Thursday 15 December 2011

Accessing the Web Context


The context in which Web components execute is an object that implements the ServletContext interface. You retrieve the Web context with the getServletContext method. The Web context provides methods for accessing:
  • Initialization parameters
  • Resources associated with the Web context
  • Object-valued attributes
  • Logging capabilities
The Web context is used by the Duke's Bookstore filters filters.HitCounterFilter and OrderFilter, discussed in the section Filtering Requests and Responses. The filters store a counter as a context attribute. Recall from Controlling Concurrent Access to Shared Resources that the counter's access methods are synchronized to prevent incompatible operations by servlets that are running concurrently. A filter retrieves the counter object with the context's getAttribute method. The incremented value of the counter is recorded with the context's log method.
public final class HitCounterFilter implements Filter {
   private FilterConfig filterConfig = null;
   public void doFilter(ServletRequest request,
      ServletResponse response, FilterChain chain) 
      throws IOException, ServletException {
      ...
      StringWriter sw = new StringWriter();
      PrintWriter writer = new PrintWriter(sw);
      ServletContext context = filterConfig.
         getServletContext();
      Counter counter = (Counter)context.
         getAttribute("hitCounter");
      ...
      writer.println("The number of hits is: " +
         counter.incCounter());
      ...
      context.log(sw.getBuffer().toString());
      ...
   }
}

No comments:

Post a Comment