How to customize JBoss AS7 404 page - jboss

I already created a custom 404 page inside my web app deployed in JBoss AS 7.1.
So if my app is at fubar dot com :8080/Myapp and I go to fubar dot com :8080/Myapp/xyzzy, I get the custom error page (defined in the web app's web.xml file).
However, when I go to fubar dot com :8080/xyzzy, JBoss displays the default 404 page which discloses that it's JBoss and which JBoss version.
I need to replace this page in order to hide this information.
Please advise.

If you want to customize the error pages for all the other contexts in JBoss 7, a part of the configuration you have in your Myapp application, you'll also have:
to disable JBoss welcome page: in the file standalone/configuration/standalone.xml (or domain/configuration/domain.xml), set the attribute enable-welcome-root as false (by default it's true)
Then you'll have to deploy a simple war file setting its context-root to '/', and define the error page for this war (using the same method you've used for Myapp). So, the war structure should be similar to (the error.war name is arbitrary):
error.war
|
|- META-INF
|- WEB-INF
| |
| |- web.xml
| |- jboss-web.xml
|
|- error
|- 404.html
where The web.xml file is:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<web-app xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee" xmlns:web="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee/web-app_2_5.xsd" xsi:schemaLocation="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee/web-app_2_5.xsd" id="WebApp_ID" version="2.5">
<display-name>yourcompanyname</display-name>
<error-page>
<error-code>404</error-code>
<location>/error/404.html</location>
</error-page>
</web-app>
And in the jboss-web.xml define the context-root as '/', so it would be:
<jboss-web>
<context-root>/</context-root>
</jboss-web>
The file 404.html is your customized html error page that Jboss will show instead of the 404 default error. That's all, deploy this application in JBoss 7, and you'll have your custom 404 error page when you'll visit fubar dot com:8080/yzyqqa or whatever other root context. Remember that you'll have to keep the error configuration in your Myapp web.xml as well (and in all the other applications you may the deploy in the server).
By the way, have you considered making your app Myapp accessible directly from fubar dot com:8080? Or even better, making the jboss server only accessible from a proxy (for example Apache)?.This way you'd avoid this problem as well.
I hope it helps!

Your problem : You defined the custom error page in web.xml of Myapp. Now if you access any resource with root as Myapp and the request throws a 404 it returns the custom error page.
Now you want that if you access any other root , here xxyzzzz you want to return the custom error page.
Now logically, if you configured a file for other project you cant expect it to be same for other project
Unless
either you configure the same thing for other project , i.e. xxxyzzz as well. i.e. place the 404 config in its web.xml aswell.
or you need to do something at the server scope.
the 1st solution is fairly simple and easy in case there are less number of projects and you not expecting a URL that does not match any of the project.
if you want to go with 1st solution, you know how to do it
Regarding the 2nd approach.
I could find some posts that should be helpful to you
refer these
with jboss as7, the custom of global web.xml is gone.
I could find only one way to configure a global 404 error page. refer here. IT WORKS :D
Custom error pages in Apache for JBoss AS7

I believe you will have to create your own page. JBoss uses Tomcat for serving the web requests.
In Tomcat the way to define your own 404 response page is having the following snippet in your web.xml
(Ref - http://wiki.apache.org/tomcat/FAQ/Miscellaneous#Q6)
<error-page>
<error-code>404</error-code>
<location>/error/404.html</location>
</error-page>
A detailed page on how to do this with struts is created by mykong # http://www.mkyong.com/struts/how-to-handle-404-error-in-struts/.
If you are using any other framework than struts you should have a equivalent.

Related

Eclipse not responding to changes in servlet and HTTP 404 Error [duplicate]

I have an HTML form in a JSP file in my WebContent/jsps folder. I have a servlet class servlet.java in my default package in src folder. In my web.xml it is mapped as /servlet.
I have tried several URLs in action attribute of the HTML form:
<form action="/servlet">
<form action="/servlet.java">
<form action="/src/servlet.java">
<form action="../servlet.java">
But none of those work. They all keep returning a HTTP 404 error like below in Tomcat 6/7/8:
HTTP Status 404 — /servlet
Description: The requested resource (/servlet) is not available.
Or as below in Tomcat 8.5/9:
HTTP Status 404 — Not Found
Message: /servlet
Description: The origin server did not find a current representation for the target resource or is not willing to disclose that one exists
Or as below in Tomcat 10:
HTTP Status 404 — Not Found
Type: Status Report
Message: The requested resource (/servlet) is not available
Description: The origin server did not find a current representation for the target resource or is not willing to disclose that one exists
Why is it not working?
Introduction
This can have a lot of causes which are broken down in following sections:
Put servlet class in a package
Set servlet URL in url-pattern
#WebServlet works only on Servlet 3.0 or newer
javax.servlet.* doesn't work anymore in Servlet 5.0 or newer
Make sure compiled *.class file is present in built WAR
Test the servlet individually without any JSP/HTML page
Use domain-relative URL to reference servlet from HTML
Use straight quotes in HTML attributes
Put servlet class in a package
First of all, put the servlet class in a Java package. You should always put publicly reuseable Java classes in a package, otherwise they are invisible to classes which are in a package, such as the server itself. This way you eliminate potential environment-specific problems. Packageless servlets work only in specific Tomcat+JDK combinations and this should never be relied upon.
In case of a "plain" IDE project, the class needs to be placed in its package structure inside the "Java Sources" folder, not inside "Web Content" folder, which is for web files such as JSP. Below is an example of the folder structure of a default Eclipse Dynamic Web Project as seen in Navigator view (the "Java Sources" folder is in such project by default represented by src folder):
EclipseProjectName
|-- src
| `-- com
| `-- example
| `-- YourServlet.java
|-- WebContent
| |-- WEB-INF
| | `-- web.xml
| `-- jsps
| `-- page.jsp
:
In case of a Maven project, the class needs to be placed in its package structure inside main/java and thus not main/resources, this is for non-class files and absolutely also not main/webapp, this is for web files. Below is an example of the folder structure of a default Maven webapp project as seen in Eclipse's Navigator view:
MavenProjectName
|-- src
| `-- main
| |-- java
| | `-- com
| | `-- example
| | `-- YourServlet.java
| |-- resources
| `-- webapp
| |-- WEB-INF
| | `-- web.xml
| `-- jsps
| `-- page.jsp
:
Note that the /jsps subfolder is not strictly necessary. You can even do without it and put the JSP file directly in webcontent/webapp root, but I'm just taking over this from your question.
Set servlet URL in url-pattern
The servlet URL is specified as the "URL pattern" of the servlet mapping. It's absolutely not per definition the classname/filename of the servlet class. The URL pattern is to be specified as value of #WebServlet annotation.
package com.example; // Use a package!
import jakarta.servlet.annotation.WebServlet; // or javax.*
import jakarta.servlet.http.HttpServlet; // or javax.*
#WebServlet("/servlet") // This is the URL of the servlet.
public class YourServlet extends HttpServlet { // Must be public and extend HttpServlet.
// ...
}
In case you want to support path parameters like /servlet/foo/bar, then use an URL pattern of /servlet/* instead. See also Servlet and path parameters like /xyz/{value}/test, how to map in web.xml?
Do note that it's considered a bad practice to use a Servlet URL pattern of /* or / in an attempt to have a "front controller". So do not abuse these URL patterns in an attempt to try to catch all URLs. For an in depth explanation see also Difference between / and /* in servlet mapping url pattern.
#WebServlet works only on Servlet 3.0 or newer
In order to use #WebServlet, you only need to make sure that your web.xml file, if any (it's optional since Servlet 3.0), is declared conform Servlet 3.0+ version and thus not conform e.g. 2.5 version or lower. It should absolutely also not have any <!DOCTYPE> line. Below is a Servlet 6.0 compatible one (which matches Tomcat 10.1+, WildFly 27+ (Preview), GlassFish/Payara 7+, etc) in its entirety:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<web-app
xmlns="https://jakarta.ee/xml/ns/jakartaee"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="https://jakarta.ee/xml/ns/jakartaee https://jakarta.ee/xml/ns/jakartaee/web-app_6_0.xsd"
version="6.0"
>
<!-- Config here. -->
</web-app>
And below is a Servlet 5.0 compatible one (which matches Tomcat 10.0.x, WildFly 22+ (Preview), GlassFish/Payara 6+, etc).
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<web-app
xmlns="https://jakarta.ee/xml/ns/jakartaee"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="https://jakarta.ee/xml/ns/jakartaee https://jakarta.ee/xml/ns/jakartaee/web-app_5_0.xsd"
version="5.0"
>
<!-- Config here. -->
</web-app>
And below is a Servlet 4.0 compatible one (which matches Tomcat 9+, WildFly 11+, GlassFish/Payara 5+, etc).
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<web-app
xmlns="http://xmlns.jcp.org/xml/ns/javaee"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://xmlns.jcp.org/xml/ns/javaee http://xmlns.jcp.org/xml/ns/javaee/web-app_4_0.xsd"
version="4.0"
>
<!-- Config here. -->
</web-app>
Or, in case you're not on Servlet 3.0+ yet (e.g. Tomcat 6 or older), then remove the #WebServlet annotation.
package com.example;
import javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet;
public class YourServlet extends HttpServlet {
// ...
}
And register the servlet instead in web.xml like this:
<servlet>
<servlet-name>yourServlet</servlet-name>
<servlet-class>com.example.YourServlet</servlet-class> <!-- Including the package thus -->
</servlet>
<servlet-mapping>
<servlet-name>yourServlet</servlet-name>
<url-pattern>/servlet</url-pattern> <!-- This is the URL of the servlet. -->
</servlet-mapping>
Note thus that you should not use both ways. Use either annotation based configuarion or XML based configuration. When you have both, then XML based configuration will override annotation based configuration.
javax.servlet.* doesn't work anymore in Servlet 5.0 or newer
Since Jakarta EE 9 / Servlet 5.0 (Tomcat 10, TomEE 9, WildFly 22 Preview, GlassFish 6, Payara 6, Liberty 22, etc), the javax.* package has been renamed to jakarta.* package.
In other words, please make absolutely sure that you don't randomly put JAR files of a different server in your WAR project such as tomcat-servlet-api-9.x.x.jar merely in order to get the javax.* package to compile. This will only cause trouble. Remove it altogether and edit the imports of your servlet class from
import javax.servlet.*;
import javax.servlet.annotation.*;
import javax.servlet.http.*;
to
import jakarta.servlet.*;
import jakarta.servlet.annotation.*;
import jakarta.servlet.http.*;
In case you're using Maven, you can find examples of proper pom.xml declarations for Tomcat 10+, Tomcat 9-, JEE 9+ and JEE 8- in this answer: How to properly configure Jakarta EE libraries in Maven pom.xml for Tomcat? The alternative is to downgrade the server to an older version, e.g. from Tomcat 10 back to Tomcat 9 or older, but this is clearly not the recommended way to go.
Make sure compiled *.class file is present in built WAR
In case you're using a build tool such as Eclipse and/or Maven, then you need to make absolutely sure that the compiled servlet class file resides in its package structure in /WEB-INF/classes folder of the produced WAR file. In case of package com.example; public class YourServlet, it must be located in /WEB-INF/classes/com/example/YourServlet.class. Otherwise you will face in case of #WebServlet also a 404 error, or in case of <servlet> a HTTP 500 error like below:
HTTP Status 500
Error instantiating servlet class com.example.YourServlet
And find in the server log a java.lang.ClassNotFoundException: com.example.YourServlet, followed by a java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError: com.example.YourServlet, in turn followed by jakarta.servlet.ServletException: Error instantiating servlet class com.example.YourServlet.
An easy way to verify if the servlet is correctly compiled and placed in classpath is to let the build tool produce a WAR file (e.g. rightclick project, Export > WAR file in Eclipse) and then inspect its contents with a ZIP tool. If the servlet class is missing in /WEB-INF/classes, or if the export causes an error, then the project is badly configured or some IDE/project configuration defaults have been mistakenly reverted (e.g. Project > Build Automatically has been disabled in Eclipse).
You also need to make sure that the project icon has no red cross indicating a build error. You can find the exact error in Problems view (Window > Show View > Other...). Usually the error message is fine Googlable. In case you have no clue, best is to restart from scratch and do not touch any IDE/project configuration defaults. In case you're using Eclipse, you can find instructions in How do I import the javax.servlet / jakarta.servlet API in my Eclipse project?
Test the servlet individually without any JSP/HTML page
Provided that the server runs on localhost:8080, and that the WAR is successfully deployed on a context path of /contextname (which defaults to the IDE project name, case sensitive!), and the servlet hasn't failed its initialization (read server logs for any deploy/servlet success/fail messages and the actual context path and servlet mapping), then a servlet with URL pattern of /servlet is available at http://localhost:8080/contextname/servlet.
You can just enter it straight in browser's address bar to test it invidivually. If its doGet() is properly overriden and implemented, then you will see its output in browser. Or if you don't have any doGet() or if it incorrectly calls super.doGet(), then a "HTTP 405: HTTP method GET is not supported by this URL" error will be shown (which is still better than a 404 as a 405 is evidence that the servlet itself is actually found).
Overriding service() is a bad practice, unless you're reinventing a MVC framework — which is very unlikely if you're just starting out with servlets and are clueless as to the problem described in the current question ;) See also Design Patterns web based applications.
Regardless, if the servlet already returns 404 when tested invidivually, then it's entirely pointless to try with a HTML form instead. Logically, it's therefore also entirely pointless to include any HTML form in questions about 404 errors from a servlet.
Use domain-relative URL to reference servlet from HTML
Once you've verified that the servlet works fine when invoked individually, then you can advance to HTML. As to your concrete problem with the HTML form, the <form action> value needs to be a valid URL. The same applies to <a href>, <img src>, <script src>, etc. You need to understand how absolute/relative URLs work. You know, an URL is a web address as you can enter/see in the webbrowser's address bar. If you're specifying a relative URL as form action, i.e. without the http:// scheme, then it becomes relative to the current URL as you see in your webbrowser's address bar. It's thus absolutely not relative to the JSP/HTML file location in server's WAR folder structure as many starters seem to think.
So, assuming that the JSP page with the HTML form is opened by http://localhost:8080/contextname/jsps/page.jsp (and thus not by file://...), and you need to submit to a servlet located in http://localhost:8080/contextname/servlet, here are several cases (note that you can here safely substitute <form action> with <a href>, <img src>, <script src>, etc):
Form action submits to an URL with a leading slash.
<form action="/servlet">
The leading slash / makes the URL relative to the domain, thus the form will submit to
http://localhost:8080/servlet
But this will likely result in a 404 as it's in the wrong context.
Form action submits to an URL without a leading slash.
<form action="servlet">
This makes the URL relative to the current folder of the current URL, thus the form will submit to
http://localhost:8080/contextname/jsps/servlet
But this will likely result in a 404 as it's in the wrong folder.
Form action submits to an URL which goes one folder up.
<form action="../servlet">
This will go one folder up (exactly like as in local disk file system paths!), thus the form will submit to
http://localhost:8080/contextname/servlet
This one must work!
The canonical approach, however, is to make the URL domain-relative so that you don't need to fix the URLs once again when you happen to move the JSP files around into another folder.
<form action="${pageContext.request.contextPath}/servlet">
This will generate
<form action="/contextname/servlet">
Which will thus always submit to the right URL.
Use straight quotes in HTML attributes
You need to make absolutely sure you're using straight quotes in HTML attributes like action="..." or action='...' and thus not curly quotes like action=”...” or action=’...’. Curly quotes are not supported in HTML and they will simply become part of the value. Watch out when copy-pasting code snippets from blogs! Some blog engines, notably Wordpress, are known to by default use so-called "smart quotes" which thus also corrupts the quotes in code snippets this way. On the other hand, instead of copy-pasting code, try simply typing over the code yourself. Additional advantage of actually getting the code through your brain and fingers is that it will make you to remember and understand the code much better in long term and also make you a better developer.
See also:
Our servlets wiki page - Contains some hello world examples
How to call servlet class from HTML form
doGet and doPost in Servlets
How do I pass current item to Java method by clicking a hyperlink or button in JSP page?
Other cases of HTTP Status 404 error:
HTTP Status 404 - Servlet [ServletName] is not available
HTTP Status 404 - The requested resource (/ProjectName/) is not available
HTTP Status 404 - The requested resource (/) is not available
JSP in /WEB-INF returns "HTTP Status 404 The requested resource is not available"
Referencing a resource placed in WEB-INF folder in JSP file returns HTTP 404 on resource
Browser can't access/find relative resources like CSS, images and links when calling a Servlet which forwards to a JSP
Scenario #1: You accidentially re-deployed from the command line while tomcat was already running.
Short Answer: Stop Tomcat, delete target folder, mvn package, then re-deploy
Scenario #2: request.getRequestDispatcher("MIS_SPELLED_FILE_NAME.jsp")
Short Answer: Check file name spelling, make sure case is correct.
Scenario #3: Class Not Found Exceptions
(Answer put here because: Question# 17982240 )
(java.lang.ClassNotFoundException for servlet in tomcat with eclipse )
(was marked as duplicate and directed me here )
Short Answer #3.1: web.xml has wrong package path in servlet-class tag.
Short Answer #3.2: java file has wrong import statement.
Below is further details for Scenario #1:
1: Stop Tomcat
Option 1: Via CTRL+C in terminal.
Option 2: (terminal closed while tomcat still running)
------------ 2.1: press:Windows+R --> type:"services.msc"
------------ 2.2: Find "Apache Tomcat #.# Tomcat#" in Name column of list.
------------ 2.3: Right Click --> "stop"
2: Delete the "target" folder.
(mvn clean will not help you here)
3: mvn package
4: YOUR_DEPLOYMENT_COMMAND_HERE
(Mine: java -jar target/dependency/webapp-runner.jar --port 5190 target/*.war )
Full Back Story:
Accidentially opened a new git-bash window and
tried to deploy a .war file for my heroku project via:
java -jar target/dependency/webapp-runner.jar --port 5190 target/*.war
After a failure to deploy, I realized I had two git-bash windows open,
and had not used CTLR+C to stop the previous deployment.
I was met with:
HTTP Status 404 – Not Found Type Status Report
Message /if-student-test.jsp
Description The origin server did not find a current representation
for the target resource or is not willing to disclose that one
exists.
Apache Tomcat/8.5.31
Below is further details for Scenario #3:
SCENARIO 3.1:
The servlet-class package path is wrong
in your web.xml file.
It should MATCH the package statement at top
of your java servlet class.
File: my_stuff/MyClass.java:
package my_stuff;
File: PRJ_ROOT/src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/web.xml
<servlet-class>
my_stuff.MyClass
</servlet-class>
SCENARIO 3.2:
You put the wrong "package" statement
at top of your myClass.java file.
For example:
File is in: "/my_stuff" folder
You mistakenly write:
package com.my_stuff
This is tricky because:
1: The maven build (mvn package) will not report any errors here.
2: servlet-class line in web.xml can have CORRECT package path. E.g:
<servlet-class>
my_stuff.MyClass
</servlet-class>
Stack Used:
Notepad++ + GitBash + Maven + Heroku Web App Runner + Tomcat9 + Windows10:
Check if you have entered the correct URL Mapping as specified in the Web.xml
For example:
In the web.xml, your servlet declaration maybe:
<servlet>
<servlet-name>ControllerA</servlet-name>
<servlet-class>PackageName.ControllerA</servlet-class>
</servlet>
<servlet-mapping>
<servlet-name>ControllerA</servlet-name>
<url-pattern>/theController</url-pattern>
</servlet-mapping>
What this snippet does is <url-pattern>/theController</url-pattern>will set the name that will be used to call the servlet from the front end (eg: form) through the URL. Therefore when you reference the servlet in the front end, in order to ensure that the request goes to the servlet "ControllerA", it should refer the specified URL Pattern "theController" from the form.
eg:
<form action="theController" method="POST">
</form>
If you're using IntelliJ, this is what fixed it for me:
Go to the Tomcat configuration:
Configuration > Deployment Tab
Scroll down and add / to the Application Context dropdown
Solution for HTTP Status 404 in NetBeans IDE:
Right click on your project and go to your project properties, then click on run, then input your project relative URL like index.jsp.
Project->Properties
Click on Run
Relative URL:/index.jsp (Select your project root URL)
My issue was that my method was missing the #RequestBody annotation. After adding the annotation I no longer received the 404 exception.
Do the following two steps. I hope, it will solve the "404 not found" issue in tomcat server during the development of java servlet application.
Step 1: Right click on the server(in the server explorer tab)->Properties->Switch Location from workspace metadata to tomcat server
Step 2: Double Click on the server(in the server explorer tab)->Select Use tomcat installation option inside server location menu
I removed the old web library such that are spring framework libraries. And build a new path of the libraries. Then it works.
An old thread, but since I didn't find it elsewhere, here is one more possibility:
If you're using servlet-api 3.0+, then your web.xml must NOT include metadata-complete="true" attribute
This tells tomcat to map the servlets using data given in web.xml instead of using the #WebServlet annotation.
First of all, run your IDE as Admin. After that, right click the project folder -> Project Facets and make sure that the Java Version is set correct. On my PC. (For Example 1.8) Now it should work.
Don't just start your server, for example Wildfly, using the cmd. It has to be launched within the IDE and now visit your localhost URL. Example: http://localhost:8080/HelloWorldServlet/HelloWorld
The fix that worked for me is(if you are using Maven): Rightclick your project, Maven -> Update project. This might give you some other error with the JDK and other Libraries(in my case, MySQL connector), but once you fix them, your original problem should be fixed!
If you would like to open a servlet with javascript without using 'form' and 'submit' button, here is the following code:
var button = document.getElementById("<<button-id>>");
button.addEventListener("click", function() {
window.location.href= "<<full-servlet-path>>" (eg. http://localhost:8086/xyz/servlet)
});
Key:
1) button-id : The 'id' tag you give to your button in your html/jsp file.
2) full-servlet-path: The path that shows in the browser when you run the servlet alone
Mapping in web.xml is what i have done :-
If there's another package made for new program then we must mention :-
packagename.filename between opening and closing of servlet-class tag in xml file.
If you are mapping your files in xml and they are not working or showing errors , then comment on the annotation line of code in the respective files.
Both methods dont work with one another , so either i use annotation method of files mentioned when we create servlet or the way of mapping , then i delete or comment the annotation line. Eg:
<servlet>
<servlet-name>s1</servlet-name>
<servlet-class>performance.FirstServ</servlet-class>
</servlet>
<servlet-mapping>
<servlet-name>s1</servlet-name>
<url-pattern>/FirstServ</url-pattern>
</servlet-mapping>
<servlet>
<servlet-name>s2</servlet-name>
<servlet-class>performance.SecondServ</servlet-class>
</servlet>
<servlet-mapping>
<servlet-name>s2</servlet-name>
<url-pattern>/SecondServ</url-pattern>
</servlet-mapping>
Commenting the annotation line of code in the respective file,if mapping in xml is done.
//#WebServlet("/FirstServ")
//#WebServlet("/SecondServ")
If someone is here who is using MySQL and felt that the code was working the previous day and now it doesn't, then I guess you must open MySQL CLI or MySQL Workbench and just make the connection to the database once. Once it gets connected, then the database also gets connected to the Java Application. I used to get the Hibernate Dialect error stating something wrong with com.mysql.jdbc.Driver. I think MySQL in some computers has a startup problem. This solved for me.
If you are a student and new to Java there might be some issue going on with your web.xml file.
Try removing the web.xml file.
Secondly check that your path variables are properly set or not.
Restart tomcat server Or your PC.
Your problem will be surely solved.
I was facing this issue too, I was receiving a 404 when accessing a URL pattern that I knew was linked to a Servlet. The reason is because I had 2 Servlets with their #WebServlet name parameter set as the same string.
#WebServlet(name = "ServletName", urlPatterns = {"/path"})
public class ServletName extends HttpServlet {}
#WebServlet(name = "ServletName", urlPatterns = {"/other-path"})
public class OtherServletName extends HttpServlet {}
Both of the name parameters are the same. If you're using the name parameter, make sure they are unique compared to all other Servlets on your application.
I had the same issue. Tried all of this but didn't help. I managed to solve this issue by adding element tags to beginning and end of the xml file. ill leave my xml file below for reference.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<element>
<web-app xmlns="http://xmlns.jcp.org/xml/ns/javaee"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://xmlns.jcp.org/xml/ns/javaee
http://xmlns.jcp.org/xml/ns/javaee/web-app_3_1.xsd"
version="3.1">
<servlet>
<servlet-name>InsertServlet</servlet-name>
<servlet-class>com.worklog.InsertServlet</servlet-class>
</servlet>
<servlet-mapping>
<servlet-name>InsertServlet</servlet-name>
<url-pattern>/insert</url-pattern>
</servlet-mapping>
</web-app>
</element>
I was having the same issue. I was developing a mvc based REST API where there was no explicit html configuration or files. The API was using Swagger to generate a user interface. The problem started when I introduced Swagger version "3.0.0". I reverted back to Swagger "2.9.2" This solved my problem.
<!-- Swagger -->
<dependency>
<groupId>io.springfox</groupId>
<artifactId>springfox-swagger-ui</artifactId>
<version>2.9.2</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>io.springfox</groupId>
<artifactId>springfox-swagger2</artifactId>
<version>2.9.2</version>
</dependency>
Please check context root cannot be empty.
If you're using eclipse:
right click, select properties, then web project settings. Check the context root cannot be empty

how to change Jboss default page to the home page of my application?

I have an application deployed in JBOSS and it is accessed as: localhost/appname
When i enter only the IP address i get redirected to the JBOSS default page.
Is there a way to go to the application's homepage with no need to give /appname ?
I hope the question is clear.
Thanks in advance.
A part of the solution given by Nightsorrow, you can also define the context root of your web application using the context-root tag of the WEB-INF/jboss-web.xml file. So defining it as '/', you can keep your original file name. This way you override the default behaviour of JBoss, which is defining the context root of web apps as the file name of the application (unless the app name is ROOT.war, which its default context is '/').
So the jboss-web.xml file would look like something similar to:
<jboss-web>
... other tags ...
<context-root>/</context-root>
... other tags ...
</jboss-web>
Notice that there can't be two applications with the same context root, so first you will have to remove ROOT.war, or change its context root following the same procedure:
adding the context-root tag to jboss-web.xml (for example: <context-root>/oldRoot</context-root>, which would make the old ROOT.war application available through localhost/oldRoot),or
just changing its file name.
In case you want to deploy an EAR file with a web module (war) inside (instead of just a plain war file), you've to use the META-INF/application.xml of the EAR. Defining the web module this way:
<application>
... other tags and other modules (ejb, web ...) ...
<module>
<web>
<web-uri>nameOfYourWarFile.war</web-uri>
<context-root>/</context-root>
</web>
</module>
... other tags and other modules (ejb, web ...) ...
</application>
You have to deploy your application in file named "ROOT.war". Also you have to delete existing ROOT.war in deploy directory.
I am using eap6. This is my first time to use jboss. I don't see that I have $JBOSS_HOME/server. I see $JBOSS_HOME/domain/server. I have searched all the files under $JBOSS_HOME. I cannot find any WEB-INF and jboss-web.xml

HTTP Status 404 - on Eclipse with Tomcat

I am trying just to run a servlet on my local Tomcat with Eclipse.
But I keep getting this error and do not have any idea what to do differently.
I actually recorded it here : http://www.screenr.com/ZyD8
Many thanks!
Also I changed the web.xml to this:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<web-app xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xmlns:web="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee/web-app_2_5.xsd"
id="WebApp_ID"
version="3.0"
xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee/web-app_3_0.xsd" >
<display-name>
TEST3
</display-name>
<welcome-file-list>
<welcome-file>
TEST3
</welcome-file>
</welcome-file-list>
<servlet>
<servlet-name>
helloServlet
</servlet-name>
<servlet-class>
HelloServlet
</servlet-class>
</servlet>
<servlet-mapping>
<servlet-name>
helloServlet
</servlet-name>
<url-pattern>
/hello
</url-pattern>
</servlet-mapping>
</web-app>
I have seen your link.
When ever you run any dynamic web project. By default Servlet container (which is Tomcat in this case) searches for files specified in wel-come list. Check your web.xml, it should contains entry like
<welcome-file-list>
<welcome-file>index.html</welcome-file>
<welcome-file>index.htm</welcome-file>
<welcome-file>index.jsp</welcome-file>
<welcome-file>default.html</welcome-file>
<welcome-file>default.htm</welcome-file>
<welcome-file>default.jsp</welcome-file>
</welcome-file-list>
You haven't created file from any of the above list. So, running
http://localhost:8080/TEST2 will give you 404 error.
Rather run : http://localhost:8080/TEST2/HelloSerlvet will invoke the servlet which you have created.
Edit: Check Project Menu of eclipse and verify "Build Automatically" is checked and Servlet container is running (http://localhost:8080).
Edit 2: Right Click Project --> Properties, Select Java Build Path --> source Tab --> Change Default output folder. Create /WEB-INF/classes
under /WebContent (default in eclipse)
This is based on the answer from Hardik Mishra with some highlights:
1. From the file explorer (not from Eclipse), Manually create the "/WEB-INF/classes" under /WebContent
2. Right Click Project --> Properties, Select Java Build Path --> source Tab --> Change Default output folder to the folder you just created above.
3. go to the file explorer, not from Eclipse, since the Eclipse "project Explorer" may have some filters that doesnot show the classes folder. You should see the .class files compiled under this directory
Try to test it again. If it does not work, restart Eclipse for one time and then it should work.
I have been seeing these types of issue for quite sometime and have seen multiple solutions which work for some and rest still face the same issue.
One of the simple solution is traverse to the .java/.jsp/etc., right click and select run from server option.
I found this solution to be simple yet effective way of running.
path Java Resource->src->->example.java-->right click-->run as-->run on server.
Even after this also you can face few issues like port 8005 not available, please follow the below link to clean out your current Apache setting and re-setting the same.
TOMCAT - HTTP Status 404
Deployment error:Starting of Tomcat failed, the server port 8080 is already in use
Hope this finding was helpful.
Normally, when you modify the web.xml file, you should "clean" Tomcat. Just right-click on Tomcat in Eclipse and clean. Do same for project. You may also stop Tomcat, remove the app from Tomcat (right-click on app under Tomcat and remove) and then add it back. Restart Tomcat.
I am gonna divide this problem in two scenarios:
scenario 1: you are trying to run/execute html/jsp file but getting this error.
scenario 2: you have successfully executed jsp/html file but it is not executing next servlet file. example: there is jsp submit form in webcontent/webapp, it is getting executed but after filling and submitting form you are getting this error.
Scenario 1:
Make sure that your jsp/html file are in webcontent/webapp folder that you created at the time of project creation.
check web.xml file where content should be like this:
try changing tomcat server version.
Scenario 2:
at this level your main culprit is web.xml file where you have to check Servlet mapping thoroughly or add webservlet annotation at file level.

JBoss 7: how to change a WAR context root

I have an application that is to be deployed in a WAR file (app.war). After deployment it is available from
http://:8080/app
I would like to have it being made available as something like
http://:8080/secret/app
I searched the documentation and for JBoss'es 5 and 6 this seems to be able to do with a jboss-web.xml file. I have tried it but with no luck. It seems that JBoss 7 just ignores the element inside jboss-web.xml.
I don't know if this is relevant but this application has both JSF and PrettyFaces.
Does anyone know if this behavior is possible with JBoss 7? If so, how can it be done? I am still trying to find an answer for this.
Thank you.
this works in AS 7.0.1, WEB-INF/jboss-web.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<jboss-web>
<context-root>/my_custom_root</context-root>
</jboss-web>
I don't think it is possible to have app root like "server/something/app", but you can simulate this behavior through application structure
Just for sharing a personal experience...if the context-root in jboss-web.xml seems to be ignored...try to see if it is (the context root) already declared in your application.xml

Problem displaying error page running Tomcat 7 in Eclipse Helios

When I run an instance of my local Tomcat 7 server within Eclipse, I am not able to display my custom error page. I have included the following in my web.xml deployment descriptor and have verified that the file is in the appropriate location.
<error-page>
<error-code>404</error-code>
<location>/WEB-INF/404.jsp</location>
</error-page>
When I attempt to navigate to a resource that doesn't exists, it should display my 404.jsp page. However, the browser (Chrome, IE, and FireFox) all display the "Oops this link appears to be broken", or "This page cannot be displayed" page instead.
Is there something I need to configure in Eclipse/Tomcat to allow custom error pages?
It should be possible to place your custom error page in the WEB-INF directory. However, I had an issue with this when a servlet was mapped to the /* URL pattern. You could try mapping to / instead, i.e.
<servlet-mapping>
<servlet-name>wsDispatcher</servlet-name>
<url-pattern>/</url-pattern>
</servlet-mapping>