Please remember: When experimenting with these new features and capabilities, not all servlet containers or Java Enterprise Edition (JEE) application servers jump immediately to the latest Servlet API release. At the time of this writing, the Jetty 6 server and Sun's GlassFish server are the two best-known servlet containers that include 2.5 support. Apache Tomcat 5.5 and JBoss 4.0 still support Servlet 2.4.
Among the changes introduced in Servlet 2.5:
To begin with, the Servlet 2.5 specification now lists J2SE 5.0 (JDK 1.5) as its minimum platform requirement. While this limits Servlet 2.5 to those platforms with J2SE 5.0 implementations, this change means that all the new language features from J2SE 5.0 (generics, autoboxing, an improved for loop, a new enum type, static importing, varargs, and metadata annotations) are guaranteed available to Servlet 2.5 programmers.
Traditionally, servlet and JEE releases have moved forward at the measured pace of one JDK level at a time, but this time, the servlet release skipped version 1.4. The expert groups considered the double jump to be justified because J2SE 5.0 offered one compelling feature that the servlet and JEE specifications wanted to use themselves: annotations.
Annotations are a new language feature provided as part of JSR 175 (A Metadata Facility for the Java Programming Language). Annotations provide a mechanism for decorating Java code constructs (classes, methods, fields, etc.) with metadata information. Annotations aren't executed like code, but, rather, mark code in such a way that code processors may alter their behavior based on the metadata information.
When you think about it, we've been annotating classes and methods all along with different tricks like the Serializable marker interface (to alter serialization) or the @deprecated Javadoc comment (to alter compilation). The new metadata facility simply provides a standard mechanism for doing annotations and a vehicle for libraries to create custom annotation types.
Here's a simple Web service annotation example:
import javax.jws.WebService; import javax.jws.WebMethod; @WebService public class HelloWorldService { @WebMethod public String helloWorld() { return "Hello World!"; } }
The @WebService and @WebMethod annotation types, specified in JSR 181 (Web Services Metadata for the Java Platform) and imported just like classes, mark this class as a Web service and mark its helloWorld() method as a Web service method. By themselves, the annotations don't do anything but sit there, kind of like Post-It notes; however, a container, upon loading this class and seeing those annotations in the bytecode, can wire up the class for Web services.
Annotations may accept name/value parameters. The parameter information is kept with the annotation and can be used to alter the behavior requested by the annotation. For example, here's a more advanced annotation example:
@WebService( name = "PingService", targetNamespace="http://acme.com/ping" ) @SOAPBinding( style=SOAPBinding.Style.RPC, use=SOAPBinding.Use.LITERAL ) public class Ping { @WebMethod(operationName = "Foo") public void foo() { } }
Upon loading this class, a proper container will respect the annotations and their parameters, and wire up the class as a PingService with a Foo operation using the remote-procedure-call/literal encoding style. In a sense, annotations define the contract a class wishes to have with its container.
The Java language itself (through JSR 175) specifies only a tiny number of annotation types. The interesting annotation types come from other JSRs:
See Resources for more details on metadata and annotations.
Coming back to Servlet 2.5, the new specification describes how several annotations work in a servlet environment. Simple servlet containers can ignore these rules, while servlets in a JEE container must abide by them.
Some annotations provide an alternative to XML entries that would otherwise go in the web.xml deployment descriptor. Other annotations act as requests for the container to perform tasks that otherwise the servlet would have to perform itself. Some annotations do both.
The exact list of annotations isn't completely finalized, because the Servlet specification itself doesn't define the annotations; it only helps interpret how they affect a servlet environment. Here's a short summary of the annotations you can expect in JEE 5 along with their intended use:
@Resource javax.sql.DataSource catalog; public getData() { Connection con = catalog.getConnection(); }
Now, before putting a servlet with this code into service, the container will locate the JNDI variable named catalog of type DataSource and manually assign that reference to the catalog variable.
For efficiency, only certain classes support resource injection: servlets, servlet filters, servlet event listeners, JavaServer Pages tag handlers and JSP library event listeners, JavaServer Faces scoped managed beans, and a few other class types unrelated to servlets.
The @Resources annotation is similar to @Resource, but used to hold an array of @Resource annotations. Both annotations are from JSR 250, the Common Annotations for the Java Platform.
Whether or not you use annotations—and especially if you don't—it's important to understand the performance impact they can have on a server at startup. In order for the server to discover annotations on classes, it must load the classes, which means that at startup, a server will look through all the classes in WEB-INF/classes and WEB-INF/lib, looking for annotations. (Per the specification, servers don't have to look outside these two places.) You can avoid this search when you know you don't have any annotations by specifying a metadata-complete attribute on the <web-app> root like this:
<web-app xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee" version="2.5" metadata-complete="true"> </web-app>
Servlet 2.5 introduces several small changes to the web.xml deployment descriptor file format to make its use more convenient.
First, when writing a <filter-mapping>, you can now use an asterisk in a <servlet-name> entry to represent all servlets (and thus all JSP pages as well). Previously, you could only bind one servlet at a time to a filter, like this:
<filter-mapping> <filter-name>Image Filter</filter-name> <servlet-name>ImageServlet</servlet-name> </filter-mapping>
Now you can bind all servlets at once:
<filter-mapping> <filter-name>Image Filter</filter-name> <servlet-name>*</servlet-name> <!-- New --> </filter-mapping>
This proves most useful when creating general rules like, "Execute a filter on all forwards to a servlet," which is written like this:
<filter-mapping> <filter-name>Dispatch Filter</filter-name> <servlet-name>*</servlet-name> <dispatcher>FORWARD</dispatcher> </filter-mapping>
Second, when writing a <servlet-mapping> or <filter-mapping>, you can now provide multiple match criteria in the same entry. A <servlet-mapping> previously supported just one <url-pattern> element. Now it supports more than one. For example:
<servlet-mapping> <servlet-name>color</servlet-name> <url-pattern>/color/*</url-pattern> <url-pattern>/colour/*</url-pattern> </servlet-mapping>
Likewise, a <filter-mapping> previously allowed just one <url-pattern> or one <servlet-name>. Now it supports any number of each:
<filter-mapping> <filter-name>Multipe Mappings Filter</filter-name> <url-pattern>/foo/*</url-pattern> <servlet-name>Servlet1</servlet-name> <servlet-name>Servlet2</servlet-name> <url-pattern>/bar/*</url-pattern> </filter-mapping>
Both these changes are syntactic sugar, but so be it. There's no reason we should program low carb.
Lastly, you can now place any legal HTTP/1.1 method name into an <http-method> element. As you may recall, the <http-method> element specifies the methods on which a <security-constraint> entry should apply. It's historically been limited to the seven standard HTTP/1.1 methods: GET, POST, PUT, DELETE, HEAD, OPTIONS, and TRACE. However, HTTP/1.1 allows for extension methods, and WebDAV is a popular technology using extensions. With Servlet 2.5, you can now apply security constraints on any conceivable HTTP method name, standard or extension, including WebDAV methods like LOCK, UNLOCK, COPY, and MOVE.
Just don't look for doLock() or doCopy() methods if you're writing a WebDAV servlet. You'll have to write your own service() method and peek at the request.getMethod() for dispatching. You just won't have to manage your own security, thanks to this change.
Servlet 2.5 eased a few restrictions around error handling and session tracking. With error handling, Servlet 2.5 removed a rule dictating that error-handling pages configured with <error-page> could not call setStatus() to alter the error code that triggered them. The rule followed the argument that the job of an error page is to report each error but not alter it. However, practical use has made clear that sometimes an error-handling page may be able to do something more graceful than show an error, perhaps choosing instead to show an online help chat window to help the user resolve the problem. The specification no longer prevents an error-page handler from producing a nonerror response.
Regarding session tracking, Servlet 2.5 eased a rule dictating that a servlet called by RequestDispatcher include() couldn't set response headers. This rule's purpose was to keep included servlets constrained within their own space on the page, unable to affect the page outside that area. The rule has eased now to allow request.getSession() calls within the included servlet, which might implicitly create a session-tracking cookie header. Logic dictates an included resource should be constrained, but logic also dictates those constraints shouldn't eliminate the ability to initiate a session. This change proves especially important for the Portlet Specification. Note that if the response was already committed, the getSession() call will throw an IllegalStateException. Previously, it would have been a no-op.
Lastly, the new specification clarifies several edge cases to make servlets more portable and guaranteed to work as desired.
The first clarification is trivial and esoteric, but interesting as an example of the unintended side effects you sometimes see in a specification. The Servlet 2.4 specification dictates that the response should be committed (that is, have the response started with the status code and headers sent to the client) in several situations including when "The amount of content specified in the setContentLength method of the response and has been written to the response." This appears all well and good until you write code like this to do a redirect:
response.setHeader("Host", "localhost"); response.setHeader("Pragma", "no-cache"); response.setHeader("Content-Length", "0"); response.setHeader("Location", "http://www.apache.org");
The servlet technically must ignore the Location header because the response must be committed immediately as the zero byte content length is satisfied. The response is over before it began! Servlet containers often refuse to implement this behavior, and the Servlet 2.5 release adds "has been greater than zero" to the rule.
The Servlet 2.4 specification says you must call request.setCharacterEncoding() before calling request.getReader(). However, it does not say what happens if you ignore this advice and make the setter call after the retrieval. For portability, it's now clarified to be a no-op.
Lastly, the rules around cross-context session management have been clarified. This comes into play when servlets dispatch requests from one context to another. Within the target call, what session should be in scope, if any? The issue came up most prominently with portlets, where a main page in one context may do several include calls to portlets in another context. Servlet 2.5 now specifies that resources within a context see the session for that context, regardless of where the request may have started. This means the portlets can track their own state separate from the main page state, and this rule will apply across servlet containers.
Because of the maintenance review nature of the Servlet 2.5 release, several larger ideas had to be postponed until the next review phase. Among the ideas postponed:
After this article was first published, Sun issued a Servlets 2.5 MR2 (second manufacturing release) that includes a few changes from the first manufacturing release:
If you look at the Servlet 2.5 changes apart from annotations, the new release does a nice job of giving web.xml a little syntactic sugar, of removing a few restrictions that were getting in the way, and of clarifying edge case behavior to enable more powerful and portable component-based Webpages.
The effect of annotations in Servlet 2.5 looks more dramatic. It's important to remember that servlets themselves don't define any new annotation types, and simple servlet containers don't even have to support annotations. Yet servlets authored for a JEE 5 environment will see their code change a lot from the annotation types introduced by common annotations and the EJB 3.0 and JAX-WS 2.0 specifications, and these will have a big impact on how servlets manage external resources, object persistence, and EJB components.
Jason Hunter is author of the book Java Servlet Programming, 2nd Edition (O'Reilly, 2001; ISBN: 0596000405) and coauthor of Java Enterprise Best Practices (O'Reilly, 2002; ISBN: 0596003846). He's an Apache Member and, as Apache's representative to the Java Community Process Executive Committee, he established a landmark agreement for open source Java. He's publisher of Servlets.com, an original contributor to Apache Tomcat, and cocreated the open source JDOM library to enable optimized Java and XML integration. He also designed and developed CountryHawk, a product that quickly determines a user's country based on their IP address.