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CH 3 - Java Servlets: COSC 617 Jeff Schmitt September 21, 2006

This document provides an overview of Java servlets, including their advantages over other technologies like CGI, the servlet lifecycle, writing servlets, servlet mappings, and common servlet exceptions. It also discusses servlet containers, web applications structure, the HttpServletRequest and HttpServletResponse interfaces, forms and interaction handling, status codes, request dispatching, security, and servlet filters.

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Pulak Ghosh
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
41 views

CH 3 - Java Servlets: COSC 617 Jeff Schmitt September 21, 2006

This document provides an overview of Java servlets, including their advantages over other technologies like CGI, the servlet lifecycle, writing servlets, servlet mappings, and common servlet exceptions. It also discusses servlet containers, web applications structure, the HttpServletRequest and HttpServletResponse interfaces, forms and interaction handling, status codes, request dispatching, security, and servlet filters.

Uploaded by

Pulak Ghosh
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Ch 3 - Java Servlets

COSC 617
Jeff Schmitt
September 21, 2006
Java Servlet API
• The predominant language for server-side
programming
• Standard way to extend server to generate
dynamic content
• Web browsers are universally available “thin”
clients
• Web server is “middleware” for running
application logic
• User sends request – server invokes servlet –
servlet takes request and generates response-
returned to user
Advantages of Servlet API
• CGI, ISAPI, ASP, PHP, etc also generate
dynamic content
• Standard, stable, supported API
• multithreaded for improved performance
• Persistent between invovations, improved
performance
• 100% portable between OS and servers
• Access to all API’s of Java platform
• Basis of JSP technology
• Basis of Struts and JSF frameworks
Servlet Basics
• Packages:
javax.servlet, javax.servlet.http
• Runs in servlet container such as Tomcat
– Tomcat 4.x for Servlet 2.3 API
– Tomcat 5.x for Servlet 2.4 API
• Servlet lifecycle
– Persistent (remains in memory between requests)
– Startup overhead occurrs only once
– init() method runs at first request
– service() method for each request
– destroy() method when server shuts down
Common Gateway Interface (CGI)
• Not persistent
• Not multithreaded
• Not high performancce
• Any language that can read standard input, write
standard output and read environment variables
• Server sends request information specially
encoded on standard input
• Server expects response information on
standard output
Writing servlets
• public class MyServlet extends
javax.servlet.GenericServlet {
• public void service(ServletRequest req,
ServletResponse resp)
• throws ServletException, IOException {
• Resp.SetContentType(“text/plain”);
• …
• }
• }
GenericServlet
• public class MyServlet extends
javax.servlet.GenericServlet {
• public void service(ServletRequest req,
ServletResponse resp)
• throws ServletException, IOException {
• resp.SetContentType(“text/plain”);
• …
• }
• }
HttpServlet
• public class MyServlet extends javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet {
• public void doGet(ServletRequest req, ServletResponse
resp)
• throws ServletException, IOException {
• resp.SetContentType(“text/plain”);
• PrintWriter out = resp.getWriter();
• out.println(“Hello, world”);
• }
• public void doPost(ServletRequest req, ServletResponse
resp)
• throws ServletException, IOException {
• doGet(req, resp);
• }
HttpServlet
• doPost does three things
– Set output type “text/plain” MIME type
– getWriter() method for out stream
– Print on out stream
• getLastModified() method
– To cache content if content delivered by a servlet has
not changed
– Return Long =time content last changed
– Default implementation returns a negative number –
servlet doesn’t know
• getServletInfo() method
– Returns String for logging purposes
Web Applications
• Consists of a set of resources including
– Servlets, Static content, JSP files, Class libraries
• Servlet context,
– a particular path on server to identify the web
application
– Servlets have an isolated, protected environment to
operate in without interference
– ServletContext class where servlets running in same
context can use this to communicate with each other
– Example servlet context: /catalog
– request.getContextPath() + “/servlet/CatalogServlet”
Web App Structure
• Directory tree
– Static resources: /
– Packed classes: /WEB-INF/lib/*.jar
– Unpacked classes: /WEB-INF/classes/*.class
– Deployment descriptor: /WEB-INF/web.xml
• Configuration information for the servlets including
• Names, servlet (path) mapprings, initialization
parameters, context-level configuration
Servlet Path Mappings
• Servlets are not files, so must be mapped to URIs (Uniform
Resource Identifiers)
• Servet container can set default, typically /servlet/*
• Example: /servlet/MyPacPageServlet can invoke
PageServlet.class
• Mapping by
– Exact path: /store/chairs
– Prefix: /store/*
– Extension: *.page
• A servlet mapped to / path becomes the default servlet for
the application and is invoked when no other servlet is
found
Servlet Context Methods
• Resources such as index.html can be accessed through
web server or by servlet
– Servlet uses request.getContextPath() to identify its context
path, for example: /app
– Servlet uses getResource() and
getResourceAsStream(request.getContextPath() + “/index.html”)
• To retrieve context-wide initialization parameters, servlet
uses getInitParameter() and getInitParameterNames()
• To access a range of information about the local
environment, shared with other servlets in same servlet
context, servlet uses getAttribute(), setAttribute(),
removeAttribute(), getAttributeNames()
HttpServletRequest interface
• Server creates object implementing this
interface, passes it to servlet. Allows access to
• URL info: getProtocol(), getServerName(),
getPort(), getScheme()
• User host name: getRemoteHost()
• Parameter info: (variables from input form):
.getParameterNames(), getParameter()
• HTTP –specific request data:
getHeaderNames(), getHeader(), getAuthType()
Forms and Interaction
• <form method=get action=“/servlet/MyServlet”>
– GET method appends parameters to action URL:
/servlet/MyServlet?userid=Jeff&pass=1234
– This is called a query string (starting with ?)
• Username: <input type=text name=“userid”
size=20>
• Password: <input type=password name=“pass”
size=20>
• <input type=submit value=“Login”>
POST Method
• <form method=post …
– Post method does not append parameters to action URL:
/servlet/MyServlet
– Instead, parameters are sent in body of request where the
password is not visible as in GET method
• POST requests are not idempotent
– From Mathematics – an idempotent unary operator definition:
whenever it is applied twice to any element, it gives the same
result as if it were applied once.
– Cannot bookmark them
– Are not safely repeatable
– Can’t be reloaded
– browsers treat them specially, ask user
HEAD, and Other Methods
• HEAD – returns headers only
• PUT, DELETE – create and remove resources
from the web server
• TRACE – returns the request headers to the
client
• doXXX() methods (XXX is one of the four)
• Most servlet programmers ignore these methods
• Default implementation informs user that request
is unsupported or provides minimal
implementation
HttpServletResponse
• Specify the MIME type of the response
– .setContentType(“image/gif”);
– Called before .getWriter() so correct Charset is used
• Two methods for producing output streams:
– Java.io.Printwriter out = resp.getWriter()
– ServletOutputStream str = resp.getOutputStream()
//used for non-text responses
• HTTP response headers and status code
– setHeader(), containsHeader(),
– setStatus(), 200 OK, 404 Not Found, etc.
– sendError()
– sendRedirect(), sets Location header and status code for
redirect. Causes browser to make another request.
RequestDispatcher
• Can forward request to another servlet
• Can include bits of content from other servlets in its own
response
• RequestDispatcher d =
req.getRequestDispatcher(“/servlet/OtherServlet”);
– Either include – goes and comes back
d.include(req, resp);
– Or forward – doesn’t come back
d.forward(req, resp);
• Request dispatching is Different from sendRedirect()
– browser not involved
– from user perspective, URL is unchanged
Status Codes
response.sendError,HttpServletResponse.SC_NOT_FOUN
D, “Could not find it”);
• SC_OK = 200 // the success code
• SC_NO_CONTENT = 204 //content unchanged -- browser view
stays at the form but avoids “contains no data” error message
• SC_MOVED_PERMANENTLY = 301
// browser uses Location header
• SC_MOVED_TEMPORARILY = 302
// browser uses Location header
• SC_UNAUTHORIZED = 401 // wrong authentication
• SC_NOT_FOUND = 404 // page not found
• SC_INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR = 500
• SC_NOT_IMPLEMENTED = 501 // for HEADER, PUT, DELETE
• SC_SERVICE_UNAVAILABLE = 503
Servlet Exceptions
• ServletException – thrown to indicate a general
servlet problem
• try { …
} catch (Exception ex) {
throw new ServletException(ex);
}
• UnavailableException, a derivative of
ServletException, notifies the server that servlet
is going to be temporarily unavailable
Servlet Context Initialization
• Application-level events use a listener style
interface
• Opportunity to create and share application-level
resources such as DB connection pools
• Classes that implement ServletContextListener
are notified when the context is initialized or
destroyed.
• Context listeners are associated with their
context with the application-level web.xml file.
Security
• J2EE User Role Model -- users can be assigned
one or more roles
• web.xml defines which servlets and resources
are protected and which users have access
• particular role allows access to specific
protected resources
• getRemoteUser() -- user’s ID
• getAuthType() -- Basic, Digest, or SSL
• isUserInRole() – for dynamic content decisions
• getUserPrincipal() – returns a
java.security.Principal object identifying the user
Servlet Filters
• Filters perform processing on the request
• Implement logging, control security, set up
connection-specific objects
• javax.servlet.Filter = filter resource class
• Filter chain – zero or more Filter objects and a
destination resource (servlet or JSP)
• Set up a filter for a particular request path, (like a
servlet mapping) such as *.jsp
• Filter resource calls doFilter() to advance to next
filter in the chain, if no more filters, request is
passed to ultimate destination
Thread Safety
• Multithreaded = one servlet, multiple requests
simultaneously
• Threadsafe – not using class variables since one
copy of these variables is shared by all threads
• Synchronized blocks of code, all threads wait
until they can enter, one at a time
• Servlet 2.4 deprecates SingleThreadModel
interface – could not resolve all potential
threading issues.
Cookies
• Persistent client-side storage of data known to server
and sent to client
• Cookie is multiple names and values. Value limited to
4096 bytes
• has expiration date, and a server name (returned to
same host and not to others)
• Cookie is sent in HTTP header of response
– resp.addCookie(name,value)
• Cookie is returned to server in HTTP header of
subsequent request
• cookies = req.getCookies();
– For (int i=0;i<cookies.length;i++) {
– cookies[i].getName cookies[i].getAttribute
Session Tracking
• For tracking individual users through the site
• Application needs stateful environment whereas
the web is inherently stateless
• Previously, applications had to resort to
complicated code, using cookies, hidden
variables in forms, rewriting URLs to contain
state information
• Delegates most of the user-tracking functions to
the server
• Server creates object
javax.servlet.http.HttpSession
Session
• Servlet uses req.getSession(true)
– Boolean arg handles case if no current session object
– Should new one be created or not
– Session.isNew() – useful to detect new session object
• Servlet binds data to the HttpSession object with
session.setAttribute(“hits”,new Integer(34));
• Server assigns unique session ID, stored in a cookie
• If cookies are not available, server uses URL rewriting.
To create links, with session ID use
– resp.encodeURL(“/servlet/View”)
or
– resp.encodeRedirectURL(“/servlet/View”)
JDBC
• Load the driver class
• Get a connection
• Create a statement
• Execute the query, returns ResultSet
• Iterate through ResultSet
JDBC Example
• // Load the Oracle JDBC driver
Class.forName ("oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver");
• //Connect to DB server as authorized user
Connection conn = DriverManager.getConnection
("jdbc:oracle:thin:@orion.towson.edu:1521:cosc",
account, password);
• // Create a JDBC Statement to hold SQL query
Statement stmt = conn.createStatement ();
ResultSet rset = stmt.executeQuery ("select ticker from
stocks");
• // Iterate through the result and print the employee
names
while (rset.next ()) {
out.println (rset.getString (1));
}

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