How to make Jetty dynamically load "static" pages
Although this is a Old problem but i found this post very helpful, in short just change your config to
<plugin>
<groupId>org.mortbay.jetty</groupId>
<artifactId>jetty-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<configuration>
<connectors>
<connector implementation="org.eclipse.jetty.server.bio.SocketConnector">
<port>8080</port>
</connector>
</connectors>
</configuration>
</plugin>
This disables the NIO support in Jetty ( but it should not be problem for debug puropse for simple cases ).
Jetty uses memory-mapped files to buffer static content, which causes the file-locking in Windows. Try setting useFileMappedBuffer
for DefaultServlet
to false
.
Troubleshooting Locked files on Windows (from the Jetty wiki) has instructions.
While one of the answers above is exactly right for configuring jetty by xml, if you want to configure this option in code (for an embedded server) the answer is different and not found on that page.
You'll find a number of suggestions online including
context.getInitParams().put("useFileMappedBuffer", "false");
Or overriding the WebAppContext, or using a fully qualified name for the init parameter. None of these suggestions worked for me (using Jetty 7.2.2). Part of the problem was that the useFileMappedBuffer option needs to be set on the servlet that the WebAppContext is using to serve the static files, rather than on the context.
In the end I did something like this on a straightforward ServletContextHandler
// Startup stuff
final Server server = new Server(port);
ServletContextHandler handler = new ServletContextHandler();
handler.setResourceBase(path);
SessionManager sm = new HashSessionManager();
SessionHandler sh = new SessionHandler(sm);
handler.setSessionHandler(sh);
DefaultServlet defaultServlet = new DefaultServlet();
ServletHolder holder = new ServletHolder(defaultServlet);
holder.setInitParameter("useFileMappedBuffer", "false");
handler.addServlet(holder, "/");
server.setHandler(handler);
server.start();
server.join();