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Apache Tomcat (called "Tomcat" for short) is a free and open-source implementation of the Jakarta Servlet, Jakarta Expression Language, and WebSocket technologies. It provides a "pure Java" HTTP web server environment in which Java code can also run. Thus it is a Java web application server, although not a full JEE application server.
Natural limitations of the platforms where an embedded HTTP server runs contribute to the list of the non-functional requirements of the embedded, or more precise, embeddable HTTP server. Some of these requirements are the following ones. [citation needed] "Small" RAM and ROM footprint. The exact size depends on the system, but in many cases ...
In 2003, the OpenEJB component became a project operating under the auspices of the Apache Software Foundation at which time it was rewritten with a focus on leveraging Tomcat as an embedded web container. A beta version of TomEE was released in October 2011, and the first production-ready version was shipped in April 2012. [7]
Spring Boot (version 1.4 or above) Spring Data JPA (version 1.10 or above) Spring Framework (version 4 or above) Spring Security (version 4 or above) Spring Web Flow (installation and flow definition) SpringSource Tool Suite (STS has an embedded Roo shell and Roo command helpers) Thymeleaf (version 3 or above) The above list can be augmented ...
On a host with a scanner, the saned daemon runs and handles network requests. On client machines a "net" back end (driver) connects to the remote host to fetch the scanner options, and perform previews and scans. The saned daemon acts as a front end locally, but simply passes requests and data between the network connections and the local scanner.
This became Apache Tomcat version 3.0, the successor to JSWDK 2.1, and derailed further development of Apache JServ servlet engine and AJP towards support of Java servlet API version 2.1. [13] The current specification remains at version 1.3, [14] however there is a published extension proposal [15] as well as an archived experimental 1.4 ...
Nikto is a free software command-line vulnerability scanner that scans web servers for dangerous files or CGIs, outdated server software and other problems. It performs generic and server type specific checks.
This version introduced a new versioning system for the Java language, although the old versioning system continued to be used for developer libraries: Both version numbers "1.5.0" and "5.0" are used to identify this release of the Java 2 Platform Standard Edition. Version "5.0" is the product version, while "1.5.0" is the developer version.