Calling a webpage from another webpage via jsp - java

I am trying to figure out how to do the following.
I have webpage at a certian location called www.hello.com/logout.jsp
What I am trying to do with logout.jsp is delete all the cookies that were stored when initially logging in. The problem is that there exists a cookie for a website with a different domain that is stored when logging in. The one way I can delete that cookie is through the logout link for that website e.g. www.hello2.com/logout.jsp
Is there anyway I can call www.hello2.com/logout.jsp from www.hello.com/logout.jsp?
I am trying to just make a call for www.hello2.com/logout.jsp from www.hello.com/logout.jsp and then redirect the user to another page on www.hello.com
Thanks in advance :D

If I understand correctly, you are trying to do an HTTP POST( or GET ) to www.hello2.com/logout.jsp while processing HTTP request to your web application's logout.jsp.
You should really consider coding your logic in Servlets and using JSPs only to present data, but in the meantime you can create a scriptlet inside your logout.jsp and do a call to another web page in there ( just don't code the whole thing in JSP, only make a call to a static method ).
In that static method you can use HttpClient to do whatever HTTP request you need from www.hello2.com.
Here are additions to your logout.jsp
<%# page import="my.package.Hello2Call" %>
<%
Hello2Call.postLogoutRequest( );
%>

Related

How should I do to send data between two jsp with a servlet

I want to display something from one jsp page in another jsp page by clicking a button. I did it using request.setAttribute request.getAttribute but it doesn't work for me, for some reason the variable I send is null or the page is blank.
From your original question : When you are doing setAttribute(), its scope is limited to the request when the main page is loading and hence will not be available on the next page as it will be a new request.
<%Object product=ptp;
request.setAttribute("purchase", ptp.getId());
%>
What you can do is, submit this value in URL param as GET or in a form (get/ post) to fetch it on next JSP using request.getParameter().
Or you can use session scope by session.setAttribute()
Hope it helps
you can pass the variables through request scope or session scope.
request.setAttribute("variable name","value of its");
session.setAttribute("variable name","value");
Here a detailed exmple
http://www.jsptut.com/sessions.jsp

Calling part of jsp page from Servlet or Java Class

I need to call small part of JSP page(like only div load) when a method is invoked? I know we can load whole JSP page from Servlet. Is this possible or any other solution for this?
know we can load whole JSP page from Servlet. Is this possible
Yes it is possible, you forward your request to jsp from servlet and it will render that jsp, here is an exact same example
1) Set some session or request variable equal to some value, say boolean myVar = true.
2) Redirect from your jsp page from your servlet.
3) In the jsp page, check for particular condition for the variable myVar. If condition is fulfilled, using scriptlets or JSTL display only the relevant part of you jsp.
You can use AJAX(Asynchronous Javascript and XML) for this purpose
For example, Suggestions, that appear without any refresh for auto-complete in google search, are using Ajax. JSP code will contain the Ajax code and will send the information to the servlet in form of XmlHttpRequest object and then takes the response from servlet as xmlhttp.responseText. The result can be written at JSP page by using DOM.
To initiate this process, you need to use the onkeyup in input tag like this:
<input type="text" onkeyup="methodName(this.value)"
Learn more about Ajax
To use AJAX with Java, try this
Ajax for Java Web Applications
$('#myDiv').load('serverPage.jsp #server_div_id');
OR
$.ajax({
url: 'serverPage.jsp',
success: function(data) {
data=$(data).find('div#id');
$('#mydiv').html(data);
}
});

Update the database from submit option

I have a jsp page having a 'submit' option for input.On clicking it i want to update the value of a table called tbIndividual.What can be the best approach to do it?
On jsp page i have somthing like this :
User Name : <%=rs.getString(2)%>
First Name : <%=rs.getString(4)%>
Last Name : <%=rs.getString(5)%>
Email Id : <%=rs.getString(6)%>
Contact : <%=rs.getString(7)%>
<input type="submit" value="ADD"></input>
And now i want to update the value of status of that particular individual from 'NO' to 'WAIT' state.On click of this submit button.
Is making new servlet for this task a good option or doing the code in jsp a better one ?
If i need to make a new servlet then what will be the code for it on jsp page .?Please help.
If you are trying to learn servlet with this project then you should create a separate servlet where you will perform your business logic (e.g addition of element in Db) and jsp should be kept away from business logic because role of jsp is to render the output not to produce the output.
If this is a project for production purposes, then you should ( IMO you must ) opt some web framework. As framework will reduce your effort, headache and increase productivity.
First of all, there are certain things you need to understand while developing web applications in Java. I have a few recommendations and inputs
Please don't use Scriptlets. Scriptlets are deprecated and they make your code clumsy and the maintainance will be hard. Use JSTL
You need to create a form in your html to have a set of variables to push them to the server on clicking submit button. The form will have an action attribute which contains the URL where the request should be sent
Create a Servlet and map with the action URL and write the doPost method which can receive the form parameters and do the business logic whatever changing the status from NO to WAIT or anything else
Please take a note that you need to have Session variables in order to have the store the data in between requests from the same client. eg browser.
Is making new servlet for this task a good option or doing the code in jsp a better one ?
Writing a new servlet is a good option, than doing the business logic in jsp page. jsp is meant for presentation, just view. They shouldn't be used to perform business logic
If i need to make a new servlet then what will be the code for it on jsp page .?
JSP should just have all the necessary html elements and attributes like form, action attribute etc.. to post the parameters in the request to the action URL. Please note the method attribute of form. You should use HTTP POST method for posting form parameters to the server
Note : Finally, Writing Servlets are also NOT recommended. Instead, you should opt for webframeworks like Spring MVC , Struts etc. Please go through the link to understand about web frameworks answered by #BaluC
Hope this clarifies.

How to generate success alerts in jsp after successful execution of a servlet?

I have a jsp page which contains a form which calls a servlet, after inserting data into the database by a servlet hot to display successs alert to the user on the page?
Thanks in advance for answering.
Either you call the servlet asynchronously with AJAX and have a success callback function (see jQuery example: http://api.jquery.com/category/ajax/ )
Or you do it the old fashioned way with a synchronous Post which loads a success page, or the same page with for example a query parameter that states that you have succeed. This could then be used to activate a script block in your JSP (or whatever template language is your flavour).
You can use a javascript alert box. See http://www.w3schools.com/js/js_popup.asp

How to insert JSP functionality in Servlets?

How can I use Servlets to access the HTML uses of having JSP without having to have all my client-facing pages called *.jsp?
I would rather do this than using all the response.write() stuff because I think it is easier to read and maintain when it is all clean "HTML".
Is this is fair assesment?
EDIT: What I'm going for is having the Servlets output things to the screen without having to redirect to a .jsp file.
In this way, I could write all the JSP stuff, but when it comes time to display it, the page the URL the user sees is essentially, "http://blah.com/posts/post-id" which is the address of the servlet and not "http://blah.com/posts.jsp?pos=post-id".
But I would still write all presentation logic in an external .jsp.
Just hide the JSP away in /WEB-INF folder so that noone can access it directly and create a servlet which forwards the request to this JSP file. Don't do a redirect, else you will see the new URL being reflected in the address bar. E.g.
protected void doGet(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOException {
String postId = request.getPathInfo();
// Do your business thing here. Any results can be placed in request scope. E.g.
request.setAttribute("post", post); // post is a bean containing information you'd like to display in JSP.
// Then forward request to JSP file.
request.getRequestDispatcher("/WEB-INF/posts.jsp").forward(request, response);
}
Map this servlet on an url-pattern of /posts/*.
In the /WEB-INF/posts.jsp make use of taglibs to control page flow and EL to access the data. E.g.
<h2>${post.title}</h2>
<p><fmt:formatDate value="${post.date}" type="date" /> - ${post.message}</p>
Finally just invoke the servlet by http://example.com/posts/postid. The /postid part will be available by HttpServletRequest#getPathInfo(). You need to parse the value yourself and do the business thing with it.
I'm not entirely sure what you're asking here. You can ge servlets themselves to write HTML, but that's not clean at all.
An alternative is to get your servlets to create HTML via a templating engine, such as Velocity or Freemarker. The syntax in the templates may be cleaner for your particular application, if less fully featured.
Back in ancient times (think '98...) this was called a "Model 2 architecture": a servlet received the request, processed it, and handed the request over to a JSP page that handled the view.
See this article for one example of how this is done, or simply search for "JSP Model 2".
Edit: for that, you can use RequestDispatcher.include() instead of forward() as described in the previous article. The rest should still be applicable.
If I understand correctly you want to hide *.jsp extension from user, right?
In that case when your Servlet redirects to a jsp page have it do this:
RequestDispatcher disp = request.getRequestDispatcher("hidden.jsp");
disp.forward(request,response);
By using Request Dispatcher instead of redirect you "hide" your .jsp extension behind the servlet name. However in case your JSP page redirects to another JSP page this won't work.
If you want the .jsp file to be visible use response.encodeURL or response.sendRedirect
I think you're looking for the Front Controller Pattern - this is the basis of "JSP Model 2" web apps (as #andri mentioned) and pretty much all the (hundreds?) of Java web frameworks.

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