I believe it's fairly clear that a ContextNotActiveException will be thrown. Hence why
we are all addressing ways to get around your problem rather than what the spec
requirements are ;-)
Why do you think it isn't clear?
On 9 Apr 2010, at 14:02, Mark Struberg wrote:
This was just one example!
My point was that the spec should clearly define what will happen if a context is not
active at the time the event get's sent.
Exchange @ConversationScoped with @ViewScoepd in my example. This context is only
available after the ViewMap got restored. And there is no way to move the ViewMap
restoration into a ServletListener.
So there will be situations where we have to deal with this situation somehow.
LieGrue,
strub
--- Nicklas Karlsson <nickarls(a)gmail.com> schrieb am Fr, 9.4.2010:
Von: Nicklas Karlsson <nickarls(a)gmail.com>
Betreff: Re: [weld-dev] proper handling of Events for beans in inactive Contexts?
An: "Sven Linstaedt" <sven.linstaedt(a)googlemail.com>
CC: "Mark Struberg" <struberg(a)yahoo.de>, "Pete Muir"
<pmuir(a)redhat.com>, weld-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
Datum: Freitag, 9. April, 2010 14:52 Uhr
You could use a similar construct like Seam 2 had, the ContextualHttpServletRequest which
essentially enabled the contexts and then you did your work i an overloaded method but the
problem is portability between CDI implementations for context activation. Or if you could
just move conversation management to a servlet listener. I mailed the EG on both issues so
let's see what comes back from that direction.
On Fri, Apr 9, 2010 at 3:31 PM, Sven Linstaedt <sven.linstaedt(a)googlemail.com>
wrote:
As far as I remember, conversation contexts are not available in servlet filters (at
least in seam version 2.x). Because conversation definition is currently tied to JSF
lifecycle, the best approach from my experience is avoid servlet filter (and others) and
only use JSF extension points like phase listeners.
br, Sven
2010/4/9 Mark Struberg <struberg(a)yahoo.de>
Sorry, I don't really get it.
If you have a 'transient conversation' and you like to send an event to BeanX and
there is no contextual instance of that BeanX already in your transient conversation
context, then a new one will get created and the event will get received by this
contextual instance.
However, a few nanoseconds later the restoreView phase will restore the ViewRoot and we
find a cid=4711 there. So we will now lookup this context with cid=4711 and oops, this
already contains a contextual instance of BeanX which DIDN'T get the event!
So what is the transient conversation really doing? What is it for?
Sometimes a context may return isActive() == false and this has a very good reason! Doing
any trickery in such cases will imo cause more problems than they solve.
LieGrue,
strub
--- Pete Muir <pmuir(a)redhat.com> schrieb am Fr, 9.4.2010:
> Von: Pete Muir <pmuir(a)redhat.com>
> Betreff: Re: [weld-dev] proper handling of Events for beans in inactive Contexts?
> An: "Mark Struberg" <struberg(a)yahoo.de>
> CC: weld-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
> Datum: Freitag, 9. April, 2010 11:37 Uhr
> Tricky situation, and something we
> "fixed" in Seam by having a transient conversation always
> active. I have a feeling that is what CDI should do to.
>
> On 25 Mar 2010, at 16:49, Mark Struberg wrote:
>
> > Hi!
> >
> > I have the following scenario:
> >
> > *) A ServletFilter fires a UserLoggedInEvent
> > *) A @ConversationScoped MyBean @Observes
> UserLoggedInEvent with Reception.ALWAYS
> >
> > The problem here is that the Conversation is not yet
> 'opened' at the time the ServletFilter fires that event.
> Thus ConversationContext.isActive() == false and I cannot
> create this bean.
> >
> > A similar situation appears if you try to send an
> event to a @ViewScoped bean from a JSF phase where the
> ViewMap doesn't yet exist.
> >
> > So since there is no way to create a contextual
> instance, the obvious solution is to not send the
> notification to this very bean.
> >
> > I didn't find this covered in the spec and I don't yet
> see much we can do in this case. This may cause some not so
> obvious behaviour and user may wonder why they don't get the
> event.
> >
> > So, should we log some info in this case or silently
> swallow it?
> >
> >
> > txs and LieGrue,
> > strub
> >
> >
> > __________________________________________________
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>
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