On Fri, 10 Jul 2020 at 13:02, Brad Wood <bdw429s(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Thanks for the reply, this is helpful. I was thinking through this
today
and came to some of the same conclusions-- the issue of potentially more
than one deployment and using a static variable for a custom predicate to
"find" the servlet information.
Here's a few brainstorms--
Is there a programmatic way to access all of the servlet deployments that
have been created? What if, in the event that there is no servlet context
in the exchange, the file and directory predicates could check and see if
only one servlet context existed, and if so, just grab that one? That
doesn't solve the scenario where two or more deployments exist, but it
would at least allow it to make a decent guess for single deployments.
Undertow does not really work like that. It does not really manage all the
Servlet deployments, it expects this to be manage by whatever system it is
embedded into (it does have the DeploymentManager concept that can managed
multiple Servlet deployments, but this is mostly just for cross context
forwards, and there can be multiple instances of the manager).
Being able to specify a given deployment when creating a predicate handler
chain is an interesting idea as well, but I'm not entirely sure how many
things in the API would need to change to get it all the way down to the
predicatebuilder's build() call. In my particular case, I'm using
the PredicatedHandlersParser.
It would just be a Map<String, Object> to allow arbitrary values to be
passed in. Really though I think you just want a custom handler that can
access it through a static.
And on the topic of using the dispatcher-- what if instead of writing a
new handler, the existing handler detected if it was inside the servlet,
and if so, it used the dispatcher, and if there was no servlet, it just
fell back to its current behavior of using the SetAttribtueHandler to
override the relative path? From an architectural standpoint, I don't know
if it would be against "the rules" to have a handler in the core package
touching stuff in the servlet package.
Not just against the rules, it would require adding a dependency on Servlet
to Undertow core. What you could do is have the notion of priority, like in
ExchangeAttributeBuilder, to allow Servlet to override the core version.
Stuart
Thanks!
~Brad
*Developer Advocate*
*Ortus Solutions, Corp *
E-mail: brad(a)coldbox.org
ColdBox Platform:
http://www.coldbox.org
Blog:
http://www.codersrevolution.com
On Thu, Jul 9, 2020 at 7:05 PM Stuart Douglas <sdouglas(a)redhat.com> wrote:
>
>
> On Fri, 10 Jul 2020 at 02:44, Brad Wood <bdw429s(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> So, in my bid to put the predicate language through the paces, I've been
>> testing out all the rewrite rules I've ever used with mod_rewrite or Tuckey
>> Rewrite to see if Undertow's handlers are up to the task.
>>
>> I've run into an issue again with probably the most common rewrite rule
>> of any CFML app using an MVC framework, which is a rule that creates
>> so-called "SES" URLs and force all requests through a front controller
>> design pattern.
>>
>> Basically
>>
>>
site.com/home/about
>>
>>
>> gets rewritten to
>>
>>
site.com/index.cfm/home/about
>>
>>
>> Here you can see how this rule is typically accomplished in Apache
>> httpd, Nginx, IIS, and Tuckey:
>>
>>
>>
https://coldbox.ortusbooks.com/the-basics/routing/requirements/rewrite-rules
>>
>>
>> The hang up is that* any incoming path that maps to an actual file*
>> skips the rewrite rule. That way* /images/logo.jpg* doesn't get
>> rewritten.
>>
>> So here was my first stab at it with Undertow's predicate language-- it
>> seemed simple enough:
>>
>> not file and not directory -> rewrite('/index.cfm/%{RELATIVE_PATH}')
>>
>>
>> But our old friend the servlet of course is nowhere to be found since my
>> "file" and "directory" predicates were executing in the root
handler chain
>> so there is no concept of a servlet's context root with which to resolve
>> file system paths.
>>
>> So basically, I understand exactly why this doesn't work, but I feel
>> that we need to find a way to make this work. This is a feature that
>> pretty much every rewrite engine I've ever used has-- the ability to test
>> the file system to see if a file or directory exists. Can we discuss the
>> following options?
>>
>> - Find a way for the root handler chain to access the deployment's
>> resource manager
>>
>>
> The big conceptual problem here is that there can be multiple Servlet
> deployments, and the rewrite could change which deployment actually gets
> served by the request. You could write a custom predicate to handle this,
> but you would need to stick the Servlet deployment in a static variable so
> the PredicateBuilder has access to it. We could do it with some API changes
> I guess, have the PredicateBuilder accept a Map<String, Object>, so you
> could pass in the ServletContext as you are building the predicates.
>
>
>>
>> - Find a way for the rewrite handler to correctly affect not only
>> the exchange but also (optionally) the HttpServletRequest so it's
possible
>> to rewrite the URL inside of the servlet's handler chain. I know for
>> certain this is possible because the Tuckey Rewrite engine is implemented
>> as a servlet filter.
>>
>> This would be done using RequestDispatcher.forward(), you could write a
> handler that uses this, or you could write one that uses the Undertow
> specific io.undertow.servlet.api.Deployment#getServletDispatcher() to
> re-dispatch without calling forward.
>
> Stuart
>
>
>
>> I would prefer the first option since I do like having the predicates in
>> the root handler chain so it can run as early as possible.
>>
>> Thanks!
>>
>> ~Brad
>>
>> *Developer Advocate*
>> *Ortus Solutions, Corp *
>>
>> E-mail: brad(a)coldbox.org
>> ColdBox Platform:
http://www.coldbox.org
>> Blog:
http://www.codersrevolution.com
>>
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>>
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>
>