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In ASP.NET, there is web.config which can hold application-wide settings. Is there a corresponding file (residing outside of the war or jar archive) for a Java EE Servlet?

What I need is some place to point out a configuration file, which currently holds four attributes which in turn, taken together, leads to the database where the rest of the data and configuration is stored. (Server, database, username and password.) These values need to be easy to change without repackaging and redeploying the entire application, hence the configuration file, but hardcoding the path to the configuration file in the application (even if it is as a constant) seems far from optimal.

Any hints? I've tried Google but found very little that seemed relevant - and what I did find appeared hideously over-engineered for my needs.

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In ASP.NET, there is web.config which can hold application-wide settings. Is there a corresponding file (residing outside of the war or jar archive) for a Java EE Servlet?

That's the web.xml. You can define settings as <context-param> entries.

<context-param>
    <param-name>foo</param-name>
    <param-value>bar</param-value>
</context-param>

It's available by ServletContext#getInitParameter(). The ServletContext is in turn available anywhere.

String foo = getServletContext().getInitParameter("foo"); // Contains "bar"

You can also access it by EL.

#{initParam.foo} <!-- prints "bar" -->

What I need is some place to point out a configuration file, which currently holds four attributes which in turn, taken together, leads to the database where the rest of the data and configuration is stored. (Server, database, username and password.) These values need to be easy to change without repackaging and redeploying the entire application, hence the configuration file, but hardcoding the path to the configuration file in the application (even if it is as a constant) seems far from optimal.

As per the emphasis, I'd use a properties file for this particular purpose which is then placed in a path outside the WAR. You just need to add this path to the Java runtime classpath. Then you can obtain it as classpath resource:

Properties properties = new Properties();
properties.load(Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader().getResourceAsStream("filename.properties"));
// ...

However, with the particular sole purpose to serve a DB connection, you're indeed better off with a servletcontainer-managed datasource as answered by Qwerky. All you possibly would need to configure is then just the datasource name.

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If this is a web app then you'd be better served configuring the database connection as a resource on the server, then getting your app to retrieve it using JNDI. Your app server will have documentation on how to do this, its a basic task.

99% of serious web apps do this, the other 1% should.

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You can have your application load an arbitrary external file by simply passing the path as a command-line parameter (to the servlet container startup script). Then store the values in the ServletContext

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  • Which gives rise to the question, how do you pass a command line parameter to a servlet? Preferably in a host-independent way. The servlet class only exposes void doPost(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response). No command-line parameters there that I can see, or am I missing something again?
    – user
    Feb 17, 2011 at 10:58
  • It depends what do you mean saying command line parameters. If they are per-request parameters use either request parameters or attributes. You can also use session attributes that are shared between all servlets withing the session. The "global" parameters can be taken from external file as @Bozho said. The path to this file could be sent via system properties.
    – AlexR
    Feb 17, 2011 at 11:03
  • @Michael Kjörling configure it on your servlet container. for tomcat it's catalina.sh
    – Bozho
    Feb 17, 2011 at 11:13

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