2) The disadvantage of working with paths is that all images, stylesheets etc
get messed up. I think we could and should provide some magic to fix
this
transparently. Something like a filter that post-processes generated
HTML
(not only components as there might be a bunch of non-component tags
too)
and that prepends all relative (not starting with /) href, src, ...
attributes
with the context path. This <img src="hi.gif" /> would be
<img src="/mycontext/hi.gif" />
Juergen, if you are reading this... would this be doable? See any
problems
with it?
I don't think it is difficult, but I find kind of uncomfortable. What
I mean by this
It is related to the URL handling stuff and should/must not be used in
combination with anything else. It is like <wicket:link>, but the
behaviour depends on the url strategy. To keep the markup independ on
the url strategy, wicket:link implementation must vary; must be
customizable. At least it must support two strategies: the current one
and "prefix with context path" one. How to decide which one to use?
Application settings? Application.getWicketLinkXXX().
Juergen
On 11/29/05, Johan Compagner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> All redirect issues i can think of (in Page constructors or in
> checkAccess()) are fixed.
> They should all work fine again
>
> johan
>
>
> On 11/29/05, Maurice Marrink <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi Eelco,
> >
> > Before this refactoring it was possible to redirect to another page
> > from inside page.checkAccess(), however since the refactoring it is no
> > longer possible. The new page is put on the stack but ignored aftered
> > the response of the original page is done.
> > Is there a new place where we can intercept a page or is this still
> > work in progress?
> >
> > We are working on a customized version of wicket here (with integrated
> > jaas authorization) and i am trying to keep our version in sync with
> > head.
> >
> > Maurice
> >
> > 2005/11/28, Eelco Hillenius <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > > Hi all,
> > >
> > > I've been working on some heavy duty refactorings of RequestCycle the
> > > last few days. I'm far from done, but I just reached an important
> > > milestone in it and I thought it was time to explain a bit what I am
> > > doing for those that follow HEAD.
> > >
> > > There's a TODO document in the new niceurl example of wicket-examples.
> > > Juergen, if you're reading this, could you take a look at that?
> > > There's a question for you in it :).
> > >
> > > Here's the last commit log in which I try to explain the refactorings:
> > >
> > > ...
> > > work in progress: request cycle refactoring.
> > >
> > > Milestone: the major part of low-level refactoring is done now and
> > > there is new functionality
> > > for mounting request targets to paths.
> > >
> > > A short explanation how request processing works now:
> > >
> > > Request cycle processing is now mostly delegated to an instance of
> > > IRequestCycleProcessor which can
> > > be created by RequestCycles or - preferably - the default request
> > > cycle processor in Application.
> > >
> > > I defined the processing clear steps; they can be found as methods on
> > > IRequestCycleProcessor:
> > >
> > > 1. Destiling a strongly typed RequestParameters object from the
> > > Request. This is done by an instance
> > > of IRequestEncoder. The request encoder is the strategy that
> takes
> > > care of creating urls (all urlFor
> > > methods of Page are now dispatched to this strategy) and
> 'decoding'
> > > them into the strongly typed
> > > parameters object. Furthermore, the encoder interface provides
> for
> > > mounting and unmounting
> > > Wicket request targets (see 2). Using this interface has the
> > > advantage that all 'translations' are now
> > > being done by one object and that the translations do not do any
> real
> > > processing yet. Hence the
> > > actual processing can be implemented in a very different way that
> has
> > > nothing to do with url translations.
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > 2. Solving an incomming request to a request target using the strongly
> > > typed RequestParameters of step 1.
> > > Request targets (IRequestTarget) are a central concept in the new
> > > refactorings. A request cycle has
> > > one current request target that can range from a bookmarkable
> page
> > > (or a redirect to it), a component
> > > listener invocation to shared resources, external resources or
> > > something like a HTTP error message.
> > > Request targets themselves are responsible for creating/
> delegating a
> > > response. For the rest they are
> > > fairly shallow, and implementations of IRequestCycleProcessor do
> the
> > > heavy lifting.
> > >
> > > Once the target is determined, it is set as 'the current' target
> in
> > > the RequestCycle. Actually, RequestCycle
> > > holds a stack of all set targets. For instance, when you call
> > > setResponsePage, what happens is that
> > > actually a request target implementation (in this case
> > > (PageRequestTarget) is put on top of the stack.
> > > after the request cycle is done executing, all request targets
> will
> > > be iterated and their cleanUp methods
> > > will be called to enable request target implementations to free
> > > resources, give notifications, etc.
> > >
> > > 3. The next step is event dispatching. During this step things like
> > > calling listener interface methods (such
> > > as Link.onClick) may be done.
> > >
> > > 4. The last step is to respond using the current request target. A
> > > target may directly call render on e.g.
> > > a component, delegate the actual response creation (like with
> > > resources) or create a redirect to
> > > defer the actual handling. A target implementation is free to do
> > > whatever it wants, as long as a response
> > > is created.
> > >
> > > 4.a. when something during handling of 3 or 4 goes wrong, an exception
> > > response is created. It is now much
> > > easier (I hope) for users to implement completely custom
> exception
> > > handling/ page rendering.
> > >
> > > NOTE: most of the refactorings are interface based (due to popular
> > > demand?) so that it is much easier than
> > > before to create proxies, interleave them, etc. This can now be done
> > > better than before as the contract
> > > is better externalized now (and enforced in the final method
> > > RequestCycle.request()) and devided in seperate
> > > steps instead of being implementation details.
> > >
> > > NOTE: there is a lot of cleaning up to do still. I'd like to take a
> > > good look at all the special cases we put in
> > > Application/Settings/Pages
> > > the last few months, and get rid of the things we don't need to support
> anymore
> > > when they can be done using this interface, such as exception page
> handling.
> > >
> > >
> > > NOTE: there is a default, handy implementation of
> > > IRequestCycleProcessor called CompoundRequestCycleProcessor
> > > which delegates it's behaviour into seperate interface calls so that
> > > it is easier to mix-'n-match implementations.
> > >
> > > NOTE: there are some API breaks:
> > >
> > > - Page class alias functionality is not supported anymore. It was
> > > 'miss-used' for shortening resource keys
> > > more than it was for having page aliases, and while the
> shortening of
> > > resource keys might be a nice thing
> > > to have again in the near future, the page aliases are not needed
> > > anymore as it is replaced by the new
> > > path mounting functionality. We need to rethink the shortening of
> > > resource keys in a more generalized
> > > fashion in the next few days.
> > >
> > > - The home page render strategy is removed. There are now two options:
> > > 1. The home page class is mounted to a path. When that is the
> case, a
> > > redirect to this bookmarkable page
> > > path will be issued and the mounted url is thus shown.
> > > 2. Nothing was mounted. The home page is rendered directly and
> the
> > > url will be 'clean'
> > > (like
> http://localhost:8080/wicket-examples/navomatic )
> > >
> > > I know there was a third option, but it was not clear to me what
> the
> > > advantage for that one was. If someone
> > > needs it, please complain :)
> > >
> > > ...
> > >
> > > Hope you have fun with it. Tomorrow, I'll (finally, sorry Evan)
> > > implement browser detection, which should be fairly simple now.
> > >
> > > Eelco
> > >
> > >
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