Home | Contact Us | FAQ | Search & Site Map | Link to Us
Sign In | Join | Other 45 Sites in Network
HomeAnnouncementsWhite Papers
Discussion GroupsFirst AidDatabasesJavaBeansGUIJava 3DVirtual MachineCORBASecurityToolsGeneral
Java DirectoryOpen Source ProjectsSample Book ChaptersUser GroupsWeb Resources
Related Topics
Databases.NETMore Topics ...

Java Forum / General / February 2007

Tip: Looking for answers? Try searching our database.

questions on J2EE

Thread view: 
gandhi.pathik@gmail.com - 09 Feb 2007 09:49 GMT
Hi Friends,

I have few questions please let me know the answers. that would be
very helpful to me.

1). If i create 10 different request from 10 browser windows for the
same servlet, then how we can ensure that same servlet instance is
willing to serve all the requests?

2).What is the difference between valueobject and plain javabean
class?
why valueobject is preferred over javabean class?

3).If i write code like request.getRequestDispatcher("www.yahoo.com/
login.jsp")? would it work or not? what will be the output?

Thanks and Regards,
Pathik S Gandhi
Cool Guy - 09 Feb 2007 10:37 GMT
Hi Pratik,

Regarding your first questions - print  this.toString() in the service
method and then create different requests,It will give the same value
for all request created.

Hope it helps...

- Sudhir

On Feb 9, 2:49 pm, "gandhi.pat...@gmail.com" <gandhi.pat...@gmail.com>
wrote:
> Hi Friends,
>
[quoted text clipped - 14 lines]
> Thanks and Regards,
> Pathik S Gandhi
Lew - 09 Feb 2007 16:36 GMT
> Cool Guy wrote:

Please do not top post.

"gandhi.pat...@gmail.com" wrote:
>> 1). If i create 10 different request from 10 browser windows for the
>> same servlet, then how we can ensure that same servlet instance is
>> willing to serve all the requests?

"willing to" - by writing the servlet in a thread-safe manner.

"actually does" - I don't believe you can. Or would want to.

You can write a servlet to implement the SingleThreadModel
<http://java.sun.com/javaee/5/docs/tutorial/doc/Servlets5.html#wp75172>
to force that one instance sequentially serves each request it receives, but
not that there be only one such instance.

From the link:
"A web container can implement this guarantee by synchronizing access to a
single instance of the servlet, or by maintaining a pool of web component
instances and dispatching each new request to a free instance. This interface
does not prevent synchronization problems that result from web components
accessing shared resources such as static class variables or external objects.
In addition, the Servlet 2.4 specification deprecates the SingleThreadModel
interface."

>> 2).What is the difference between valueobject and plain javabean
>> class?

"Value object' is a generic term for any object whose job is to represent a
set of attributes - a "noun" in your object model. A "JavaBean" object is
often a value object, and it follows a set of nomenclature and structural
conventions put forward by the Java API. When a JavaBean is used as a value
object, it is a particular way to implement a value object.

>> why valueobject is preferred over javabean class?

There is no such preference. You can use either, or both at once in the sense
that a JavaBean in this scenario would also be a value object. I write all my
value objects as JavaBeans.

For many projects it is a good practice to separate the value objects
(implemented as JavaBeans or not) from the "process objects" or "behavioral
objects" that use the value objects. Consider EJBs, which can be entity beans
or session beans. (An entity object is a specialization of a value object,
also implementable as a JavaBean.)

>> 3).If i write code like
>> request.getRequestDispatcher("www.yahoo.com/login.jsp")?
>> would it work or not?

That would depend on whether there were a directory "www.yahoo.com/" relative
to the current location within the context root, and a "login.jsp" within it
(assuming that by "work" you mean "return a non-null RequestDispatcher object").

>> what will be the output?

A RequestDispatcher object or null.
<http://java.sun.com/j2ee/1.4/docs/api/javax/servlet/ServletRequest.html#getReque
stDispatcher(java.lang.String
)>
<http://java.sun.com/j2ee/1.4/docs/api/javax/servlet/RequestDispatcher.html>

- Lew


Free Magazines

Get these publications absolutely FREE for up to 12 months. There are no hidden fees and no obligation. Simply choose a title, complete the application form and submit it. Read more ...

Oracle MagazineNetwork ComputingComputer WorldBio-IT WorldeWeekInformation WeekInfosecurity
 
Sign In
Join
My Latest Posts
My Monitored Threads
My Blog
My Photo Gallery
My Profile
My Homepage

Start New Thread
Enable EMail Alerts
Rate this Thread



©2009 Advenet LLC   Privacy Policy - Terms of Use
This website includes both content owned or controlled by Advenet as well as content owned or controlled by third parties.