Tag Library Sharing". |
(XML validation of web.xml
file; default: false
)
Set this to true
to enable XML validation of the application web.xml
file. Because the Tomcat reference implementation does not perform XML validation, xml_validate
is false
by default.
In an OC4J standalone development environment, you can set JSP configuration parameters in global-web-application.xml
, web.xml
, or orion-web.xml
, inside the <servlet>
element for the JSP front-end servlet. In the portion of global-web-application.xml
shown in "JSP Container Setup", the settings would go where the init_params
place holder appears. (In an Oracle9iAS production environment, you should use Enterprise Manager for configuration. See "JSP Configuration in Oracle Enterprise Manager".)
The following example lists <servlet>
element and subelement settings for the JSP front-end servlet. This sample enables the precompile_check
flag, sets the main_mode
flag to run without checking timestamps, and runs the Java compiler in verbose mode.
<servlet> <servlet-name>jsp</servlet-name> <servlet-class>oracle.jsp.runtimev2.JspServlet</servlet-class> <init-param> <param-name>precompile_check</param-name> <param-value>true</param-value> </init-param> <init-param> <param-name>main_mode</param-name> <param-value>justrun</param-value> </init-param> <init-param> <param-name>javaccmd</param-name> <param-value>javac -verbose</param-value> </init-param> </servlet>
You can override any settings in the global-web-application.xml
file with settings in the web.xml
file for a particular application, and you can make deployment-specific overrides of web.xml
settings through settings in orion-web.xml
. For information about global-web-application.xml
and orion-web.xml
, see the Oracle9iAS Containers for J2EE Servlet Developer's Guide.
There are also OC4J configuration parameters--as opposed to parameters for the JspServlet
front-end servlet of the JSP container--which affect JSP pages. This section documents JSP-related attributes of the root <orion-web-app>
element of the OC4J global-web-application.xml
file or orion-web.xml
file. For more information about these files, see the Oracle9iAS Containers for J2EE Servlet Developer's Guide.
The following <orion-web-app>
attributes, in the OC4J global-web-application.xml
file or orion-web.xml
file, affect JSP performance and functionality:
jsp-print-null
: Set this flag to "false
" to print an empty string instead of the string "null" for null output from a JSP page. The default is "true
".
jsp-timeout
: Specify an integer value, in seconds, after which any JSP page will be removed from memory if it has not been requested. This frees up resources in situations where some pages are called infrequently. The default value is 0, for no timeout.
The
Note:
autoreload-jsp-pages
and autoreload-jsp-beans
attributes of the <orion-web-app>
element are not supported by the OC4J JSP container in Oracle9iAS release 2. You can use the JSP main_mode
configuration parameter, described in "JSP Configuration Parameter Descriptions", for equivalent functionality.
To set configuration values that would apply to all applications in an OC4J instance, use the <orion-web-app>
element of the OC4J global-web-application.xml
file. To set configuration values for a particular application deployment, overriding settings in global-web-application.xml
, use the <orion-web-app>
element of the deployment-specific orion-web.xml
file.
Here is an example:
<orion-web-app ... jsp-print-null="false" ... > ... </orion-web-app>
Note that the <orion-web-app>
element has numerous attributes and subelements. For a complete discussion, see the Oracle9iAS Containers for J2EE Servlet Developer's Guide.
Note:
This discussion assumes an OC4J standalone development environment. In an Oracle9iAS production environment, you generally must use Enterprise Manager for configuration. However, as of Oracle9iAS release 2 (9.0.3), |
Be aware of the following key configuration files in the OC4J environment.
Global files for all OC4J applications, in the OC4J configuration files directory:
server.xml
--This has an overall <application-server>
element, with an <application>
subelement for each J2EE application. Each <application>
subelement specifies the name of the application and the name and location of its EAR deployment file. The <application-server>
element specifies the name of the general application source directory, where EAR files are placed for deployment and extracted, and the application deployment directory, where OC4J-specific configuration files are generated. Additionally, there is a <web-site>
element for the default Web site, and you can add a <web-site>
element for each additional Web site you want to have on the server.
default-web-site.xml
(or http-web-site.xml
for OC4J standalone, or other Web site XML file as applicable)--This includes a <web-app>
element for each Web application for the default Web site, mapping the application name to the "Web application name". The Web application name corresponds to the WAR deployment file name. Additional Web site XML files, as specified for additional Web sites in the server.xml
file, have the same functionality.
global-web-application.xml
--This is a global configuration file for OC4J Web applications. It establishes default configurations and includes setup and configuration of the JSP front-end servlet, JspServlet
.
application.xml
--This is another parent configuration file for OC4J applications.
data-sources.xml
--This specifies data sources for database connections.
(In Oracle9iAS, OC4J directory paths are configurable; in OC4J standalone, the configuration files directory is j2ee/home/config
by default.)
In addition to the global application.xml
file, there is a standard application.xml
file, and optionally an orion-application.xml
file, for each application. These files are in the application EAR file.
Also, in an application WAR file, which is inside the application EAR file, there is a standard web.xml
file and optionally an orion-web.xml
file. These are for application-specific and deployment-specific configuration settings, overriding global-web-application.xml
settings or providing additional settings as appropriate. The global-web-application.xml
and orion-web.xml
files support the same elements, which is a superset of those supported by the web.xml
file.
If the orion-application.xml
and orion-web.xml
files are not present in the archive files, they will be generated during initial deployment, according to settings in the global-web-application.xml
file.
For additional information, see "Overview of EAR/WAR Deployment". For complete information about the use of these files, see the Oracle9iAS Containers for J2EE User's Guide and the Oracle9iAS Containers for J2EE Servlet Developer's Guide.
In an Oracle9iAS environment, such as for production deployment, you should perform most OC4J configuration through Enterprise Manager. This includes configuration of the front-end JSP servlet for the OC4J JSP container. The following graphic shows the Enterprise Manager JSP Properties Page for an OC4J instance.
(For information beyond what is described here about using Enterprise Manager to configure OC4J, see the Oracle9iAS Containers for J2EE User's Guide. For general information about using Enterprise Manager to manage your Oracle9iAS environment, see the Oracle9i Application Server Administrator's Guide.)
You can drill down to this page as follows:
Table 3-2 shows the correspondence between JSP container properties shown in the Enterprise Manager JSP Properties Page, and configuration parameters of the JSP container front-end servlet as described in "JSP Configuration Parameters". See that section for the meanings of the settings.
Possible settings are shown with defaults in bold. Note that Enterprise Manager defaults are appropriate for a production environment, so are not necessarily the same as defaults otherwise, which are appropriate for a development environment.
For Enterprise Manager in Oracle9iAS release 2 (9.0.3), the following configuration parameters are not yet supported through the JSP Properties Page:
check_page_scope
, extra_imports
, forgive_dup_dir_attr
, no_tld_xml_validate
, old_include_from_top
, req_time_introspection
, and well_known_taglib_loc
.
<orion-web-app>
element in global-web-application.xml
or orion-web.xml
: jsp-print-null
and jsp-timeout
.
Instead, you must update them in orion-web.xml
or other appropriate XML file (such as web.xml
or global-web-application.xml
). Edit orion-web.xml
or global-web-application.xml
through the Enterprise Manager Web Module Advanced Properties Page, as described in the Oracle9iAS Containers for J2EE Servlet Developer's Guide. Also see "Setting JSP Configuration Parameters in OC4J" and "Setting JSP-Related OC4J Configuration Parameters" for related information.
Note:
If you update an XML configuration file manually in Oracle9iAS, you must then run the |
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