Session Servlet Example: Difference between revisions

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Note that the attribute count is displayed as part of the <tt>describe-session</tt> command output.
Note that the attribute count is displayed as part of the <tt>describe-session</tt> command output.
===Application Type===
The session servlet application allows for experiments with an application type, represented by the [https://github.com/NovaOrdis/playground/blob/master/jee/servlet/session-servlet/src/main/java/io/novaordis/playground/jee/servlet/session/applicaton/ApplicationType.java ApplicationType]  class. The <tt>ApplicationType</tt> can be modified into a backward compatible new version, incompatible new version, etc.
To write a String into ApplicationType instance, that will be in turn written into the session, use:
<pre>
http://localhost:8080/session-servlet/write/apptype/<string-value>
</pre>
To read the String value from the ApplicationType instance maintained by the session:
<pre>
http://localhost:8080/session-servlet/read/apptype
</pre>


===Enable HTTP Session Replication===
===Enable HTTP Session Replication===
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:[[HTTP_Session_Replication#WildFly-Specific_Configuration|HTTP Session Replication - WildFly-Specific Configuration]]
:[[HTTP_Session_Replication#WildFly-Specific_Configuration|HTTP Session Replication - WildFly-Specific Configuration]]
</blockquote>
</blockquote>
===Application Type===
The synthetic application allows for experiments with an application type, represented by the [https://github.com/NovaOrdis/playground/blob/master/jee/servlet/session-servlet/src/main/java/io/novaordis/playground/jee/servlet/session/applicaton/ApplicationType.java ApplicationType]  class.


=Root Context=
=Root Context=

Revision as of 03:15, 16 June 2016

Internal

Overview

A simple JEE servlet that can be deployed within a JEE container and used to test continuity, load balancing, failover, session stickiness, session replication, etc. It has been tested to work with WildFly/EAP and with Tomcat. One of the design constraints was to avoid container-specific dependencies. Its only dependencies are slf4j for logging and the Servlet API.

Source Code

https://github.com/NovaOrdis/playground/tree/master/jee/servlet/session-servlet

Build

mvn clean package

Deploy

Copy ./target/session-servlet.war into the deployment directory of the application server.

Usage

Authentication

The default build produces a servlet that does NOT require authentication.

If you want authentication, do this (JBoss 5 procedure, may need to be updated for WildFly):

1. Un-comment web.xml section starting with <security-constraint> and ending with </security-role>.

2. Replace "admin" with a valid role. The replacement must be done in both places where <role-name> is mentioned. For example, if deployed on JBoss 5, pick up an appropriate role from $JBOSS_HOME/server/$JBOSS_PROFILE/conf/props/jmx-console-roles.properties.

3. Enable <security-domain> in jboss-web.xml and make sure it points to the correct one on the server.

HTTP Session Support

The servlet will NOT establish a HTTP session by default.

If you wish it to establish a session, call the /establish-session URL:

http://localhost:8080/session-servlet/establish-session

This will create a HTTP session and send the Set-Cookie JSESSIONID back to browser. If /establish-session is called repeatedly on an already established session, the application will warn, but otherwise nothing else will happen; enable-session is idempotent.

To get more information about the current session, use:

http://localhost:8080/session-servlet/describe-session

To invalidate the current session, use:

http://localhost:8080/session-servlet/invalidate-session

To write a String attribute into the session use:

http://localhost:8080/session-servlet/write/<attribute-name>/<attribute-value>

To read the value corresponding to previously written String attribute:

http://localhost:8080/session-servlet/read/<attribute-name>

To get the names of all attributes stored into the session, use:

http://localhost:8080/session-servlet/attributes

Note that the attribute count is displayed as part of the describe-session command output.

Application Type

The session servlet application allows for experiments with an application type, represented by the ApplicationType class. The ApplicationType can be modified into a backward compatible new version, incompatible new version, etc.

To write a String into ApplicationType instance, that will be in turn written into the session, use:

http://localhost:8080/session-servlet/write/apptype/<string-value>

To read the String value from the ApplicationType instance maintained by the session:

http://localhost:8080/session-servlet/read/apptype

Enable HTTP Session Replication

The syntactic application allows for experiments with distributable sessions. To enable session replication:

1. Uncomment the <distributable> configuration element in src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/web.xml.

2. Uncomment the <replication-config> section in src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/jboss-web.xml and configure the cache name, replication trigger and replication granularity. For more details about configuring WildFly session replication see:

HTTP Session Replication - WildFly-Specific Configuration

Root Context

You can change the root context as follows:

On JBoss

Method One

Simply deploy the WAR under the desired name.

Method Two

TODO: use jboss-web.xml and root-context.

On Tomcat

Simply deploy the WAR under the desired name.

Test Plan

1. Simple Availability

Build and deploy.

Go to http://<server-address>:<server-port>/session-servlet

It will return a simple HTTP page listing relevant information regarding the execution.

2. Session Experiments

Establish a session with http://<server-address>:<server-port>/session-servlet?establish-session

Then drop the parameter, the browser/server should maintain the session until it expires.