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      Copyright (c) 2009, 2021 Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
      
      This program and the accompanying materials are made available under the
      terms of the Eclipse Public License v. 2.0, which is available at
      http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-2.0.
      
      This Source Code may also be made available under the following Secondary
      Licenses when the conditions for such availability set forth in the
      Eclipse Public License v. 2.0 are satisfied: GNU General Public License,
      version 2 with the GNU Classpath Exception, which is available at
      https://www.gnu.org/software/classpath/license.html.
      
      SPDX-License-Identifier: EPL-2.0 OR GPL-2.0 WITH Classpath-exception-2.0
      
    
  

  
    

      This is the XML Schema for the JSP 3.1 deployment descriptor
      types.  The JSP 3.1 schema contains all the special
      structures and datatypes that are necessary to use JSP files
      from a web application. 
      
      The contents of this schema is used by the web-common_6_0.xsd 
      file to define JSP specific content. 
      
    
  

  
    

      The following conventions apply to all Jakarta EE
      deployment descriptor elements unless indicated otherwise.
      
      - In elements that specify a pathname to a file within the
      same JAR file, relative filenames (i.e., those not
      starting with "/") are considered relative to the root of
      the JAR file's namespace.  Absolute filenames (i.e., those
      starting with "/") also specify names in the root of the
      JAR file's namespace.  In general, relative names are
      preferred.  The exception is .war files where absolute
      names are preferred for consistency with the Servlet API.
      
    
  

  




  
    
      

        The jsp-configType is used to provide global configuration
        information for the JSP files in a web application. It has
        two subelements, taglib and jsp-property-group.
        
      
    
    
      
      
    
    
  




  
    
      

        The jsp-file element contains the full path to a JSP file
        within the web application beginning with a `/'.
        
      
    
    
      
    
  




  
    
      

        The jsp-property-groupType is used to group a number of
        files so they can be given global property information.
        All files so described are deemed to be JSP files.  The
        following additional properties can be described:
        
        - Control whether EL is ignored.
        - Control whether scripting elements are invalid.
        - Indicate pageEncoding information.
        - Indicate that a resource is a JSP document (XML).
        - Prelude and Coda automatic includes.
        - Control whether the character sequence #{ is allowed
        when used as a String literal.
        - Control whether template text containing only
        whitespaces must be removed from the response output.
        - Indicate the default contentType information.
        - Indicate the default buffering model for JspWriter
        - Control whether error should be raised for the use of
        undeclared namespaces in a JSP page.
        
      
    
    
      
      
      
        
          

            Can be used to easily set the isELIgnored
            property of a group of JSP pages.  By default, the
            EL evaluation is enabled for Web Applications using
            a Servlet 2.4 or greater web.xml, and disabled
            otherwise.
            
          
        
      
      
        
          

            Can be used to easily set the errorOnELNotFound
            property of a group of JSP pages. By default, this
            property is false.
            
          
        
      
      
        
          

            The valid values of page-encoding are those of the
            pageEncoding page directive.  It is a
            translation-time error to name different encodings
            in the pageEncoding attribute of the page directive
            of a JSP page and in a JSP configuration element
            matching the page.  It is also a translation-time
            error to name different encodings in the prolog
            or text declaration of a document in XML syntax and
            in a JSP configuration element matching the document.
            It is legal to name the same encoding through
            mulitple mechanisms.
            
          
        
      
      
        
          

            Can be used to easily disable scripting in a
            group of JSP pages.  By default, scripting is
            enabled.
            
          
        
      
      
        
          

            If true, denotes that the group of resources
            that match the URL pattern are JSP documents,
            and thus must be interpreted as XML documents.
            If false, the resources are assumed to not
            be JSP documents, unless there is another
            property group that indicates otherwise.
            
          
        
      
      
        
          

            The include-prelude element is a context-relative
            path that must correspond to an element in the
            Web Application.  When the element is present,
            the given path will be automatically included (as
            in an include directive) at the beginning of each
            JSP page in this jsp-property-group.
            
          
        
      
      
        
          

            The include-coda element is a context-relative
            path that must correspond to an element in the
            Web Application.  When the element is present,
            the given path will be automatically included (as
            in an include directive) at the end of each
            JSP page in this jsp-property-group.
            
          
        
      
      
        
          

            The character sequence #{ is reserved for EL expressions.
            Consequently, a translation error occurs if the #{
            character sequence is used as a String literal, unless
            this element is enabled (true). Disabled (false) by
            default.
            
          
        
      
      
        
          

            Indicates that template text containing only whitespaces
            must be removed from the response output. It has no
            effect on JSP documents (XML syntax). Disabled (false)
            by default.
            
          
        
      
      
        
          

            The valid values of default-content-type are those of the
            contentType page directive.  It specifies the default
            response contentType if the page directive does not include
            a contentType attribute.
            
          
        
      
      
        
          

            The valid values of buffer are those of the
            buffer page directive.  It specifies if buffering should be
            used for the output to response, and if so, the size of the
            buffer to use.
            
          
        
      
      
        
          

            The default behavior when a tag with unknown namespace is used
            in a JSP page (regular syntax) is to silently ignore it.  If
            set to true, then an error must be raised during the translation
            time when an undeclared tag is used in a JSP page.  Disabled
            (false) by default.
            
          
        
      
    
    
  




  
    
      

        The taglibType defines the syntax for declaring in
        the deployment descriptor that a tag library is
        available to the application.  This can be done
        to override implicit map entries from TLD files and
        from the container.
        
      
    
    
      
        
          

            A taglib-uri element describes a URI identifying a
            tag library used in the web application.  The body
            of the taglib-uri element may be either an
            absolute URI specification, or a relative URI.
            There should be no entries in web.xml with the
            same taglib-uri value.
            
          
        
      
      
        
          

            the taglib-location element contains the location
            (as a resource relative to the root of the web
            application) where to find the Tag Library
            Description file for the tag library.
            
          
        
      
    
    
  






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