The Struts-Faces Integration Library (Version 0.4) README File $Id: README.txt,v 1.2 2003/06/04 17:38:12 craigmcc Exp $ ============ INTRODUCTION: ============ This package contains an add-on library that supports the use of JavaServer Faces user interface technology in a Struts based web application, in place of the Struts custom tag libraries. As a proof of concept, it also includes the canonical "struts-example" example web application, converted to use JavaServer Faces tags, as well as tags from the JSP Standard Tag Library (JSTL), version 1.0 or later. Note that this software is based on the Early Access 4 release of JavaServer Faces technology, and is itself very new. Therefore, it is appropriate only for evaluation and learning, and not yet appropriate for production application deployments. EXAMPLE APPLICATION NOTE -- Because the JavaServer Faces reference implementation is an early access release, the license under which it is available does not allow redistribution. See RUNNING THE EXAMPLE APPLICATION, below, for information on how to integrate your own copy of the required JAR files into the example app, which is required before it will run. ======================== NEW AND REVISED FEATURES: ======================== This release of the Struts-Faces Integration Library (Version 0.4) has the following new features relative to the previous (0.3) release: * Value reference expressions in "valueRef" attributes of UI component tags can now recognize and support the properties of DynaBeans directly, thanks to the use of the pluggable PropertyResolver made available in JavaServer Faces 1.0ea4. For backwards compatibility, the ".map" pseudo-property on DynaActionForm and its subclasses is still recognized. This release of the Struts-Faces Integration Library (Version 0.4) has the following revised features relative to the previous (0.3) release: * In all UI tags for input and output components, the "modelReference" attribute has been replaced with "valueRef", for consistency with the corresponding change in the standard JavaServer Faces component tags. * In all UI tags corresponding to JavaServer Faces components, the following changes have been made to reflect the corresponding changes in the underlying API classes: - Replaced javax.faces.webapp.FacesTag by javax.faces.webapp.UIComponentTag. - Replaced createComponent() method that returned a new component instance by getComponentType() method that returns a component type. * The library utilizes the new (in EA4) capability to embed a configuration file in the struts-faces.jar file (META-INF/faces-config.xml) to automatically register the custom components and renderers included in the library. Previously, these application elements needed to be registered programmatically in a ServletContextListener. * Previously, the (deprecated) ApplicationHandler API was used to connect form submits to the Struts request processing lifecycle. This has been replaced by plugging a custom implementation of the new ActionListener interface. * The renderer implementation classes have been substantially simplified due to the removal of the requirement to provide information about supported render-dependent attributes. ======================== CONTENTS OF THIS RELEASE: ======================== Top Level Directory: ------------------- LICENSE.txt -- The Apache Software License, under which all software included in this bundle is licensed. README.txt -- This README file. build.xml -- Ant build script (only required for building from source). build.properties.sample -- Sample "build.properties" file that may be customized (only required for building from source). Directory "conf": ---------------- faces-config.xml -- Configuration file used by the struts-faces.jar file to automatically register JavaServer Faces components and renderers that are implemented in the library. This is for reference only; your application does not need to do anything to include this file. struts-faces.tld -- The JSP tag library descriptor file for the Struts-Faces integration tag library. Directory "docs": ---------------- struts-faces.html -- Reference documentation for the Struts-Faces integration tag library. api/ -- Javadocs for the classes included in the Struts-Faces integration library (org.apache.struts.faces.*). Directory "lib": --------------- struts-faces.jar -- The compiled classes (and embedded tag library descriptor) for the Struts-Faces integration library. Directory "src": --------------- conf/ -- Source files for the generated TLD and tag library documentation (only required for building from source), as well as the faces-config.xml file used to register custom components and renderers. example/ -- Source files for the "struts-example" application that has been converted to use JavaServer Faces components. You can compare this to the corresponding sources in a standard Struts release to see what had to be changed. java/ -- Source files for the Struts-Faces integration library classes (only required for building from source). The following packages (under org.apache.struts.faces) contain the necessary code: application -- Integrate with ActionListener, custom PropertyResolver, custom RequestProcessor component -- Custom JavaServer Faces component implementations (only Form for now) renderer -- Custom JavaServer Faces renderer implementations taglib -- Custom JavaServer Faces component tag implementations Directory "web": --------------- example/ -- JSP and web application configuration files for the "struts-example" application that has been converted to use JavaServer Faces components. You can compare this to the corresponding sources in a standard Struts release to see what had to be changed. Directory "webapps": ------------------- struts-faces.war -- The converted example application, minus the required JAR files from the JavaServer Faces reference implementation Early Access 4 release. See RUNNING THE EXAMPLE APPLIATION for information on how to configure and deploy this web application on your container. =============================== RUNNING THE EXAMPLE APPLICATION: =============================== The following steps are required to deploy and run the example application (struts-faces.war) included in this distribution: Install A Java Development Kit: ------------------------------ The Struts-Faces integration library requires a Java Development Kit (not the Java Runtime Environment), version 1.3 or later. It was tested against Sun's JDK 1.4.1_01 release, available at: http://java.sun.com/j2se/ Install the Java Web Services Developer Pack 1.2ea Release: ---------------------------------------------------------- The JavaServer Faces reference implementation EA4 release is included in the overall Java Web Services Developer Pack (1.2ea) release that may be downloaded from: http://java.sun.com/webservices/webservicespack.html Follow the directions on this page to execute the included installer, which will install the JWSDP release into a convenient directory. You should select the configuration option to install the included Tomcat servlet and JSP container. The JavaServer Faces release is located in the "jsf" subdirectory of this distribution. It has also been integrated into the servlet container that is provided by the JWSDP, along with several example applications that illustrate the use of JavaServer Faces APIs and tag libraries. Install The Struts-Faces Integration Library 0.4 Distribution: ------------------------------------------------------------- Download the Struts-Faces Integration Library (Version 0.4) distribution from: http://jakarta.apache.org/builds/jakarta-struts/release/struts-faces-0.4/ and unpack it into a convenient directory. Add JavaServer Faces JAR Files To Example WAR: --------------------------------------------- If you are planning to execute the sample application on the JWSDP 1.2ea servlet container, you can skip this step (because the JavaServer Faces API and RI classes have been integrated into the container). However, if you want to execute the application on a different Servlet 2.4 (or later) container, you will need to manually integrate the required libraries into the WAR file. You can do this by executing the following steps from the command line, where $JWSDP_HOME is the path of the directory into which you installed JWSDP 1.2ea, and $STRUTS_FACES_HOME is the path of the directory into which you installed the Struts-Faces Integration Library. mkdir temp cd temp jar xvf $STRUTS_FACES_HOME/webapps/struts-faces.war cp $JWSDP_HOME/jsf/lib/jsf-api.jar WEB-INF/lib cp $JWSDP_HOME/jsf/lib/jsf-ri.jar WEB-INF/lib jar cvf ../struts-faces.war * cd .. After executing these steps, your current working directory will contain a revised web application archive (WAR) file that has all the required libraries to execute on any Servlet 2.4 / JSP 2.0 (or later) container. VERSION COMPATIBILITY NOTE: The example application is distributed with the JSTL 1.1 JAR files (jstl.jar and standard.jar), and is therefore dependent upon JSP 2.0. You can easily make a version of the webapp that runs on a Servlet 2.3 / JSP 1.2 container (such as Tomcat 4.1.24) by replacing these two JAR with the corresponding JARs from a JSTL 1.0 release. Deploy The Example Application: ------------------------------ Follow the standard instructions for your container to deploy the struts-faces.war web application archive. For the JWSDP 1.2 release, you have the following choices: * Drop the "struts-faces.war" file into the "webapps" subdirectory of the JWSDP 1.2 release, and wait a few moments for the container to recognize the new application and deploy it for you. * Use the dynamic deployment Ant commands, as described below. Execute The Example Application: ------------------------------- By default, the application will be installed at context path "/struts-faces", so the URL to access it will typically be something like: http://localhost:8080/struts-faces/ The example application is functionally identical to the canonical struts-example.war application included in standard Struts 1.1 releases. When first started, the only valid username/password combination is "user" and "pass". ==================== BUILDING FROM SOURCE: ==================== If you wish, you can build the Struts-Faces integration library, and the sample application, from the source code included in this distribution. Follow these steps: Install An Ant Distribution: --------------------------- If you have downloaded the JWSDP 1.2ea release described above, Ant is already included. Otherwise, download Apache Ant, version 1.5.1 or later, from: http://jakarta.apache.org/site/binindex.cgi Install this environment as described in the Ant documentation, and ensure that Ant's "bin" directory is on your PATH. Configure Your Build Properties: ------------------------------- Copy the "build.properties.sample" file in the top level directory to a file named "build.properties", and customize the settings that are specified there. The default values are set up for easy use with the JWSDP 1.2ea download. Build The Sources: ----------------- The simplest way to build is to execute: ant clean dist to recreate the entire distribution in the "dist" subdirectory. Use the "ant -projecthelp" command to see what other targets are available. ======================================================= USING THE STRUTS-FACES LIBRARY IN YOUR OWN APPLICATIONS: ======================================================= Using the Struts-Faces integration library in your own Struts-based web applications is straightforward, and requires the following steps: * Add the "struts-faces.jar" file from the "lib" subdirectory of this release into the "/WEB-INF/lib" subdirectory of your webapp. * Add the following JAR files from the JavaServer Faces reference implementation's "lib" directory to your application's "/WEB-INF/lib" directory: jsf-api.jar, jsf-ri.jar. * Add the following JAR files, containing the JSTL release (or from the JavaServer Faces release) to your application's "/WEB-INF/lib" directory: jstl.jar, standard.jar. * Add the servlet definition for the JavaServer Faces servlet into your web application's deployment descriptor (/WEB-INF/web.xml): faces javax.faces.webapp.FacesServlet 1 * If you have a element on your declaration of the Struts controller servlet, modify the value to be "2" or greater so that FacesServlet is initialized first. * Add the servlet mapping for the JavaServer Faces servlet into your web application's deployment descriptor (/WEB-INF/web.xml): faces /faces/* * The tag library in the Struts-Faces integration library (as well as those in the JavaServer Faces reference implementation) are embedded in the JAR files themselves, and rely on the ability of a Servlet 2.3 (or later) container to automatically recognize them. Therefore, there is no need to copy the TLD files into the WEB-INF subdirectory of your web application. * Modify the JSP pages of your web application to use the JSTL, JavaServer Faces, and Struts-Faces integration library tags, instead of the traditional Struts tag libraries. This migration can occur one page at a time, as you become familiar with the new technologies. You will want to note the following points in particular: - Include the following tag library directives at the top of your page in order to declare them: <%@ taglib prefix="c" uri="http://java.sun.com/jstl/core" %> <%@ taglib prefix="f" uri="http://java.sun.com/jsf/core" %> <%@ taglib prefix="h" uri="http://java.sun.com/jsf/html" %> <%@ taglib prefix="s" uri="http://jakarta.apache.org/struts/tags-faces" %> - The Struts-Faces tag library (prefix "s" above) contains replacements for functionality in the existing Struts HTML tag library that are not directly provided by JavaServer Faces components. You should convert your existing use of the Struts HTML variants of these tags to use the Struts-Faces version instead. (Functionality and attributes should be basically compatible, so this is usually just a matter of changing the tag prefixes.) - In particular, you must use the Struts-Faces version of the form tag () in order to activate standard Struts features like automatic creation of the form bean, and looking up the appropriate action to invoke based on the "action" attribute. - Replace the use of tags from the Struts HTML library with user interface component tags provided by the JavaServer Faces reference implementation, by other third party libraries, or by your application itself. For example, on the logon.jsp page, the username field was changed from: to the following JavaServer Faces Component tag: - In the previous (0.3) release of this integration library, it was required to modify the reference expression to include ".map." if your Struts form bean was actually a DynaActionForm. This is no longer required. - JavaServer Faces provides its own mechanisms for internationalizing user interfaces. These can be used directly; however, to ease the transition for existing Struts-based web applications, the Struts-Faces integration library supports the tag, which is functionally equivalent to the previous tag. - Optionally, replace the use of tags from the Struts BEAN and LOGIC libraries with corresponding functionality from JSTL tags. This is recommended, because JSTL tags are more powerful than their Struts library counterparts, and the expression language syntax is the same as that used for value reference expressions. * For each JSP page that you have modified to use JavaServer Faces components instead of traditional Struts tags, modify any elements in your webapp's struts-config.xml file to include "/faces" in front of the path to that page. For example, change: to this: * In most circumstances, you should not need to make any changes in your Actions, or the business logic classes invoked by your actions. They are still invoked as part of the standard Struts request processing lifecycle, and are still expected to return an ActionForward (or null) defining what view layer technology should be invoked next. * If your application itself provides additional UIComponent and/or Renderer implementations, you must register them with the default JavaServer Faces RenderKit before they can be used. The simplest way to do this is to define a "faces-config.xml" file that contains the declaration for your custom classes. Such a file can be included either in the "/WEB-INF" directory of your web application, or in the "META-INF" directory of a JAR file included in "/WEB-INF/lib". (The Struts-Faces integration library itself uses the latter technique to register its custom components automatically for any web application that includes "struts-faces.jar" in its "/WEB-INF/lib" directory.) ================= KNOWN LIMITATIONS: ================= The following items identify functionality areas that have not yet been fully implemented or tested: * Use of the Tiles Framework. Integrating with Tiles will require a specialized subclass of the Tiles RequestProcessor class. * Use of the Struts-Faces integration library in multiple application modules. * Use of the "forwardPattern" or "pagePattern" attributes on the element. * Use of the Struts Nested tag libraries. * Use of the Struts-EL tag library (although this should be unnecessary, since you are free to use JSTL tags directly). * Use of a custom RequestProcessor subclass. The Struts-Faces integration library provides its own custom subclass (org.apache.struts.faces.application.FacesRequestProcessor), which must be used (or subclassed) for the integration to operate successfuly.