![]() ![]() Open the Services Window (from the Window menu – option Services or using Ctrl-5). Now the Tomcat 7 Server can be started (and stopped, deployed to etc.) from within NetBeans. The newly configured Server is presented: Also provide credentials for a Tomcat Administrator account ( in my case I used admin/admin). Provide the location where this server instance is installed – the target directory for the extraction of Tomcat 7. Select the type of Server to add and provide a name for it – just for reference within NetBeans. The list of currently configured servers appears. ![]() Open the Tools menu and select the option Servers: Next I turn to NetBeans to configure Tomcat 7 as a new server. Installation of Tomcat starts with downloading Tomcat, from the Apache site: Īfter downloading the zip-file, I extracted it to c:\java (the location is of your own choosing though). In a previous blog I described the installation of NetBeans ( ). ![]() And as testimonial to the ease of use the development teams behind Tomcat and NetBeans provide to the world of Java developers. Still, a brief blog article explaining the steps – for even easier lives for Java Web developers. Installing Tomcat 7 is dead-easy and configuring Tomcat as Server in NetBeans to allow direct (re)deployment of web applications from within NetBeans is just as easy. Most notably, it supports version 3.0 of the Servlet API (application programming interface) and version 2.2 of JavaServer Pages, both part of the recently ratified JEE 6. While not a full application server, Tomcat implements the functionality described in the Java Enterprise Edition Web profile specifications. Tomcat 7 is a Servlet Container – a fairly light weight container, very convenient for development and testing. ![]()
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