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I developed a dynamic web project in Eclipse. I can access the app through my browser using the following URL:

http://localhost:8080/MyDynamicWebApp

I want to change the access URL to:

http://localhost:8080/app

To do so, I changed the context root from the project "Properties | Web Project Settings | Context Root". However, the web app still has the same access URL. I have re-deployed the application on Tomcat and re-started the Tomcat, but the access URL is the same as earlier.

I found that there was no server.xml file attached with the WAR file. Without the server.xml file attached, how is the Tomcat determining that the context root of my web app is /MyDynamicWebApp and allowing me to access the application through this context root URL?

0

15 Answers 15

345

Some of these answers give workarounds. What actually must happen is that you clean and re-publish your project to "activate" the new URI. This is done by right-clicking your server (in the Servers view) and choosing Clean. Then you start (or restart it). Most of the other answers here suggest you do things that in effect accomplish this.

The file that's changing is workspace/.metadata/.plugins/org.eclipse.wst.server.core/publish/publish.dat unless, that is, you've got more than one server in your workspace in which case it will be publishN.dat on that same path.


Not sure if this is proper etiquette or not — I am editing this answer to give exact steps for Eclipse Indigo.

  1. In your project's Properties, choose Web Project Settings.

  2. Change Context root to app.

    screen shot of Eclipse project properties Web Project Settings

  3. Choose Window > Show View > Servers.

  4. Stop the server by either clicking the red square box ("Stop the server" tooltip) or context-click on the server listing to choose "Stop".

  5. On the server you want to use, context-click to choose "Clean…".

    enter image description here

  6. Click OK in this confirmation dialog box.

    Screenshot of dialog asking to update server configuration to match the changed context root

Now you can run your app with the new "app" URL such as:

http://localhost:8080/app/

Doing this outside of Eclipse, on your production server, is even easier --> Rename the war file. Export your Vaadin app as a WAR file (File > Export > Web > WAR file). Move the WAR file to your web server's servlet container such as Tomcat. Rename your WAR file, in this case to app.war. When you start the servlet container, most such as Tomcat will auto-deploy the app, which includes expanding the war file to a folder. In this case, we should see a folder named app. You should be good to go. Test your URL. For a domain such as *example.com" this would be:

http://www.example.com/app/

Vaadin toolkit programmers may need to rebuild their widget set if using visual add ons.

6
  • Great answer !!! You save my life ost of the other answers here suggest you do things that in effect accomplish this Dec 4, 2012 at 12:26
  • Here's the genius of this reply: I Googled my way to this page, and didn't even read the tags (I am building an ASP.NET website using Visual Studio). But the solution worked anyway!
    – Curt
    Jan 25, 2014 at 21:01
  • I have no such and option "Web Project Settings" Apr 9, 2016 at 15:55
  • just saying that workspace/.metadata/.plugins/org.eclipse.wst.server.core/publish/publish.dat is a binary file, I don't understand why you mention it up there, it gives the Impression it's the solution to the problem
    – aliopi
    Nov 27, 2017 at 12:07
  • 1
    But what if we don't use Eclipse.. or any IDE.. I want to programmatically configure the root path of servlet context. How shall I do that? in web.xml probably?.. Mar 12, 2019 at 11:49
33

After changing the context root in project properties you have to remove your web application from Tomcat (using Add and Remove... on the context menu of the server), redeploy, then re-add your application and redeploy. It worked for me.

If you are struck you have another choice: select the Tomcat server in the Servers view. Double clicking on that server (or selecting Open in the context menu) brings a multipage editor where there is a Modules page. Here you can change the root context of your module (called Path on this page).

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  • Thanks! This did the trick for me. however, it even works without changing the context root in the project properties. Am I missing something here?
    – Chris
    Mar 16, 2011 at 15:33
  • This also used to work for me in previous Eclipse builds but in the current build (Luna) only the Clean option now works
    – Griknok
    Dec 8, 2016 at 23:49
  • namasety, dhanywaada :) when I initially changed my context, it did not work even after server restart and clean. it worked only post, I removed project and readded. Jan 1, 2020 at 23:45
24

If you are running Tomcat from Eclipse, it doesn't use the configuration from your actual Tomcat installation. It uses the Tomcat configuration that it created and stored under "Servers" project. If you view your Eclipse workspace, you should see a project called "Servers". Expand that "Servers" project and you will come across server.xml. Open this file and scroll all the way to the bottom, and you should see something like this:-

<Context docBase="abc" path="/abc" reloadable="true" source="org.eclipse.jst.jee.server:abc"/>

Here, you can just change your project context path to something else.

Hope this helps.

2
  • I'm not sure your want to change all 3 values. Csaba_H's solution worked for me and that only changes the "path" attribute...
    – Chris
    Mar 16, 2011 at 15:29
  • This one didn't work for me - the files in that directory get overwritten when you restart the server. Csaba_H's version two, Modules tab under Tomcat Server, seems like the "right" approach.
    – idarwin
    Sep 4, 2012 at 23:52
17

I tried out solution suggested by Russ Bateman Here in the post

http://localhost:8080/Myapp to http://localhost:8080/somepath/Myapp

But Didnt worked for me as I needed to have a *.war file that can hold the config and not the individual instance of server on my localmachine.

Reference

In order to do that I need jboss-web.xml placed in WEB-INF

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
 <!--
Copyright (c) 2008 Object Computing, Inc.
All rights reserved.
-->
<!DOCTYPE jboss-web PUBLIC "-//JBoss//DTD Web Application 4.2//EN"
"http://www.jboss.org/j2ee/dtd/jboss-web_4_2.dtd">

  <jboss-web>
  <context-root>somepath/Myapp</context-root>
  </jboss-web>
4
  • This worked for me. Environment = Eclipse + m2e + m2e-wtp + deploying to JBoss from Servers view. Needed to deploy main web project as ROOT and no Eclipse setting did the trick. I copied Tosha's file (above) and places "ROOT" sans quotes as the context-root value. Done and done. Thanks, @Tosha! Apr 23, 2013 at 19:21
  • This works, but I wonder why it ignores the setting in project properties?
    – Vedran
    May 3, 2013 at 11:38
  • 4
    Works with JBoss WildFly 8.1.0 Final
    – alexander
    Feb 24, 2015 at 17:54
  • I migrated from MyEclipse 8.6 to Eclipse and could not get to deploy with '/' root context. Adding jboss-web.xml worked successfully. server: Jboss AS 5.1 Eclipse Luna.
    – Sai
    Jan 6, 2016 at 16:47
10

Setting the path to nothing in the Eclipse web modules edit dialog enabled me to access the project without any path component in the URL (i.e. ROOT)

You can reach the web modules edit dialog by pressing F3 if you select Tomcat in the "Servers" view or by double clicking on it.

Some screenshots:

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  • Sorry but can you give more details on this?
    – smonff
    Sep 8, 2015 at 13:30
  • oh, thank you! On Eclipse Luna on GNU/Linux, a / is required though.
    – smonff
    Sep 8, 2015 at 17:10
  • 1
    I used Eclipse Mars (4.5) on Win7.
    – Ray Hulha
    Sep 8, 2015 at 21:26
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Apache tomcat keeps the project context path in server.xml path. For each web project on Eclipse, there is tag from there you can change it.
Suppose, there are two or three project deployed on server. For each one context path is stored in . This tag is located on server.xml file within Server created on eclipse.

I have one project for there on context root path in server is:

<Context docBase="Test" path="/test" reloadable="true" source="org.eclipse.jst.jee.server:Test1"/>

This path represents context path of your web application. By changing this path, your web app context path will change.

6

I know the answer has been accepted already. But, just in case anyone using Maven wants to achieve the same thing, just set the finalName in the maven build to whatever name you want to give and do a maven -> update project

<build>
    <finalName><any-name></finalName>
    <plugins><provide-plugins-needed></plugins>
<build>
4

If the project is maven, change the "finalName" in pom.xml and Update Project as Maven.This worked for me.

2

In Glassfish you must also change the file WEB-INF/glassfish-web.xml

<glassfish-web-app>
    <context-root>/myapp</context-root>
</glassfish-web-app>

So when you click in "Run as> Run on server" it will open correctly.

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  • Yes, we must. Nice sharing.
    – Alexsoyes
    Aug 18, 2018 at 20:57
2

I just wanted to add that if you don't want your application name in the root context at all, you and just put "/" (no quotes, just the forward slash) in the Eclipse --> Web Project Settings --> Context Root entry

That will deploy the webapp to just http://localhost:8080/

Of course, this will cause problems with other webapps you try to run on the server, so heads up with that.

Took me forever to piece that together... so even though this post is 8 years old, hopefully this will still help someone!

0

In the java project, open .settings folder. there locate the file named "org.eclipse.wst.common.component" . Change tag <wb-module deploy-name="NEW_NAME"> .

Also you may want to change context root in project properties

1
  • all that looks good on my project and it runs within eclipse just fine. it's when i convert it to a war file using maven that it looses it's root context and instead of localhost/events/ it runs on localhost/ which breaks all my links
    – JesseBoyd
    Oct 10, 2017 at 22:07
0

If using eclipse to deploy your application . We can use this maven plugin

<plugin>
    <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
    <artifactId>maven-eclipse-plugin</artifactId>
    <version>2.10</version>
    <configuration>
        <wtpversion>2.0</wtpversion>
        <wtpContextName>newContextroot</wtpContextName>
    </configuration>
</plugin>

now go to your project root folder and open cmd prompt at that location type this command :

mvn eclipse:eclipse -Dwtpversion=2.0

You may need to restart eclipse , or in server view delete server and create agian to see affect. I wonder this exercise make sense in real life but works.

0

If using maven java ee 7/8 enterprise application, need to edit the pom.xml of the EAR project

<build>
    <plugins>
        ...
        <plugin>
            <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
            <artifactId>maven-ear-plugin</artifactId>
            <version>2.8</version>
            <configuration>
                <version>6</version>
                <defaultLibBundleDir>lib</defaultLibBundleDir>
                <modules>
                    <webModule>
                        <groupId>com.sample</groupId>
                        <artifactId>ProjectName-web</artifactId>
                        <contextRoot>/myproject</contextRoot>
                    </webModule>
                </modules>
            </configuration>
        </plugin>
        ...
    </plugins>
</build>
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I'm there are some alternate resource... But the programmatically way will be by changing the server.xml file from your server .....

This is how a real world project is configured ....change the path in context.

<Context docBase="projectName" path="/reachingPath" reloadable="true" source="org.eclipse.jst.jee.server:projectName"/></Host>
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It works very well with Maven.

<properties>
   <m2eclipse.wtp.contextRoot>put-the-context-here</m2eclipse.wtp.contextRoot>
</properties>

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