In file serving, Web applications can serve static file
types, such as HTML. File-serving attributes are used by the servlet
that implements file-serving behavior.
The file-serving behavior is implemented by setting the fileservingenabled
property to true when configuring the Web module.
Example attributes:
- bufferSize
- Sets buffer size that is used for serving static files.
- extendedDocumentRoot
- Enables you to configure an application with one or more directory
paths from which you can serve static files and Java ServerPages (JSP)
files. You can use this attribute when an application requires access
to files that exist outside of the application Web archive (WAR) directory.
For example, if several applications require access to a set of common
files, you can place the common files in a directory to which you
can link each application as an extended document root directory.
Use
this attribute in addition to the contextRoot attribute.
You can also use this attribute to define a
WebSphere variable on multiple nodes to the appropriate directory.
Example:<fileServingEnabled="true">
<fileServingAttributes xmi:id="FileServingAttribute_1" name="extendedDocumentRoot"
value="${MY_CUSTOM_VARIABLE}"/>
where
MY_CUSTOM_VARIABLE is
the WebSphere variable that you want to define on multiple nodes.
For
more information, see JSP engine configuration parameters.
- file.serving.patterns.allow
- Specifies that only files matching the specified pattern are served.
- file.serving.patterns.deny
- Specifies that files that match the specified file pattern are
denied