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Hongqing Liufd5ee812014-05-10 16:32:51 +08001<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
2<!--
3 Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
4 contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
5 this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
6 The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
7 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
8 the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
9
10 http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
11
12 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
13 distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
14 WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
15 See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
16 limitations under the License.
17-->
18
刘洪青6266f992017-05-15 21:21:03 +080019<!DOCTYPE web-app
20 PUBLIC "-//Sun Microsystems, Inc.//DTD Web Application 2.3//EN"
Hongqing Liufd5ee812014-05-10 16:32:51 +080021 "http://java.sun.com/dtd/web-app_2_3.dtd">
22
23<web-app>
24
25
26 <!-- General description of your web application -->
27
28 <display-name>My Web Application</display-name>
29 <description>
30 This is version X.X of an application to perform
31 a wild and wonderful task, based on servlets and
32 JSP pages. It was written by Dave Developer
33 (dave@mycompany.com), who should be contacted for
34 more information.
35 </description>
36
37
38 <!-- Context initialization parameters that define shared
39 String constants used within your application, which
40 can be customized by the system administrator who is
41 installing your application. The values actually
42 assigned to these parameters can be retrieved in a
43 servlet or JSP page by calling:
44
45 String value =
46 getServletContext().getInitParameter("name");
47
48 where "name" matches the <param-name> element of
49 one of these initialization parameters.
50
51 You can define any number of context initialization
52 parameters, including zero.
53 -->
54
55 <context-param>
56 <param-name>webmaster</param-name>
57 <param-value>myaddress@mycompany.com</param-value>
58 <description>
59 The EMAIL address of the administrator to whom questions
60 and comments about this application should be addressed.
61 </description>
62 </context-param>
63
64
65 <!-- Servlet definitions for the servlets that make up
66 your web application, including initialization
67 parameters. With Tomcat, you can also send requests
68 to servlets not listed here with a request like this:
69
70 http://localhost:8080/{context-path}/servlet/{classname}
71
72 but this usage is not guaranteed to be portable. It also
73 makes relative references to images and other resources
74 required by your servlet more complicated, so defining
75 all of your servlets (and defining a mapping to them with
76 a servlet-mapping element) is recommended.
77
78 Servlet initialization parameters can be retrieved in a
79 servlet or JSP page by calling:
80
81 String value =
82 getServletConfig().getInitParameter("name");
83
84 where "name" matches the <param-name> element of
85 one of these initialization parameters.
86
87 You can define any number of servlets, including zero.
88 -->
89
90 <servlet>
91 <servlet-name>controller</servlet-name>
92 <description>
93 This servlet plays the "controller" role in the MVC architecture
94 used in this application. It is generally mapped to the ".do"
95 filename extension with a servlet-mapping element, and all form
96 submits in the app will be submitted to a request URI like
97 "saveCustomer.do", which will therefore be mapped to this servlet.
98
99 The initialization parameter names for this servlet are the
100 "servlet path" that will be received by this servlet (after the
101 filename extension is removed). The corresponding value is the
102 name of the action class that will be used to process this request.
103 </description>
104 <servlet-class>com.mycompany.mypackage.ControllerServlet</servlet-class>
105 <init-param>
106 <param-name>listOrders</param-name>
107 <param-value>com.mycompany.myactions.ListOrdersAction</param-value>
108 </init-param>
109 <init-param>
110 <param-name>saveCustomer</param-name>
111 <param-value>com.mycompany.myactions.SaveCustomerAction</param-value>
112 </init-param>
113 <!-- Load this servlet at server startup time -->
114 <load-on-startup>5</load-on-startup>
115 </servlet>
116
117 <servlet>
118 <servlet-name>graph</servlet-name>
119 <description>
120 This servlet produces GIF images that are dynamically generated
121 graphs, based on the input parameters included on the request.
122 It is generally mapped to a specific request URI like "/graph".
123 </description>
124 </servlet>
125
126
127 <!-- Define mappings that are used by the servlet container to
128 translate a particular request URI (context-relative) to a
129 particular servlet. The examples below correspond to the
130 servlet descriptions above. Thus, a request URI like:
131
132 http://localhost:8080/{contextpath}/graph
133
134 will be mapped to the "graph" servlet, while a request like:
135
136 http://localhost:8080/{contextpath}/saveCustomer.do
137
138 will be mapped to the "controller" servlet.
139
140 You may define any number of servlet mappings, including zero.
141 It is also legal to define more than one mapping for the same
142 servlet, if you wish to.
143 -->
144
145 <servlet-mapping>
146 <servlet-name>controller</servlet-name>
147 <url-pattern>*.do</url-pattern>
148 </servlet-mapping>
149
150 <servlet-mapping>
151 <servlet-name>graph</servlet-name>
152 <url-pattern>/graph</url-pattern>
153 </servlet-mapping>
154
155
156 <!-- Define the default session timeout for your application,
157 in minutes. From a servlet or JSP page, you can modify
158 the timeout for a particular session dynamically by using
159 HttpSession.getMaxInactiveInterval(). -->
160
161 <session-config>
162 <session-timeout>30</session-timeout> <!-- 30 minutes -->
163 </session-config>
164
165
166</web-app>