Thanks for the reply!

That is kind of what is going on already.  The Action's act as the local
Java class talked about in the Business Delegate Pattern that create and
cache the Stateful Session Bean (a different one per Action).  They (the
Actions) then use the Session Bean's business logic. This is done in a
standard way though where each Session Bean will implement an interface that
is common to all of the other Session Beans in the application. This way
each action simply calls a factory and based on the way the factory is
called, a Stateful Session Bean for that type of action is returned, then
cached in the Action.  All actions then can make the submit(...),
inspect(...), etc. calls common to all types of Session Beans (but performed
differently by each one).

The question is though, for these actions, shouldn't they keep session state
that will match the Stateful Session Beans?  Typically, I know you want have
your Model hold Session state while your client holds request state, but in
this case, where the Action needs to remember the cached Session Bean,
doesn't it seem to make sense to mark the Action as session scope in the
struts config file as well?

  

-----Original Message-----
From: Adam Hardy [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, March 01, 2004 5:35 PM
To: Struts Users Mailing List
Subject: Re: Semi-OT: Saving state when using EJB Session Beans and
Struts


On 03/01/2004 05:47 PM Smith, Darrin wrote:
> In short, the Actions will be calling various Stateful Session Beans to do
> the actual work.  These are used for various reasons with the main one
being
> their built-in transaction support (online orders...need to be either
> done...or not done). How should state be handled and at what level
> (page...request...session...) in the upstream struts portion? 

Hmmm. Thought someone more knowledgeable would answer this, and was 
waiting with interest myself. Oh well. Without too much experience with 
EJBs myself, I can say a couple of things: the gurus say 'use the 
business delegate pattern with an EJB session facade'. Secondly, it 
depends heavily on what your stateful session beans are holding as 
state. Care to name something?

Adam
-- 
struts 1.1 + tomcat 5.0.16 + java 1.4.2
Linux 2.4.20 Debian


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