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JSP – Java Server Pages Part 1 Representation and Management of Data on the Internet.

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Presentation on theme: "JSP – Java Server Pages Part 1 Representation and Management of Data on the Internet."— Presentation transcript:

1 JSP – Java Server Pages Part 1 Representation and Management of Data on the Internet

2 Introduction

3 What is JSP Good For? Servlets allow us to write dynamic Web pages -Easy access to request, session and context data -Easy manipulation of the response (cookies, etc.) -And lots more... It is not convenient to write and maintain long static HTML using Servlets out.println(" Bla Bla " + "bla bla bla bla" + "lots more here...")

4 JSP Idea Use HTML for most of the page Write Servlet code directly in the HTML page, marked with special tags The server automatically translates a JSP page to a Servlet class and the latter is actually invoked -In Tomcat 5.0, you can find the generated Servlet code under $CATALINA_BASE/work/

5 Relationships Servlets: HTML code is printed in Java code JSP: Java code is embedded in HTML code Java HTML Java HTML

6 Example Hello World Hello World Tomcat 5.0 Generated Servlet

7 Generated Servlet Hierarchy (Tomcat 5.0 Implementation) Apache Implementation Generated Servlet Sun Specifications

8 JSP Limitations and Advantages JSP can only do what a Servlet can do Easier to write and maintain HTML Easier to separate HTML from code Can use a "reverse engineering technique": create static HTML and then replace static data with Java code

9 JSP Life Cycle

10 The following table describes the life cycle of JSP generated Servlet in details:

11 JSP Life Cycle Page first written Request #1 Request #2 Server restarted Request #3 Request #4 Page modified Request #5 Request #6 JSP page translated into servlet YesNo YesNo Servlet compiledYesNo YesNo Servlet instantiated and loaded into server's memory YesNoYesNoYesNo init (or equivalent) called YesNoYesNoYesNo doGet (or equivalent) called Yes Written by Marty Hall. Core Servlets & JSP book: www.coreservlets.com

12 JSP Translation When the JSP file is modified, JSP is translated into a Servlet -Application need not be reloaded when JSP file is modified Server does not generate the Servlet class after startup, if the latter already exists -Generated Servlet acts just like any other Servlet

13 init() and destroy() init() of the generated Servlet is called every time the Servlet class is loaded into memory and instantiated destroy() of the generated Servlet is called every time the generated Servlet is removed The latter two happen even if the reason is modification of the JSP file

14 Thread Synchronization After the Servlet is generated, one instance of it serves requests in different threads, just like any other Servlet In particular, the service method ( _jspService ) may be executed by several concurrent threads Thus, like Servlets, JSP programming requires concurrency management

15 Basic JSP Elements

16 Basic Elements in a JSP file HTML code: content JSP Comments: Expressions: Scriptlets: Declarations: Directives: Actions:, EL Expressions: ${expression} Covered Later...

17 JSP Expressions A JSP expression is used to insert Java values directly into the output It has the form:, where expression can be a Java object, a numerical expression, a method call that returns a value, etc... For example:

18 JSP Expressions A JSP Expression is evaluated The result is converted to a string The string is inserted into the page This evaluation is performed at runtime (when the page is requested), and thus has full access to information about the request, the session, etc...

19 Expression Translation A Random Number public void _jspService(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws java.io.IOException, ServletException {... response.setContentType("text/html");... out.write(" A Random Number \r\n"); out.print( Math.random() ); out.write("\r\n");... }

20 Predefined Variables (Implicit Objects) The following predefined variables can be used: - request : the HttpServletRequest - response : the HttpServletResponse - session : the HttpSession associated with the request - out : the PrintWriter (a buffered version of type JspWriter ) used to fill the response content - application : The ServletContext These variables and more will be discussed in details

21 JSP Expressions JSP Expressions Current time: Your hostname: Your session ID: The testParam form parameter:

22 JSP Scriplets JSP scriptlets let you insert arbitrary code into the Servlet service method ( _jspService ) Scriptlets have the form: The code is inserted verbatim into the service method, according to the location of the scriplet Scriptlets have access to the same automatically defined variables as expressions

23 public void _jspService(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOException {... response.setContentType("text/html");... out.print(foo()); bar();... } Scriptlet Translation

24 An Interesting Example Scriptlets don't have to be complete code blocks: You won the game! You lost the game! if (Math.random() < 0.5) { out.write("You won the game!"); } else { out.write("You lost the game!"); }

25 JSP Declarations A JSP declaration lets you define methods or members that get inserted into the Servlet class (outside of all methods) It has the following form: For example: It is usually of better design to define methods in a separate Java class...

26 Declaration Example Print the number of times the current page has been requested since the Servlet initialization: <%! private synchronized int incAccess() { return ++accessCount; } %> Accesses to page since Servlet init:

27 public class serviceCount_jsp extends... implements... throws... { private int accessCount = 0; private synchronized int incAccess() { return ++accessCount; } public void _jspService(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOException {... out.write(" Accesses to page since Servlet init: "); out.print(incAccess());... }... }

28 jspInit and jspDestroy In JSP pages, like regular Servlets, we sometimes want to implement init and destroy It is illegal to use JSP declarations to override init or destroy, since they are (usually) already implemented by the generated Servlet Instead, override the methods jspInit and jspDestroy -The generated servlet is guaranteed to call these methods from init and destroy, respectively -The standard versions of jspInit and jspDestroy are empty (placeholders for you to override)

29 JSP Directives A JSP directive affects the structure of the Servlet class that is generated from the JSP page It usually has the following form: Three directives: page, include and taglib include and taglib will be discussed later

30 page -Directive Attributes import attribute: A comma separated list of classes/packages to import contentType attribute: Sets the MIME-Type of the resulting document (default is text/html) What is the difference between setting the contentType attribute, and writing ?

31 More page -Directive Attributes session="true|false" - use a session? buffer="sizekb|none" - Specifies the content-buffer size ( out ) autoFlush="true|false" -Specifies whether the buffer should be flushed when it fills, or throw an exception otherwise isELIgnored ="true|false" -Specifies whether JSP expression language is used -EL is discussed later

32 Variables in JSP

33 Implicit Objects As seen before, some useful variables, like request and session are predefined These variables are called implicit objects Implicit objects are defined in the scope of the service method -Can these be used in JSP declarations? Implicit objects are part of the JSP specifications

34 The objects request and response request and response are the HttpServletRequest and HttpServletResponse arguments of the service method Using these objects, you can: Read request parameters Set response headers etc. (everything we learned in Servlet lectures)

35 The object out This is the Writer used to add write output into the response body This object implements the interface JspWriter that combines the functionality of PrintWriter and BufferedWriter Recall that you can adjust the buffer size, or turn buffering off, through use of the buffer attribute of the page directive

36 The object pageContext pageContext is a new object introduced by JSP This object stores all important elements used by the generated Servlet, like the application context, the session, the output writer, etc. It enable vendors to elegantly extend their JSP implementation This object is also used to store page-scoped attributes (e.g., Java Beans - discussed later)

37 The object session This is the HttpSession object associated with the request If the session attribute in the page directive is turned off ( ) then this object is not available Recall that a session is created by default

38 The object config This is the ServletConfig of the page, as received in the init() method Remember: contains Servlet specific initialization parameters Later, we will study how initialization parameters are passed to JSP pages Recall that you can also obtain the ServletContext from config

39 The object application This is the ServletContext as obtained via getServletConfig().getContext() Remember: -The ServletContext is shared by all Web-application Servlets (including ones generated from JSP) -Getting and setting attributes is with getAttribute and setAttribute of ServletContext -You can use this object to get application-wide initialization parameters

40 Page Scope service() local variables pageContext attributes

41 Request Scope request attributes

42 Session Scope session attributes

43 Servlet Scope Servlet members

44 Application Scope application attributes

45 Servlet Package and Helper Classes The generated Servlet has a named package In Tomcat, this package is: org.apache.jsp In Java, you cannot use classes from the default package (i.e. with no package declaration) from a named package! Therefore, helper classes used by JSP pages must have a named package

46 JSP and XML

47 Simple XML Production ">

48 Generated XML red blue green

49 JSPX files are JSP files that have the extension jspx and have XML syntax Non-XML symbols <%, <%@, etc. are replaced with special JSP tags Default content type of JSPX is text/xml (and not text/html ) Thus, JSPX files generate XML and can be edited using XML tools JSPX Files

50 Expression Code Declaration <jsp:directive.type Attribute="value"/>

51 Problems with JSPX The XML declaration ( ) and the DOCTYPE definition are now those of the JSPX file. How do we include those in the result XML? -Solution: use the tag to explicitly require DOCTYPE and XML declarations How do we generate dynamic attribute values and still keep the document well formed? -Solution 1: use for explicit element construction -Solution 2: use an EL expression (discussed later)

52 <jsp:output doctype-root-element="colors" doctype-system="colors.dtd" /> static String[] colors = {"red","blue","green"}; i colors[i] }

53 JSP as JSPX You can tell the container that a JSP file acts as a JSPX file Use the element as the document root

54 ]]> static String[] colors = {"red","blue","green"}; i colors[i] }

55 Using External Parameters

56 JSP Initial Parameters Like Servlets, initialization parameters can be passed to JSP files using the element of the application configuration file web.xml Use the sub-element instead of the sub-element A is also needed -Use the real JSP URL as the

57 dbLogin snoopy dbPassword snoopass An Example web.xml

58 ParamPage /paramPage.jsp tableName users ParamPage /paramPage.jsp web.xml

59 JSP initial parameters Hello I should use the table To access the Database, I should use the login and the password. paramPage.jsp


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