I am having a weird problem here, and I am really stuck, need to get this work badly.
so i have a page say index.jsp with a link say "a href=servlet?id=10". when I click on this link it will go to doGet() on my servlet and here is the code in my servlet.
protected void doGet(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response)
throws ServletException, IOException {
String action = request.getParameter("id");
// search database and create an arraylist
if(//user logged in)
address = "s/results.jsp";
else
address = "results.jsp";
// set arraylist in session object
RequestDispatcher dispatcher = request.getRequestDispatcher(address);
dispatcher.forward(request,response);
}
So the above code works fine but after request forwarding, my browser shows the url as
http://localhost/project/servlet?id=10.
I don't want the above url as i am forwarding to two different jsp's based on the user login status one is in 's' folder and other is outside of that. if user is logged in then i forward to 's/results.jsp' and if user is not logged in i am forwarding to 'results.jsp'.
in case of s/results.jsp i am accessing resources like images and scripts from outside of 's' folder by using ../ in the results.jsp.
as url is not changing to s/results.jsp , i am unable to access the resources with '../' and as i am using jsp pagination , when i click next the url is changing to s/results.jsp and in that case i am able to access resources using ../
one solution in my mind is to copy all resources in s folder , but that would increase redundancy.
one other solution in my mind is to create two different servlets for two jsp's but i don't know where to put the servlet so that it can access resources outside of s folder with ../
is their any other good way i can do the task..
I have tried to find information about this but haven't been able to figure it out.
Any help will be very much appreciated.
You have basically instructed your webbrowser to send a request to exactly that URL. The forward does not change the URL. It is entirely server side. Apart from using response.sendRedirect()
instead -which would trash the current request, including all of its attributes, and create a brand new request on the given URL-, you could also just change your link to <a href="results?id=10">
, or when the user is logged in, to <a href="s/results?id=10">
.
<a href="${user.loggedin ? 's/' : ''}results?id=10">
Finally alter the servlet mapping accordingly so that it get invoked on those URLs.
<url-pattern>/results</url-pattern>
<url-pattern>/s/results</url-pattern>
You'll only miss the JSP extension. But JSPs which are to be used by a dispatcher belong in /WEB-INF
folder anyway so that they cannot be viewed by the enduser directly without invoking the servlet first. You also end up with nicer URLs.