Nevermind. I just found another example online that has the proper SSI
syntax. That was my problem.
-M@
On Monday, October 20, 2003, at 06:19 PM, Matthew Hixson wrote:
I have a page I'm working on called login.html. I'd like to have my
header and footer placed around the body specified in login.html.
-- begin login.html --
<!#include file="header.ssi" >
<b>Here's the body content.</b>
<!#include file="footer.ssi" >
-- end login.html --
Beneath this directory I have an include directory containing
header.ssh and footer.ssi. I'm trying to generate the whole HTML page
by doing this:
xmlc -ssi -ssibase ./include/ -warnings yes -parseinfo -docout
output.html login.html
The output from XMLC shows:
login.html:2: Warning: inserting missing 'title' element
0>RootNode: ''
4> DocTypeTag: 'html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2//EN"'
4> StartTag: html
8> StartTag: head
12> StartTag: title
8> StartTag: body
12> StartTag: b
16> TextNode: 'Here's the body content.'
12> TextNode: ''
and output.html contains:
<HTML><HEAD><TITLE></TITLE></HEAD><BODY><B>Here's the body
content.</B></BODY></HTML>
It seems that XMLC is ignoring the SSI elements. I can even put
nonexistent filenames into the include statements and XMLC doesn't
complain. Nor does it have a problem if I pass a nonexistent
directory name with the -ssibase argument.
Is there something else I need to do to get SSI's to work? I just
want to be able to view the source HTML file in my browser before
having to run my servlet before I see anything, and I don't want to
cut & paste my header & footer into every document.
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
-M@
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