January 16, 2007
I used to use the sysdeo Tomcat plugin in Eclipse for my development, but someone suggested that I take a look at the Eclipse Web Tools project, which is an application server feature for Eclipse. It seems like it is the mechanism through which Eclipse is planning to support application servers in the future, so I thought it would be worth a look.
However, once I got it installed, I ran into a problem that is mentioned a few times on various sites on the web, but with few solutions. When I tried to run the application server, I got the following message:
Due to new licensing guidelines mandated by the Apache Software Foundation Board of Directors, a JMX implementation can no longer be distributed with the Apache Tomcat binaries. As a result, you must download a JMX 1.2 implementation (such as the Sun Reference Implementation) and copy the JAR containing the API and implementation of the JMX specification to: ${catalina.home}/bin/jmx.jar
This article describes the workaround that I discovered to make Tomcat 5.0 work correctly inside Eclipse.
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eclipse, java, linux, tomcat |
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Posted by edwardaux
January 13, 2007
One of the challenges on the web at the moment is that many sites want you to register a “free” userid just to do the most mundane thing (such as downloading a file, viewing a picture, etc). While I don’t have a problem with that requirement in general, I am often quite sceptical about what they plan to do with my userid.
There is a common technique that many people use where they create a site-specific version of their email address (I believed it is often called “plussed email addressing”). For example, let’s say that my actual address is edwardaux@mydomain.com and I wanted to signup to flickr, I could
create an email address called edwardaux-flickr@mydomain.com and use that (and tell my mail server to forward all email to that address to my real edwardaux@mydomain.com address). The nice thing about this is that if flickr is naughty (not that I am suggesting they are) and sells/gives my email address to spammers, I can immediately determine that by looking at who the email was addressed to.
The problem with this approach is that I have to go into my mail server ahead of time and manually create each site-specific email address. That is a bit of a hassle, and I am sure that I can get away with a simpler approach.
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linux, qmail, vpopmail |
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Posted by edwardaux
January 7, 2007
I was looking at re-skinning a sporting team website that I had recently created, and really liked the look of the new rounded corners that grace so many websites. There are two main techniques that are used to achieve that look:
- Having a number of 1×1 pixel divs that shape the corners
- Having some rounded corner images
I don’t really like the first technique because it seems so inefficient (not to mention that it reminds me of the 1×1-pixel fillers of the 90’s), and the second wasn’t able to be used for my purposes because each team on my website can pick their own colour scheme from the full 24-bit RGB colour space (and I didn’t want to have to create 16777216 different corner combinations). So, what to do?
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css, java, png |
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Posted by edwardaux