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Interface javax.servlet.Servlet
- public interface Servlet
This interface is for developing servlets. A servlet is a body of
Java code that is loaded into and runs inside a network service,
such as a web server. It receives and responds to requests from
clients. For example, a client may need information from a
database; a servlet can be written that receives the request, gets
and processes the data as needed by the client, and then returns it
to the client.
All servlets implement this interface. Servlet writers typically
do this by subclassing either GenericServlet, which implements the
Servlet interface, or by subclassing GenericServlet's descendent,
HttpServlet. Developers need to directly implement this interface
only if their servlets cannot (or choose not to) inherit from
GenericServlet or HttpServlet. For example, RMI or CORBA objects
that act as servlets will directly implement this interface.
The Servlet interface defines methods to initialize a servlet, to
receive and respond to client requests, and to destroy a servlet and
its resources. These are known as life-cycle methods, and are called
by the network service in the following manner:
- Servlet is created then initialized.
- Zero or more service calls from clients are handled
- Servlet is destroyed then garbage collected and finalized
Initializing a servlet involves doing any expensive one-time setup,
such as loading configuration data from files or starting helper
threads. Service calls from clients are handled using a request and
response paradigm. They rely on the underlying network transport to
provide quality of service guarantees, such as reordering,
duplication, message integrity, privacy, etc. Destroying a servlet
involves undoing any initialization work and synchronizing
persistent state with the current in-memory state.
In addition to the life-cycle methods, the Servlet interface
provides for a method for the servlet to use to get any startup
information, and a method that allows the servlet to return basic
information about itself, such as its author, version and copyright.
- See Also:
- GenericServlet, HttpServlet
-
destroy()
- Cleans up whatever resources are being held (e.g., memory, file
handles, threads) and makes sure that any persistent state is
synchronized with the servlet's current in-memory state.
-
getServletConfig()
- Returns a servlet config object, which contains any
initialization parameters and startup configuration for this
servlet.
-
getServletInfo()
- Returns a string containing information about the servlet, such as
its author, version, and copyright.
-
init(ServletConfig)
- Initializes the servlet.
-
service(ServletRequest, ServletResponse)
- Carries out a single request from the client.
init
public abstract void init(ServletConfig config) throws ServletException
- Initializes the servlet. The method is called once,
automatically, by the network service when it loads the servlet.
It is guaranteed to finish before any service requests are
accepted. After initialization, the network service does not
call the init method again unless it reloads the servlet after
it has unloaded and destroyed it.
The init method should save the ServletConfig object so that
it can be returned by the getServletConfig method. If a fatal
initialization error occurs, the init method should throw an
appropriate "UnavailableException" exception. It should never
call the method System.exit.
- Parameters:
- config - object containing the servlet's startup
configuration and initialization parameters
- Throws: ServletException
- if a servlet exception has occurred
- See Also:
- UnavailableException, getServletConfig
getServletConfig
public abstract ServletConfig getServletConfig()
- Returns a servlet config object, which contains any
initialization parameters and startup configuration for this
servlet. This is the ServletConfig object passed to the init
method; the init method should have stored this object so that
this method could return it.
- See Also:
- init
service
public abstract void service(ServletRequest req,
ServletResponse res) throws ServletException, IOException
- Carries out a single request from the client. The method
implements a request and response paradigm. The request object
contains information about the service request, including
parameters provided by the client. The response object is used
to return information to the client. The request and response
objects rely on the underlying network transport for quality of
service guarantees, such as reordering, duplication, privacy,
and authentication.
Service requests are not handled until servlet initialization
has completed. Any requests for service that are received
during initialization block until it is complete. Note that
servlets typically run inside multi-threaded servers; servers
can handle multiple service requests simultaneously. It is the
servlet writer's responsibility to synchronize access to any
shared resources, such as network connections or the servlet's
class and instance variables. Information on multi-threaded
programming in Java can be found in the
Java tutorial on multi-threaded programming.
- Parameters:
- req - the client's request of the servlet
- res - the servlet's response to the client
- Throws: ServletException
- if a servlet exception has occurred
- Throws: IOException
- if an I/O exception has occurred
getServletInfo
public abstract String getServletInfo()
- Returns a string containing information about the servlet, such as
its author, version, and copyright.
destroy
public abstract void destroy()
- Cleans up whatever resources are being held (e.g., memory, file
handles, threads) and makes sure that any persistent state is
synchronized with the servlet's current in-memory state. The
method is called once, automatically, by the network service
when it unloads the servlet. After destroy is run, it cannot be
called again until the network service reloads the servlet.
When the network service removes a servlet, it calls destroy
after all service calls have been completed, or a
service-specific number of seconds have passed, whichever comes
first. In the case of long-running operations, there could be
other threads running service requests when destroy is called.
The servlet writer is responsible for making sure that any
threads still in the service method complete.
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