A autorun.inf file is component of the Windows operating system and has no relevance on a Mac.
an auto run inf on your mac*
put the audiotracks first, then datatrack with the autorun and exe files as the last track on the CD
I would suggest typing in: start <nameofthefile>.INF and make sure that you have a program that is set up to defaultly open INF files.
Any Web Application has a hierarchical structure (of folders) that is used for packaging the web applications. The application needs a reference point within the hierarchical structure. Here, let's call it TOMCAT_HOME. This represents the root of your server (Tomcat) installation, not your Web application root. When we talk of a Web application's context, we are referring to that Web application's root directory or path within a particular server. A special directory exists within the application hierarchy named WEB-INF. This directory contains all things related to the application that aren't in the document root of the application. It is this WEB-INF directory that is the Web application's root directory, also referred to as the context. The most important file here is web.xml, the name of the WebApp deployment descriptor. Let us take a look at the various contents (files & folders) that will be present inside this WEB-INF directory: 1. /WEB-INF/web.xml - This is the Deployment Descriptor file 2. /WEB-INF/classes/ - This is the directory where all your java class files will be placed 3. /WEB-INF/lib/ - This is the folder where all your JAR files go. The classes folder is where you will place the .class file of your Servlet to deploy it on a server
Open up the .minecraft folder, and then open the bin folder, and then open the minecraft.jar with win-rar. Then drag all the .class files into that folder, then delete the META-INF folder. Then you should have the mod.
The JSP Files in a web application can be placed inside the WEB-INF folder and then invoked. If the JSP is in WEB-INF\webapps\examples\hello.jsp you can invoke it by calling http://localhost:8080/examples/hello.jsp
The JSP Files in a web application can be placed inside the WEB-INF folder and then invoked. If the JSP is in WEB-INF\webapps\examples\hello.jsp you can invoke it by calling http://localhost:8080/examples/hello.jsp
You Run a Servlet by deploying it on the server, which in this case is tomcat. We need to deploy the servlet in the Web Applications context. When we talk of a Web application's context, we are referring to that Web application's root directory or path within a particular server. A special directory exists within the application hierarchy named WEB-INF. This directory contains all things related to the application that aren't in the document root of the application. It is this WEB-INF directory that is the Web application's root directory, also referred to as the context. The most important file here is web.xml, the name of the WebApp deployment descriptor. Let us take a look at the various contents (files & folders) that will be present inside this WEB-INF directory: 1. /WEB-INF/web.xml - This is the Deployment Descriptor file 2. /WEB-INF/classes/ - This is the directory where all your java class files will be placed 3. /WEB-INF/lib/ - This is the folder where all your JAR files go. my tomcat is installed in c:\dev\java\Jakarta-tomcat-4.0.1. This is my TOMCAT_HOME. Remember that, this path that is referred by TOMCAT_HOME might vary from PC to PC depending on the installation preferences of the user. To Deploy the Servlet, you need to place the .class file corresponding to your servlet in the /WEB-INF/classes/ folder
.inf file
META-INF to remove it open minecraft.jar with winrar or 7-zip
In your minecraft.jar file, (which you need winRAR or 7-Zip to open with), delete the META-INF file.
at the login screen click auto update and then try it