JavaServer Pages:
JavaServer Pages (JSP) technology is the Java           platform technology for delivering dynamic content to web clients in a           portable, secure and well-defined way. The JavaServer Pages           specification extends the Java Servlet API to provide web application           developers with a robust framework for creating dynamic web content on           the Server using HTML, and XML templates, and Java code, which is           secure, fast, and independent of server platforms. JSP has been built           on top of the Servlet API and utilizes Servlet semantics. JSP has           become the preferred request handler and response mechanism. Although           JSP technology is going to be a powerful successor to basic Servlets,           they have an evolutionary relationship and can be used in a           cooperative and complementary manner. Go to Home
Servlets are powerful and sometimes they are           a bit cumbersome when it comes to generating complex HTML. Most           servlets contain a little code that handles application logic and a           lot more code that handles output formatting. This can make it           difficult to separate and reuse portions of the code when a different           output format is needed. For these reasons, web application developers           turn towards JSP as their preferred servlet environment.
Evolution of Web Applications
Over the last few years, web server           applications have evolved from static to dynamic applications. This           evolution became necessary due to some deficiencies in earlier web           site design. For example, to put more of business processes on the           web, whether in business-to-consumer (B2C) or business-to-business           (B2B) markets, conventional web site design technologies are not           enough. The main issues, every developer faces when developing web           applications, are:
1. Scalability - a successful site will have           more users and as the number of users is increasing fastly, the web           applications have to scale correspondingly. Go to Home
2. Integration of data and business logic -           the web is just another way to conduct business, and so it should be           able to use the same middle-tier and data-access code.
3. Manageability - web sites just keep           getting bigger and we need some viable mechanism to manage the           ever-increasing content and its interaction with business systems.
4. Personalization - adding a personal touch           to the web page becomes an essential factor to keep our customer           coming back again. Knowing their preferences, allowing them to           configure the information they view, remembering their past           transactions or frequent search keywords are all important in           providing feedback and interaction from what is otherwise a fairly           one-sided conversation.
Apart from these general needs for a           business-oriented web site, the necessity for new technologies to           create robust, dynamic and compact server-side web applications has           been realized. The main characteristics of today's dynamic web server           applications are as follows:
1. Serve HTML and XML, and stream data to the           web client Go to Home
2. Separate presentation, logic and data
3. Interface to databases, other Java           applications, CORBA, directory and mail services
4. Make use of application server middleware           to provide transactional support.
5. Track client sessions
Now let us have a look on the role of Java           technology and platform in this regard.
Java's Role for Server Applications
Sun Microsystems, having consulted many           expert partners from other related IT industries, has come out with a           number of open APIs for the technologies and services on server side.           This collection of APIs is named as Java 2 Enterprise Edition (J2EE).           The J2EE specification provides a platform for enterprise           applications, with full API support for enterprise code and guarantees           of portability between server implementations. Also it brings a clear           division between code which deals with presentation, business logic           and data.  Go to Home
The J2EE specification meets the needs of web           applications because it provides:
1. Rich interaction with a web server via           servlets and built-in support for sessions available in both servlets           and EJBs
2. The use of EJBs to mirror the user           interaction with data by providing automatic session and transaction           support to EJBs operating in the EJB server.
3. Entity EJBs to represent data as an object           and seamless integration with the Java data access APIs
4. Flexible template-based output using JSP           and XML
This family of APIs mean that the final web           page can be generated from a user input request, which was processed           by a servlet or JSP and a session EJB, which represents the user's           session with the server, using data extracted from a database and put           into an entity EJB. Thus, the Java revolution of portable code and           open APIs is married with an evolution in existing products such as           database, application, mail and web servers. The wide availability of           products to run Java applications on the server has made this a           fast-moving and very competitive market, but the essential           compatibility through specifications, standard APIs and class           libraries has held. This makes server-side Java a very exciting area. Go to Home
JavaServer Pages - An Overview
The JavaServer Pages 1.2 specification           provides web developers with a framework to build applications           containing dynamic web content such as HTML, DHTML, XHTML and XML. A           JSP page is a text based document containing static HTML and dynamic           actions which describe how to process a response to the client in a           more powerful and flexible manner. Most of a JSP file is plain HTML           but it also has, interspersed with it, special JSP tags.
There are many JSP tags such as:
1.JSP directive denoted by <%@,  2.  scriplets indicated by <% ... %>               tags and
directive includes the contents of the               file sample.html in the response at that point.
To process a JSP file, we need a JSP engine           that can be connected with a web server or can be accommodated inside           a web server. Firstly when a web browser seeks a JSP file through an           URL from the web server, the web server recognizes the .jsp file           extension in the URL requested by the browser and understands that the           requested resource is a JavaServer Page. Then the web server passes           the request to the JSP engine. The JSP page is then translated into a           Java class, which is then compiled into a servlet.
This translation and compilation phase occurs           only when the JSP file is requested for the first time, or if it           undergoes any changes to the extent of getting retranslated and           recompiled. For each additional request of the JSP page thereafter,           the request directly goes to the servlet byte code, which is already           in memory. Thus when a request comes for a servlet, an init() method           is called when the Servlet is first loaded into the virtual machine,           to perform any global initialization that every request of the servlet           will need. Then the individual requests are sent to a service()           method, where the response is put together. The servlet creates a new           thread to run service() method for each request. The request from the           browser is converted into a Java object of type HttpServletRequest,           which is passed to the Servlet along with an HttpServletResponse           object that is used to send the response back to the browser. The           servlet code performs the operations specified by the JSP elements in           the .jsp file. Go to Home
The Components of JSPs
JSP syntax is almost similar to XML syntax.           The following general rules are applicable to all JSP tags.
1. Tags have either a start tag with optional           attributes, an optional body, and a matching end tag or they have an           empty tag possibly with attributes.
2. Attribute values in the tag always appear           quoted. The special strings ' and " can be used if           quotes are a part of the attribute value itself.
Any whitespace within the body text of a           document is not significant, but is preserved, which means that any           whitespace in the JSP being translated is read and preserved during           translation into a servlet.
The character \ can be used as an escape           character in a tag, for instance, to use the % character, \% can be           used.
JavaServer Pages are text files that combine           standard HTML and new scripting tags. JSPs look like HTML, but they           get compiled into Java servlets the first time they are invoked. The           resulting servlet is a combination of HTML from the JSP file and           embedded dynamic content specified by the new tags. Everything in a           JSP page can be divided into two categories:
1. Elements that are processed on the server  Go to Home
2. Template data or everything other than           elements, that the engine processing the JSP engines.
Element data or that part of the JSP which is           processed on the server, can be classified into the following           categories:
1. Directives
2. Scripting elements
3. Standard actions
JSP directives serve as messages to the JSP           container from the JSP. They are used to set global values such as           class declaration, methods to be implemented, output content type,           etc. They do not produce any output to the client. All directives have           scope of the entire JSP file. That is, a directive affects the whole           JSP file, and only that JSP file. Directives are characterized by the           @ character within the tag and the general syntax is:
The three directives are page, include and           taglib.
Scripting elements are used to include           scripting code (Java code) within the JSP. They allow to declare           variables and methods, include arbitrary scripting code and evaluate           an expression. The three types of scripting element are: Declaration,           Scriptlets and Expressions. Go to Home
A declaration is a block of Java code in a           JSP that is used to define class-wide variables and methods in the           generated class file. Declarations are initialized when the JSP page           is initialized and have class scope. Anything defined in a declaration           is available throughout the JSP, to other declarations, expressions or           code.
A scriptlet consists of one or more valid           Java statements. A scriptlet is a block of Java code that is executed           at request-processing time. A scriptlet is enclosed between           "<%" and "%>". What the scriptlet actually does depends on the code, and it can           produce output into the output stream to the client. Multiple           scriptlets are combined in the compiled class in the order in which           they appear in the JSP. Scriptlets like any other Java code block or           method, can modify objects inside them as a result of method           invocations.
An expression is a shorthand notation for a           scriptlet that outputs a value in the response stream back to the           client. When the expression is evaluated, the result is converted to a           string and displayed, An expression is enclosed within <%= and %>           "<%=" and "%>". If any part of expression is an object, the conversion is done using           the toString() method of the object.
Standard actions are specific tags that           affect the runtime behavior of the JSP and affect the response sent           back to the client. The JSP specification lists some standard action           types to be provided by all containers, irrespective of the           implementation. Standard actions provide page authors with some basic           functionality to exploit; the vendor is free to provide other actions           to enhance behavior.  Go to Home
How JSP and JSP Container function
A JSP page is executed in a JSP container or           a JSP engine, which is installed in a web server or in a application           server. When a client asks for a JSP page the engine wraps up the           request and delivers it to the JSP page along with a response object.           The JSP page processes the request and modifies the response object to           incorporate the communication with the client. The container or the           engine, on getting the response, wraps up the responses from the JSP           page and delivers it to the client. The underlying layer for a JSP is           actually a servlet implementation. The abstractions of the request and           response are the same as the ServletRequest and ServletResponse           respectively. If the protocol used is HTTP, then the corresponding           objects are HttpServletRequest and HttpServletResponse. Go to Home
The first time the engine intercepts a           request for a JSP, it compiles this translation unit (the JSP page and           other dependent files) into a class file that implements the servlet           protocol. If the dependent files are other JSPs they are compiled into           their own classes. The servlet class generated at the end of the           translation process must extend a superclass that is either
1. specified by the JSP author through the           use of the extends attribute in the page directive or
2. is a JSP container specific implementation           class that implements javax.servlet.jsp.JspPage interface and provides           some basic page specific behavior.
Since most JSP pages use HTTP, their           implementation classes must actually implement the           javax.servlet.jsp.HttpJspPage interface, which is a sub interface of           javax.servlet.jsp.JspPage.
The javax.servlet.jsp.JspPage interface           contains two methods:
1. public void jspInit() - This method is           invoked when the JSP is initialized and the page authors are free to           provide initialization of the JSP by implementing this method in their           JSPs.
2. public void jspDestroy() - This method is           invoked when the JSP is about to be destroyed by the container.           Similar to above, page authors can provide their own implementation.
The javax.servlet.jsp.HttpJspPage interface           contains one method:
public void _jspService(HttpServletRequest           request, HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException,           IOException  Go to Home
This method generated by the JSP container is           invoked, every time a request comes to the JSP. The request is           processed and the JSP generates appropriate response. This response is           taken by the container and passed back to the client.
JSP Architecture
There are two basic ways of using the JSP           technology. They are the client/server (page-centric) 2-tier approach           and the N-tier approach (dispatcher).
The Page-Centric Approach
Applications built using a client-server           (2-tier) approach consist of one or more application programs running           on client machines and connecting to a server-based application to           work. With the arrival of Servlets technology, 2-tier applications           could also be developed using Java programming language. This model           allows JSPs or Servlets direct access to some resource such as           database or legacy application to service a client's request. The JSP           page is where the incoming request is intercepted, processed and the           response sent back to the client. JSPs differ from Servlets in this           scenario by providing clean code, separating code from the content by           placing data access in EJBs. Even though this model makes application           development easier, it does not scale up well for a large number of           simultaneous clients as it entails a significant amount of request           processing to be performed and each request must establish or share a           potentially scarce/expensive connection to the resource in question.  Go to Home
Page-view - This basic architecture involves           direct request invocations to a server page with embedded Java code,           and markup tags which dynamically generate output for substitution           within the HTML. This approach has been blessed a number of benefits.           It is very straightforward and is a low-overhead approach from a           developerment perspective. All the Java code may be embedded within           the HTML, so changes are confined to a very limited area, reducing           complexity drastically.
The big trade-off here is in the level of           sophistication. As the scale of the system grows, some limitations           begin to surface, such as bloating of business logic code in the page           instead of factoring forward to a mediating Servlet or factoring back           to a worker bean. It is a fact that utilizing a Servlet and helper           beans helps to separate developer roles more cleanly and improves the           potential for code reuse.
Page-view with bean - This pattern is used           when the above architecture becomes too cluttered with           business-related code and data access code. The Java code representing           the business logic and simple data storage implementation in the           previous model moves from the JSP to the JavaBean worker. This           refactoring leaves a much cleaner JSP with limited Java code, which           can be comfortably owned by an individual in a web-production role,           since it encapsulates mostly markup tags.
The Dispatcher Approach
In this approach, a Servlet or JSP acts as a           mediator or controller, delegating requests to JSP pages and JavaBeans.           There are three different architectures. They are mediator-view,           mediator-composite view and service to workers.  Go to Home
In an N-tier application, the server side of           the architecture is broken up into multiple tiers. In this case, the           application is composed of multiple tiers, where the middle tier, the           JSP, interacts with the back end resources via another object or EJBs           component. The Enterprise JavaBeans server and the EJB provide managed           access to resources, support transactions and access to underlying           security mechanisms, thus addressing the resource sharing and           performance issues of the 2-tier approach.
The first step in N-tiered application design           should be identifying the correct objects and their interaction and           the second step is identifying the JSPs or Servlets. These are divided           into two categories.
Front end JSPs or Servlets manage application           flow and business logic evaluation. They act as a point to intercept           the HTTP requests coming from the users. They provide a single entry           point to an application, simplifying security management and making           application state easier to maintain.
Presentation JSPs or Servlets generate HTML           or XML with their main purpose in life being presentation of dynamic           content. They contain only presentation and rendering logic.
These categories resemble to the Modal-View           design pattern, where the front-end components is the model and the           presentation component the view. In this approach, JSPs are used to           generate the presentation layer and either JSPs or Servlets to perform           process-intensive tasks. The front-end component acts as the           controller and is in charge of the request processing and the creation           of any beans or objects used by the presentation JSP, as well as           deciding, depending on the user's actions, which JSP to forward this           request to. There is no processing logic within the presentation JSP           itself and it simply responsible for retrieving any objects or beans           that may have been previously created by the Servlet and extracting           the dynamic content for insertion within static templates.  Go to Home
Benefits of JSP
One of the main reasons why the JavaServer           Pages technology has evolved into what it is today and it is still           evolving is the overwhelming technical need to simplify application           design by separating dynamic content from static template display           data. Another benefit of utilizing JSP is that it allows to more           cleanly separate the roles of web application/HTML designer from a           software developer. The JSP technology is blessed with a number of           exciting benefits, which are chronicled as follows:
1. The JSP technology is platform           independent, in its dynamic web pages, its web servers, and its           underlying server components. That is, JSP pages perform perfectly           without any hassle on any platform, run on any web server, and           web-enabled application server. The JSP pages can be accessed from any           web server.
2. The JSP technology emphasizes the use of           reusable components. These components can be combined or manipulated           towards developing more purposeful components and page design. This           definitely reduces development time apart from the At development           time, JSPs are very different from Servlets, however, they are           precompiled into Servlets at run time and executed by a JSP engine           which is installed on a Web-enabled application server such as BEA           WebLogic and   IBM WebSphere.  Go to Home
Conclusion
JSP and Servlets are gaining rapid acceptance           as means to provide dynamic content on the Internet. With full access           to the Java platform, running from the server in a secure manner, the           application possibilities are almost limitless. When JSPs are used           with Enterprise JavaBeans technology, e-commerce and database           resources can be further enhanced to meet an enterprise's needs for           web applications providing secure transactions in an open platform.           J2EE technology as a whole makes it easy to develop, deploy and use           web server applications instead of mingling with other technologies           such as CGI and ASP. There are many tools for facilitating quick web           software development and to easily convert existing server-side           technologies to JSP and Servlets.
Many application server vendors are           aggressively deploying JSP within their products. This results in           developing robust e-commerce applications as JSP provides XML           functionality and scalability. By providing a clear separation between           content and coding, JSP solves many problems attached with existing           server-side applications.  Go to Home
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Tuesday, October 7, 2008
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