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© 2008 IBM Session ID: D19 Session Title: Annotated Portal Development with RAD and Spring Speaker(s): Ken Sipe, Technology Director, Perficient Peter.

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Presentation on theme: "© 2008 IBM Session ID: D19 Session Title: Annotated Portal Development with RAD and Spring Speaker(s): Ken Sipe, Technology Director, Perficient Peter."— Presentation transcript:

1 © 2008 IBM Session ID: D19 Session Title: Annotated Portal Development with RAD and Spring Speaker(s): Ken Sipe, Technology Director, Perficient Peter Blinstrubas, IBM Americas Portal Leader WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008

2 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 2 2 Abstract  This session will show off the paradigm shift in portlet development which comes with Spring annotations.  The session will also demonstrate how to unit test the portlets without a portal server running.  This session is intended for developers already familiar with portlet development who want to improve their productivity and test their work 2

3 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 3 3 Agenda  Portlets  Anatomy of a Portlet  Productivity Pain Points  Annotations  What are Annotations?  Spring  What is Spring  Spring 2.5 Annotations  Portlet + Spring Annotation Development  Better Development Paradigm  Better Testing Paradigm 3

4 © 2008 IBM Portal and Portlets 4

5 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 5 5 Portal Anatomy - External 5

6 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 6 6 Portlet Anatomy - Internal These interfaces shape your role in the container and resources available from the container  Portlet  PortletConfig  PortletContext  PortalContext

7 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 7 7 Portlet Interface 7

8 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 8 8 Portlet Functionality  Similar to Servlets  Managed by container  Generate dynamic content  Life-cycle managed  Differences from Servlets  Generate Markup fragments  Not Directly addressable  Persistence storage for preferences  Request Processing  Portlet Modes  Window State Minimized, etc.  User Information 8

9 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 9 9 Portlet Coding Difference 1: Request Processing  Request processing comes in two forms:  Action Requests  Render Requests  Each client request invokes at most one action request  Each client request may invoke any number of render requests, depending on layout, caching, and other factors  A portlet may be rendered many times between action requests  Unlike servlets, portlets are not bound to a logical location (URL)

10 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 10 Portlet Modes  View mode  doView(…)  Normal Display  Edit mode  doEdit(…)  Configuration mode of the portlet Location details Personal preferences  Help mode  doHelp(…)

11 © 2008 IBM Simple HelloWorld Portlet Example 11

12 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 12 Portal Tool Features v7.x Streamlined Portlet Wizard Co-operative Wizard Usability improvement. Enhanced Credential Vault Support. JSR 168 and JSR 286

13 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 13 Hello World Portlet public class HelloWorld extends GenericPortlet { protected void doView(RenderRequest request, RenderResponse response) throws PortletException, IOException { response.setContentType(“text/html”); response.getWriter().println(“Hello Portlet”); }

14 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 14 Pain Points  Code Dependency on Portlet  Not POJO  Management and Dependency on the View Technology  Execution Model  Action Request  Render Request  Portlet Modes  View  Edit  Help

15 © 2008 IBM Spring Spring MVC Portal 15

16 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 16 What is Spring?  IoC  Generic Bean Factory  Abstraction from other frameworks  Removes croft from developer code  Provides typology freedom Develop on Tomcat, deploy to WebSphere  Provides Testability No need for in the container testing Framework ties are in the spring framework 16

17 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 17 Heart of Spring MVC  DispatcherPortlet  Defined in the portlet.xml file  Controller for portlet  Multiple may be defined in a single portlet.xml file  Name of defined portlet is the key to the configuration file (by default) springportlet-portlet.xml

18 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 18 Spring Portlet XML File  Defines Controller and other Spring Beans  Maps Controller for each mode

19 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 19 Spring Portlet Controller import javax.portlet.RenderRequest; import javax.portlet.RenderResponse; import org.springframework.web.portlet.ModelAndView; import org.springframework.web.portlet.mvc.AbstractController; public class ViewController extends AbstractController { protected ModelAndView handleRenderRequestInternal(RenderRequest request, RenderResponse response) throws Exception { return new ModelAndView("View"); }

20 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 20 Spring View Mapping <bean id="viewResolver“ class= "org.springframework.web.servlet.view.InternalResourceViewResolver"> org.springframework.web.servlet.view.JstlView /WEB-INF/jsp/.jsp

21 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 21 Changes to Web.xml  ContextLoaderListener  Listener to bootstap spring  ViewRendererServlet  Front Controller for Spring Portlet MVC

22 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 22 Spring applicationContent.xml  Required by ViewRendererServlet  Provides Shared Spring beans across portlets

23 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 23 Spring Portlet MVC Setup  Jars:  Spring Spring.jar, spring-webmvc-portlet.jar  Logging Commons-logging.jar, log4j-1.2.14.jar  Web Jstl.jar, standard.jar  Create portlet Configuration  Configure for Spring  Portlet.xml with DispatcherPortlet  Spring xml *-portlet.xml  applicationContext.xml  Configure web.xml  Create Controller  Create Views

24 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 24 Spring Portlet Benefits  Separates Portlet from View Technology  Spring Enables the Portlet  After Spring Wiring  Simple Code Model Controller for multiple portlet modes Controller for each portlet mode 24

25 © 2008 IBM Spring 2.5 Annotations 25

26 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 26 Java 5+ Annotations  Java 5 Introduces Annotations  New Type of Interface  Provides Metadata for:  Compile time  Runtime  Language Provides  Built-in Annotations @Override  Ability to Define Custom Annotations  Annotation Creation @Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME) public @interface Author { String name(); }  Annotation Use @Author ( name = "John Doe" ) public class OrderDAO { // class code goes here } 26

27 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 27 Spring 2.5 Annotations  JSR 250 - @PostConstruct, @Resource…  JAX-WS 2.0’s - @WebServiceRef  EJB 3.0 - @EJB  Test Enhancements - Junit 4.4 and TestNG  Stereotypes - @Component, @Controller…  Spring enhancements - @Autowired,  AOP - @Configurable  MVC annotations - @RequestParam, @RequestMapping… 27

28 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 28 Spring 2.5 Context Annotations  @Scope  Indicates the scope to use for annotated class instances  Default == “singleton”  Options: Singleton Prototype  Web Options: Request Session Global session

29 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 29 Spring 2.5 Stereotypes  @Component **  Indicates that a class is a component  Class is a candidate for auto-detection  Custom component extensions  @Controller  Specialized Component  Typically used with RequestMapping annotation  Discussed in section on web mvc  @Repository  2.0 stereotype… previously mentioned  Now an extension of @Component  @Service  Intended to be a business service facade

30 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 30 Spring 2.5 Factory Annotations  @Autowired  Marks a constructor, field, setter or config method for injection.  Fields are injected After construction Before config methods  @Autowired(required=false)  Config: AutowiredAnnotationBeanPostProcessor  @Configurable  Marks class as being eligible for Spring-driven configuration  Used with AspectJ  @Qualifier  Qualifies a bean for autowiring  May be customized  @Required  Marks a method as being injection required

31 © 2008 IBM A World with No Editor Support 31

32 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 32 Spring 2.5 MVC Annotations  @Controller  Stereotype used to “Controller” of MVC  Scanned for RequestMappings  @RequestMapping  Annotates a handler method for a request  Very flexible  @RequestParam  Annotates that a method parameter should be bound to a web request parameter  SessionAttributes  Marks session attributes that a handler uses

33 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 33 @RequestMapping - Extreme Flexibility  Parameters can be  Request / response / session  WebRequest  InputStream  OutputStream  @RequestParam  +++  Return types  ModelAndView Object  Model Object  Map for exposing model  View Object  String which is a view name  Void… if method wrote the response content directly

34 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 34 Spring 2.5 Controller Example @Controller public class ConfController { @Autowired private confDB confDB; @RequestMapping("/sessionList") public String showSessionList(ModelMap model) { model.addAttribute("sessions", this.confDB.getSessions()); return "sessionList"; } @RequestMapping("speakerImage") public void streamSpeakerImage(@RequestParam("name") String name, OutputStream outputStream) throws IOException { this.confDB.getSpeakerImage(name,outputStream); } @RequestMapping("/clearDatabase") public String clearDB() { this.confDB.clear(); return "redirect:sessionList"; }

35 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 35 Compare Controllers  Spring w/o annotations  Spring w/ annotations

36 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 36 Testing – Here is your Portlet  Any Problems testing this code? 36

37 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 37 Spring 3.X – What’s Coming?  JSR-286 Portlet Support  Java 5+ Only  Remove all pre-JDK 5 Dependencies 37

38 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 38 Summary  IBM WebSphere Portal Server  #1 portal container in the enterprise  Spring  #1 IoC container and glue of architecture  Enables continuous integration  Future of Development  Annotations  Code by convention instead of configuration 38

39 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 39 Additional Information and Resources WebSphere Portal – IBM Site http://www-3.ibm.com/software/genservers/portal/ WebSphere Portal Business Solutions Catalog: http://catalog.lotus.com/wps/portal/portal Websphere Portal Developer’s Zone http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/websphere/zones/portal/ Product Documentation and WebSphere Portal Wiki http://www-3.ibm.com/software/genservers/portal/library/ http://www-10.lotus.com/ldd/portalwiki.nsf http://springsource.com/ Education http://www-3.ibm.com/software/genservers/portal/education/ WebSphere Portal 6.0 DemoNet http://docs.dfw.ibm.com/wp6/?DDSPageRequest=/

40 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 40 Session ID:D19 Session:Annotated Portal Development with RAD and Spring Presenter(s):Ken Sipe, Technology Director, Perficient, Inc. Peter Blinstrubas, IBM Americas Portal Leader Please take a few minutes to fill out the session survey. Thank you Mark your calendars! 2009 U.S. WebSphere Portal Technical Conference October 12-15, 2009, Sheraton San Diego Hotel and Marina WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008

41 STORY TITLE WebSphere Portal Technical Conference U.S. 2008 41 © IBM Corporation 2008 All Rights Reserved. The information contained in this publication is provided for informational purposes only. While efforts were made to verify the completeness and accuracy of the information contained in this publication, it is provided AS IS without warranty of any kind, express or implied. In addition, this information is based on IBM’s current product plans and strategy, which are subject to change by IBM without notice. IBM shall not be responsible for any damages arising out of the use of, or otherwise related to, this publication or any other materials. Nothing contained in this publication is intended to, nor shall have the effect of, creating any warranties or representations from IBM or its suppliers or licensors, or altering the terms and conditions of the applicable license agreement governing the use of IBM software. References in this presentation to IBM products, programs, or services do not imply that they will be available in all countries in which IBM operates. Product release dates and/or capabilities referenced in this presentation may change at any time at IBM’s sole discretion based on market opportunities or other factors, and are not intended to be a commitment to future product or feature availability in any way. Nothing contained in these materials is intended to, nor shall have the effect of, stating or implying that any activities undertaken by you will result in any specific sales, revenue growth or other results. All customer examples described are presented as illustrations of how those customers have used IBM products and the results they may have achieved. Actual environmental costs and performance characteristics may vary by customer. IBM, the IBM logo, WebSphere, Lotus, Lotus Notes, Domino, Quickplace, Sametime, Workplace and Quickr are trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation in the United States, other countries, or both. Java and all Java-based trademarks are trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the United States, other countries, or both. Microsoft and Windows are trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United States, other countries, or both. Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in the United States, other countries, or both. Other company, product, or service names may be trademarks or service marks of others. All references to Renovations Inc. refer to a fictitious company and are used for illustration purposes only.


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