Links Top Level Elements Connectors Containers Nested Components | Introduction |
The Context element represents a web
application, which is run within a particular virtual host.
Each web application is based on a Web Application Archive
(WAR) file, or a corresponding directory containing the corresponding
unpacked contents, as described in the Servlet Specification (version
2.2 or later). For more information about web application archives,
you can download the
Servlet
Specification, and review the Tomcat
Application Developer's Guide.
The web application used to process each HTTP request is selected
by Catalina based on matching the longest possible prefix of the
Request URI against the context path of each defined Context.
Once selected, that Context will select an appropriate servlet to
process the incoming request, according to the servlet mappings defined
in the web application deployment descriptor file (which MUST
be located at /WEB-INF/web.xml within the web app's
directory hierarchy).
You may define as many Context elements as you
wish. Each such Context MUST have a unique context path. In
addition, a Context must be present with a context path equal to
a zero-length string. This Context becomes the default
web application for this virtual host, and is used to process all
requests that do not match any other Context's context path.
For Tomcat 5, unlike Tomcat 4.x, it is NOT recommended to place
<Context> elements directly in the server.xml file. This
is because it makes modifing the Context configuration
more invasive since the main conf/server.xml file cannot be
reloaded without restarting Tomcat.
Context elements may be explicitly defined:
- in the
$CATALINA_HOME/conf/context.xml file:
the Context element information will be loaded by all webapps
- in the
$CATALINA_HOME/conf/[enginename]/[hostname]/context.xml.default
file: the Context element information will be loaded by all webapps of that
host
- in individual files (with a ".xml" extension) in the
$CATALINA_HOME/conf/[enginename]/[hostname]/ directory.
The name of the file (less the .xml) extension will be used as the
context path. Multi-level context paths may be defined using #, e.g.
context#path.xml . The default web application may be defined
by using a file called ROOT.xml .
- if the previous file was not found for this application, in an individual
file at
/META-INF/context.xml inside the application files
- inside a Host element in the main
conf/server.xml
In addition to explicitly specified Context elements, there are
several techniques by which Context elements can be created automatically
for you. See
Automatic Application Deployment and
User Web Applications
for more information.
The description below uses the variable name $CATALINA_HOME
to refer to the directory into which you have installed Tomcat 5,
and is the base directory against which most relative paths are
resolved. However, if you have configured Tomcat 5 for multiple
instances by setting a CATALINA_BASE directory, you should use
$CATALINA_BASE instead of $CATALINA_HOME for each of these
references.
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Attributes |
Common Attributes |
All implementations of Context
support the following attributes:
Attribute | Description |
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backgroundProcessorDelay |
This value represents the delay in seconds between the
invocation of the backgroundProcess method on this context and
its child containers, including all wrappers.
Child containers will not be invoked if their delay value is not
negative (which would mean they are using their own processing
thread). Setting this to a positive value will cause
a thread to be spawn. After waiting the specified amount of time,
the thread will invoke the backgroundProcess method on this host
and all its child containers. A context will use background
processing to perform session expiration and class monitoring for
reloading. If not specified, the default value for this attribute is
-1, which means the context will rely on the background processing
thread of its parent host.
| className |
Java class name of the implementation to use. This class must
implement the org.apache.catalina.Context interface.
If not specified, the standard value (defined below) will be used.
| cookies |
Set to true if you want cookies to be used for
session identifier communication if supported by the client (this
is the default). Set to false if you want to disable
the use of cookies for session identifier communication, and rely
only on URL rewriting by the application.
| crossContext |
Set to true if you want calls within this application
to ServletContext.getContext() to successfully return a
request dispatcher for other web applications running on this virtual
host. Set to false (the default) in security
conscious environments, to make getContext() always
return null .
| docBase |
The Document Base (also known as the Context
Root) directory for this web application, or the pathname
to the web application archive file (if this web application is
being executed directly from the WAR file). You may specify
an absolute pathname for this directory or WAR file, or a pathname
that is relative to the appBase directory of the
owning Host.
If a symbolic link is used for docBase then changes to the
symbolic link will only be effective after a Tomcat restart or
by undeploying and redeploying the conext. A context reload is not
sufficient.
Do not choose a docBase that starts with your Host's appBase string.
The default appBase is "webapps" so do not choose a docBase like
"webapps-foo." Doing so will lead to deployment errors: see
Bugzilla for details.
The value of this field must not be set when the Context is
configured using a META-INF/context.xml file as it will be
inferred by the automatic deployment process.
| override |
Set to true to have explicit settings in this
Context element override any corresponding settings in the
default settings associated with the owning
Host. The default is false .
| privileged |
Set to true to allow this context to use container
servlets, like the manager servlet. Use of the privileged
attribute will change the context's parent class loader to be the
Catalina class loader rather than the Shared class
loader.
| path |
The context path of this web application, which is
matched against the beginning of each request URI to select the
appropriate web application for processing. All of the context paths
within a particular Host must be unique.
If you specify a context path of an empty string (""), you are
defining the default web application for this Host, which
will process all requests not assigned to other Contexts.
The value of this field must not be set except when statically
defining a Context in server.xml, as it will be inferred from the
filenames used for either the .xml context file or the docBase.
| reloadable |
Set to true if you want Catalina to monitor classes in
/WEB-INF/classes/ and /WEB-INF/lib for
changes, and automatically reload the web application if a change
is detected. This feature is very useful during application
development, but it requires significant runtime overhead and is
not recommended for use on deployed production applications. That's
why the default setting for this attribute is false. You
can use the Manager web
application, however, to trigger reloads of deployed applications
on demand.
| wrapperClass |
Java class name of the org.apache.catalina.Wrapper
implementation class that will be used for servlets managed by this
Context. If not specified, a standard default value will be used.
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Standard Implementation |
The standard implementation of Context is
org.apache.catalina.core.StandardContext.
It supports the following additional attributes (in addition to the
common attributes listed above):
Attribute | Description |
---|
allowLinking |
If the value of this flag is true , symlinks will be
allowed inside the web application, pointing to resources outside the
web application base path. If not specified, the default value
of the flag is false .
NOTE: This flag MUST NOT be set to true on the Windows platform
(or any other OS which does not have a case sensitive filesystem),
as it will disable case sensitivity checks, allowing JSP source code
disclosure, among other security problems.
| antiJARLocking |
If true, the Tomcat classloader will take extra measures to avoid
JAR file locking when resources are accessed inside JARs through URLs.
This will impact startup time of applications, but could prove to be useful
on platforms or configurations where file locking can occur.
If not specified, the default value is false .
| antiResourceLocking |
If true, Tomcat will prevent any file locking.
This will significantly impact startup time of applications,
but allows full webapp hot deploy and undeploy on platforms
or configurations where file locking can occur.
If not specified, the default value is false .
Please note that setting this to true has some side effects,
including the disabling of JSP reloading in a running server: see
Bugzilla 37668.
Please note that setting this flag to true in applications that are
outside the appBase for the Host (the webapps directory
by default) will cause the application to be
deleted on Tomcat shutdown. You probably don't want to
do this, so think twice before setting antiResourceLocking=true on a webapp
that's outside the appBase for its Host.
| cacheMaxSize |
Maximum size of the static resource cache in kilobytes.
If not specified, the default value is 10240
(10 megabytes).
| cacheTTL |
Amount of time in milliseconds between cache entries revalidation.
If not specified, the default value is 5000
(5 seconds).
| cachingAllowed |
If the value of this flag is true , the cache for static
resources will be used. If not specified, the default value
of the flag is true .
| caseSensitive |
If the value of this flag is true , all case sensitivity
checks will be disabled. If not
specified, the default value of the flag is true .
NOTE: This flag MUST NOT be set to false on the Windows platform
(or any other OS which does not have a case sensitive filesystem),
as it will disable case sensitivity checks, allowing JSP source code
disclosure, among other security problems.
| processTlds |
Whether the context should process TLDs on startup. The default
is true. The false setting is intended for special cases
that know in advance TLDs are not part of the webapp.
| swallowOutput |
If the value of this flag is true , the bytes output to
System.out and System.err by the web application will be redirected to
the web application logger. If not specified, the default value
of the flag is false .
| tldNamespaceAware |
If the value of this flag is true , the TLD files
XML validation will be namespace-aware. If you turn this flag on,
you should probably also turn tldValidation on. The
default value for this flag is false , and setting it
to true will incur a performance penalty.
| tldValidation |
If the value of this flag is true , the TLD files
will be XML validated on context startup. The default value for
this flag is false , and setting it to true will incur
a performance penalty.
| unloadDelay |
Amount of ms that the container will wait for servlets to unload.
If not specified, the default value of the flag is 2000
ms.
| unpackWAR |
If true, Tomcat will unpack all compressed web applications before
running them.
If not specified, the default value is true .
| useNaming |
Set to true (the default) to have Catalina enable a
JNDI InitialContext for this web application that is
compatible with Java2 Enterprise Edition (J2EE) platform
conventions.
| workDir |
Pathname to a scratch directory to be provided by this Context
for temporary read-write use by servlets within the associated web
application. This directory will be made visible to servlets in the
web application by a servlet context attribute (of type
java.io.File ) named
javax.servlet.context.tempdir as described in the
Servlet Specification. If not specified, a suitable directory
underneath $CATALINA_HOME/work will be provided.
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Nested Components |
You can nest at most one instance of the following utility components
by nesting a corresponding element inside your Context
element:
- Loader -
Configure the web application class loader that will be used to load
servlet and bean classes for this web application. Normally, the
default configuration of the class loader will be sufficient.
- Manager -
Configure the session manager that will be used to create, destroy,
and persist HTTP sessions for this web application. Normally, the
default configuration of the session manager will be sufficient.
- Realm -
Configure a realm that will allow its
database of users, and their associated roles, to be utilized solely
for this particular web application. If not specified, this web
application will utilize the Realm associated with the owning
Host or Engine.
- Resources -
Configure the resource manager that will be used to access the static
resources associated with this web application. Normally, the
default configuration of the resource manager will be sufficient.
- WatchedResource - The auto deployer will monitor the
specified static resource of the web application for updates, and will
reload the web application if is is updated. The content of this element
must be a string.
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Special Features |
Logging |
A context is associated with the
org.apache.catalina.core.ContainerBase.[enginename].[hostname].[path]
log category. Note that the brackets are actually part of the name, don't omit them.
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Automatic Context Configuration |
If you use the standard Context implementation,
the following configuration steps occur automtically when Catalina
is started, or whenever this web application is reloaded. No special
configuration is required to enable this feature.
- If you have not declared your own Loader
element, a standard web application class loader will be configured.
- If you have not declared your own Manager
element, a standard session manager will be configured.
- If you have not declared your own Resources
element, a standard resources manager will be configured.
- The web application properties listed in
conf/web.xml
will be processed as defaults for this web application. This is used
to establish default mappings (such as mapping the *.jsp
extension to the corresponding JSP servlet), and other standard
features that apply to all web applications.
- The web application properties listed in the
/WEB-INF/web.xml resource for this web application
will be processed (if this resource exists).
- If your web application has specified security constraints that might
require user authentication, an appropriate Authenticator that
implements the login method you have selected will be configured.
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Environment Entries |
You can configure named values that will be made visible to the
web application as environment entry resources, by nesting
<Environment> entries inside this element. For
example, you can create an environment entry like this:
| | | |
<Context ...>
...
<Environment name="maxExemptions" value="10"
type="java.lang.Integer" override="false"/>
...
</Context>
| | | | |
This is equivalent to the inclusion of the following element in the
web application deployment descriptor (/WEB-INF/web.xml ):
| | | |
<env-entry>
<env-entry-name>maxExemptions</param-name>
<env-entry-value>10</env-entry-value>
<env-entry-type>java.lang.Integer</env-entry-type>
</env-entry>
| | | | |
but does not require modification of the deployment descriptor
to customize this value.
The valid attributes for an <Environment> element
are as follows:
Attribute | Description |
---|
description |
Optional, human-readable description of this environment entry.
| name |
The name of the environment entry to be created, relative to the
java:comp/env context.
| override |
Set this to false if you do not want
an <env-entry> for the same environment entry name,
found in the web application deployment descriptor, to override the
value specified here. By default, overrides are allowed.
| type |
The fully qualified Java class name expected by the web application
for this environment entry. Must be one of the legal values for
<env-entry-type> in the web application deployment
descriptor: java.lang.Boolean ,
java.lang.Byte , java.lang.Character ,
java.lang.Double , java.lang.Float ,
java.lang.Integer , java.lang.Long ,
java.lang.Short , or java.lang.String .
| value |
The parameter value that will be presented to the application
when requested from the JNDI context. This value must be convertable
to the Java type defined by the type attribute.
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Resource Links |
This element is used to create a link to a global JNDI resource. Doing
a JNDI lookup on the link name will then return the linked global
resource.
For example, you can create a resource link like this:
| | | |
<Context ...>
...
<ResourceLink name="linkToGlobalResource"
global="simpleValue"
type="java.lang.Integer"
...
</Context>
| | | | |
The valid attributes for a <ResourceLink> element
are as follows:
Attribute | Description |
---|
global |
The name of the linked global resource in the
global JNDI context.
| name |
The name of the resource link to be created, relative to the
java:comp/env context.
| type |
The fully qualified Java class name expected by the web
application when it performs a lookup for this resource link.
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Transaction |
You can declare the characteristics of the UserTransaction
to be returned for JNDI lookup for java:comp/UserTransaction .
You MUST define an object factory class to instantiate
this object as well as the needed resource parameters as attributes of the
Transaction
element, and the properties used to configure that object factory.
The valid attributes for the <Transaction> element
are as follows:
Attribute | Description |
---|
factory |
The class name for the JNDI object factory.
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