On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 16:00:49 -0800, Don Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On the topic of a Struts API bean, I completely agree.  We should have
> one bean, probably actually stored in the servlet context, which
> contains references to all the Struts-specific components like
> configuration elements and message resources.  Now this, and the Spring
> topic, do overlap since this API bean could actually be a Spring
> BeanFactory which might be a more flexible approach actually.
> 
> This would be separate from the ActionContext idea which would hold
> references to objects necessary for the execution of actions (chain
> context, http request/response, all current Action helper methods, etc).

Well, let's generalise that to references to objects necessary for the
processing of a specific request, and not tie it to actions per se.
;-) But yes, this would be where things like the current module and
the module's resource bundles are stashed, amongst other things as you
suggested.

--
Martin Cooper


> Ted, in fact, suggested an API bean previously as well, and I believe
> has even started sketching out what one might look like.
> 
> Don
> 
> Joe Germuska wrote:
> 
> > While I'm one who has had good experiences with Spring's BeanFactory
> > for managing my business objects, maybe we should focus first on
> > defining what Struts is and what needs to be configured.  This would
> > allow us to move more flexibly to various configuration approaches, or
> > conceivably support more than one.
> >
> > I've been thinking for a while that we should stop storing so many
> > things directly in the ServletContext and instead, define a "Struts"
> > object which would hold these things.  I've mentioned this obliquely a
> > few times and not gotten much response, so maybe no one else likes the
> > idea.  Or maybe it's been too oblique.  Benefits of something like
> > this would be reducing dependencies on the Servlet API and providing a
> > better environment for testing.
> >
> > Is there any interest in this, or is it cracked?  If it's not cracked,
> > we might also take a longer-term look at abstracting the session,
> > which seems tedious, but has some of the same issues.  We may never
> > need to truly abstract away the HttpServletRequest, since the Chain
> > context will have the same lifecycle and serve about the same purpose.
> >
> > Now, then:  This whole thread started as a different question and was
> > motivated by an earlier question.  Assuming that we continue to use
> > Digester to instantiate and populate ActionConfig objects, I would
> > like to add a "generic" mapped property to ActionConfig so that rather
> > than writing trivial and boring subclasses of ActionConfig, one can
> > simply set properties on it.  I'd make it a Properties because I'd
> > expect it to have strings, but I would accept arguments to make it a
> > map instead with the idea that later other Objects might get in
> > there.  (Ugh, but all that casting!)  Assuming no one objects in the
> > next day or two, I'll assume it's ok, and I'll call it "props", just
> > because I would rather not screw around waiting for another name.
> >
> > The motivation for this was a perceived flaw in the ChainAction and
> > chain DispatchAction classes which won't know in which catalog to look
> > for the command either one is supposed to execute.  A generic property
> > map would allow the ChainAction to define the name of the properties
> > it wants for its configuration, rather than requiring that its
> > ActionConfig implement some specific interface just to get one more
> > property in.
> >
> > Joe
> >
> 
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