How to design a session-less JSF 2.0 web applicati

2020-08-02 03:02发布

问题:

I am working on a JSF 2.0 website. The website has two kind of users(public and registered). Now I want to know that how can I create session for both kind of users? For registered users, when my user is login then there should be session for it, and when session expires then I redirect it to page that your session has expired. For public users there should be no session at all. Means there is no session time out for my public users and they never have messages that your session has expired. How can I implement this behavior in JSF 2.0.

Can I use filter for it or there is better approach for it? I also read that JSF automatically creates session using managed beans. Can I use these sessions for my task?

Edit:

I tell you what i did so you people better guide me in this scenerio

What i did i put a filter in my web app like this

<filter>
    <filter-name>SessionTimeoutFilter</filter-name>
    <filter-class>util.SessionTimeoutFilter</filter-class>
</filter>
<filter-mapping>
    <filter-name>SessionTimeoutFilter</filter-name>
    <url-pattern>*.xhtml</url-pattern>
</filter-mapping>

Here is my Filter code

public class SessionTimeoutFilter implements Filter {

    // This should be your default Home or Login page
    // "login.seam" if you use Jboss Seam otherwise "login.jsf"   
    // "login.xhtml" or whatever
    private String timeoutPage = "faces/SessionExpire.xhtml";
    private String welcomePage = "faces/index.xhtml";
    public static Boolean expirePage = false;
    private FilterConfig fc;

    @Override
    public void init(FilterConfig filterConfig) throws ServletException {

        this.fc = filterConfig;

    }

    @Override
    public void doFilter(ServletRequest request, ServletResponse response,   FilterChain filterChain)
        throws IOException, ServletException {

        HttpServletRequest httpServletRequest = (HttpServletRequest) request;
        HttpServletResponse httpServletResponse = (HttpServletResponse) response;

        HttpSession session = httpServletRequest.getSession();

        /**
         * The session objects have a built-in data structure (a hash table) in which you can store
         * any number of keys and associated values. You use session.getAttribute("key") to look up
         * a previously stored value. The return type is Object, so you must do a typecast to
         * whatever more specific type of data was associated with that attribute name in the session.
         * The return value is null if there is no such attribute, so you need to check for null
         * before calling methods on objects associated with sessions.
         *
         * Note:
         *     JSF session scoped managed beans are under the covers stored as a HttpSession
         *     attribute with the managed bean name as key.
         */
        Login login = (Login)session.getAttribute("login");

        if (login == null) {  // No such object already in session

            filterChain.doFilter(request, response);

        } else {

            /**
             * If you use a RequestDispatcher, the target servlet/JSP receives the same
             * request/response objects as the original servlet/JSP. Therefore, you can pass
             * data between them using request.setAttribute(). With a sendRedirect(), it is a
             * new request from the client, and the only way to pass data is through the session or
             * with web parameters (url?name=value).
             */
            filterChain.doFilter(request, response);

        }

        System.out.println();

    } //end of doFilter()

    @Override
    public void destroy() {

    } //end of destroy()

Now what happen that if you first time enter url of my site then this filter invoke. It gets

Login login = (Login)session.getAttribute("login");

null. So it simply move to my index.xhtml page. Now my index.html page constructor invokes. Here is my code

@ManagedBean
//////@RequestScoped
@SessionScoped
public class Login implements Serializable {

    //Constructor
    public Login() {

        FacesContext facesContext = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance();
        ExternalContext externalContext = facesContext.getExternalContext();

        //getSession(false), which returns null if no session already exists for the current client.
        HttpSession session =(HttpSession)externalContext.getSession(false);

        if (session == null) {

            System.out.println();

        } else {

            session.setAttribute("logedin", 0);     //public user
            session.setMaxInactiveInterval(-1);     // no session time out

            Enumeration e = session.getAttributeNames();

            while (e.hasMoreElements()) {

                /**
                 * Here you also get "login" attr. Because when managed bean create the
                 * session, it sets you managedBean name in the session attribute.
                 */
                String attr = (String)e.nextElement();
                System.err.println("attr  = "+ attr);
                Object value = session.getAttribute(attr);
                System.err.println("value = "+ value);

            } //end of while

        }

    }//end of constructor

} //end of class Login

when first time user come to my site then it is not login so i set logedin session attribute 0. Now suppose user enter credentials and press log in button. First my filter is invoke but this time it will get login attribute and comes to my doFilter() else check and then come to My validUser() method. Here is my code

public String validUser() throws Exception {

    ArrayList2d<Object> mainarray = new ArrayList2d<Object>();
    mainarray.addRow();
    mainarray.add(userName);
    mainarray.add(password);

    busBeans.usermanagement.users um = new busBeans.usermanagement.users();
    ArrayList retrieveList = um.getValidUser(mainarray);    //database check of user existence

    if (Integer.parseInt(retrieveList.get(0).toString()) == 0) {

        ArrayList str = (ArrayList) retrieveList.get(1);

        FacesContext facesContext = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance();
        ExternalContext externalContext = facesContext.getExternalContext();

        //getSession(false), which returns null if no session already exists for the current client.
        HttpSession session =(HttpSession)externalContext.getSession(false);

        if (session == null) {

            System.out.println();

        } else {

            Enumeration e = session.getAttributeNames();

            while (e.hasMoreElements()) {

                String attr = (String)e.nextElement();
                System.err.println("attr  = "+ attr);
                Object value = session.getAttribute(attr);
                System.err.println("value = "+ value);

            } //end of while

        }

        logedin=true;
        session.setAttribute("logedin", 1);
        session.setAttribute("firstLastName", str.get(7).toString());
        session.setAttribute("getusercredentials", str);
        session.setAttribute("sessionUserId", str.get(0).toString());
        session.setAttribute("sessionRoleId",str.get(1).toString());
        firstLastName = session.getAttribute("firstLastName").toString();
        session.setMaxInactiveInterval(60);  //1 min
        ConnectionUtil.setRgihts(Integer.parseInt(str.get(0).toString()) , Integer.parseInt(str.get(1).toString()) ,Integer.parseInt(str.get(5).toString()));
        checkRgihts();
    }

} //end of validUser()

Now i want to ask one thing. I set sessionTimeout using setMaxInterval. Is it ok or it is better to do in web.xml? Now whne timeOut expires then filter doesn't invoke. But suppose that I also attach HttpSessionListener. Then on session time Out its destroy method invoke. I can invalidate session here. Like this.

public class MySessionListener implements HttpSessionListener {

    // Constructor
    public MySessionListener() {

    } //end of constructor

    @Override
    public void sessionCreated(HttpSessionEvent event) {

        System.out.println("Current Session created : " + event.getSession().getCreationTime());
        System.out.println();


    } //end of sessionCreated()

    @Override
    public void sessionDestroyed(HttpSessionEvent event) {

        // get the destroying session...
        HttpSession session = event.getSession();

        if (session != null) {

            session.invalidate();

        }

        System.out.println();

    } //end of sessionDestroyed()

} //end of class MySessionListener

But on session expiration i also want to redirect user to redirecr Page if this is a registered user. IF this is a public user i don't want to redirect it although session has expired. I can check in the destroy method by getting attribute logedin that it is a public user or registered user. But then how can i redirect for registered user or do nothing for public user.

If somehow my filter invoke on session time out and some how i check that if this is a registered user by getting logedin attribute 1 and session time out has expired, because for public user i set timeout -1, then redirect the user, using RequestDispatcher otherwoise do filterChain.doFilter(request, response);.

So this is the scenerio that i implemented. I don't know whether my approaches are right or not ? I don't know what security issues i will face by this approach. So that's it.. Now you people guide me what should i do.....

Thanks

回答1:

I understand what your goal is, but I don't think that not having a Session for unauthenticated users is particularly the best approach.

Consider an unauthenticated user navigating through a Primefaces wizard as he provides information to sign up for an account, (Eg. Pick Username, Provide Password, Choose Security Questions, etc...)

You are not going to want to persist this user information until it all has been collected and validated, because perhaps the user has a change of heart and decides not to sign up? Now you have an incomplete user record in your database that needs to be cleaned.

The answer is that you need to store this information in a ViewScoped bean or in session until the unauthenticated user confirms the account creation, where it can finally be persisted.

What I feel the best approach would be is for you to give a User a unique Role with one role being Unauthenticated. Using components like Spring Security 3 or even Seam you should be able to control page Authorization through the Role of the User in Session.

For instance, you can prevent unauthenticated users from entering pages in ../app/* or normal users from accessing pages in ../admin/*



回答2:

I used some thing like this. First there is a filter. Here is my filter

@Override
public void doFilter(ServletRequest request, ServletResponse response, FilterChain filterChain)
        throws IOException, ServletException {

    HttpServletRequest httpServletRequest = (HttpServletRequest) request;
    HttpServletResponse httpServletResponse = (HttpServletResponse) response;

    //Send request to server after each 1min
    // httpServletResponse.setIntHeader("Refresh", 60);

    //getSession(false), which returns null if no session already exists for the current client
    HttpSession session = httpServletRequest.getSession(false);

    if (session == null) {

        //session timeout check.
        if (httpServletRequest.getRequestedSessionId() != null && !httpServletRequest.isRequestedSessionIdValid()) {

            System.out.println("Session has expired");

            /**
             * getSession() (or, equivalently, getSession(true)) creates a new session if no
             * session already exists.
             */
            session = httpServletRequest.getSession(true);
            session.setAttribute("logedin", "0");    // public user

             //httpServletResponse.sendRedirect("http://www.google.com");
             httpServletResponse.sendRedirect(timeoutPage);

        } else {

            session = httpServletRequest.getSession(true);
            session.setAttribute("logedin", "0");

            filterChain.doFilter(httpServletRequest, httpServletResponse);

        }

    } else {

        String isRegisteredUser = session.getAttribute("logedin").toString();

        if (isRegisteredUser.equalsIgnoreCase(("1"))) {

            Login login = (Login)session.getAttribute("login");

            Enumeration e = session.getAttributeNames();



            System.out.println("");

            filterChain.doFilter(httpServletRequest, httpServletResponse);

        } else if (isRegisteredUser.equalsIgnoreCase(("0")))  {

             Enumeration e = session.getAttributeNames();

             filterChain.doFilter(httpServletRequest, httpServletResponse);

        } //end of else if (isRegisteredUser.equalsIgnoreCase(("0")))

    }

} //end of doFilter()

Now when user enter url of my site then this filter invoke. First time it get session null then it checks for session timeout. no session time out so it creates a session. Set logedin attribute to zero, means this is public user and pass the request. Here is my method

//constructor
public Login() {

    try {
        FacesContext facesContext = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance();
        ExternalContext externalContext = facesContext.getExternalContext();
        HttpServletRequest httpServletRequest = (HttpServletRequest)externalContext.getRequest();

        //getSession(false), which returns null if no session already exists for the current client.
        HttpSession session =(HttpSession)externalContext.getSession(false);

        if (session == null) {

            session = httpServletRequest.getSession(true);
            session.setAttribute("logedin", "0");
            session.setMaxInactiveInterval(-1);
            System.out.println();

            } else {

                session.setAttribute("logedin", "0");

                //No session timeout for public users
                session.setMaxInactiveInterval(-1);  

                Enumeration e = session.getAttributeNames();

            }

    } catch (Exception e) {
        System.out.println("Exception in session " + e.getMessage());
    }


} //end of constructor

First time it gets session, just override the values so there is no harm to set the same attribute. But here i just want to ask one thing that is it ok to set no session time out for public users ? will it damage my application at some point, like my server goes out of memory and etc ? If yes, then how can i overcome this ?

Now suppose that my user is log in. Then my filter invoke, this time it will get a session so it comes to my isRegisterdUser check and check the value. He get 0 , just pass the request and then my valid user method call.

public String validUser() throws Exception {

    String returnString = null;

    ArrayList2d<Object> mainarray = new ArrayList2d<Object>();
    mainarray.addRow();
    mainarray.add(userName);
    mainarray.add(password);

    busBeans.usermanagement.users um = new busBeans.usermanagement.users();
    ArrayList retrieveList = um.getValidUser(mainarray);
    if (Integer.parseInt(retrieveList.get(0).toString()) == 0) {
        ArrayList str = (ArrayList) retrieveList.get(1);

        FacesContext facesContext = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance();
        ExternalContext externalContext = facesContext.getExternalContext();

        //getSession(false), which returns null if no session already exists for the current client.
        HttpSession session =(HttpSession)externalContext.getSession(false);


        if (session == null) {

            System.out.println();

        } else {

            Enumeration e = session.getAttributeNames();

        }

        System.out.println();

        logedin=true;

        //Set session attributes for login users
        session.setAttribute("logedin", 1);
        session.setAttribute("firstLastName", str.get(7).toString());
        session.setAttribute("getusercredentials", str);
        session.setAttribute("sessionUserId", str.get(0).toString());
        session.setAttribute("sessionRoleId",str.get(1).toString());
        session.setAttribute("registeredUser", "true");

        /**
         * set session timeout for login user
         * 1 min = 60 sec
         * 5 min = 60 * 5 sec = 300 sec
        */
        session.setMaxInactiveInterval(300);   //5min

        firstLastName = session.getAttribute("firstLastName").toString();

    }

    return returnString=null;

} //end of  validUser()

I override the value of logedin attribute to 1 so now the user become valid user. Now if valid user make request then my filter invoke, it will get a session so it comes to my isRegisterdUser check, this time it get value 1 so just pass the request.Now when session time out and user make any request, then my filter invoke and this time it comes inside the check

if (httpServletRequest.getRequestedSessionId() != null && !httpServletRequest.isRequestedSessionIdValid()) {

            System.out.println("Session has expired");

             //httpServletResponse.sendRedirect("http://www.google.com");
             httpServletResponse.sendRedirect(timeoutPage);

        } else {

            session = httpServletRequest.getSession(true);
            session.setAttribute("logedin", "0");

            filterChain.doFilter(httpServletRequest, httpServletResponse);

        }

and redirect the user by making it public. So here how this i do it. I got also a idea that i refresh the page after some time, i have sessionCreationTime, sessionLastAccessTime and sessionMaxTime. so i can do a work like this

String isRegisteredUser = session.getAttribute("logedin").toString();

        if (isRegisteredUser.equalsIgnoreCase(("1"))) {

            Login login = (Login)session.getAttribute("login");

            Enumeration e = session.getAttributeNames();

           while (e.hasMoreElements()) {

                String attr = (String)e.nextElement();
                System.err.println("attr  = "+ attr);
                Object value = session.getAttribute(attr);
                System.err.println("value = "+ value);

           } //end of while

           long sessionCreationTime = session.getCreationTime();
            int sessionCreationTimeInSec = (int)(sessionCreationTime / 1000) % 60;
           int sessionCreationTimeInMinutes = (int)((sessionCreationTime / (1000*60)) % 60);

            long sessionLastAccessTime = session.getLastAccessedTime();
            int sessionLastAccessTimeInSec  = (int)(sessionLastAccessTime / 1000) % 60 ;
           int sessionLastAccessTimeInMinutes  = (int)((sessionLastAccessTime / (1000*60)) % 60 );

            int sessionMaxTime = session.getMaxInactiveInterval();
            int sessionMaxTimeInMinute = sessionMaxTime / 60 ;

            if ((sessionCreationTimeInMinutes - sessionLastAccessTimeInMinutes) - 1 > sessionMaxTimeInMinute) {

                System.out.println("Session is expiring in one minute");

           }

            System.out.println("");

            filterChain.doFilter(httpServletRequest, httpServletResponse);

        }

The idea here is that if some how you check that how much time left for session timeout then you can invalidate the session just before your session time out time. Because once your session expire you get session null and you have no attributes to check. But before one minute you have session and all session attributes so you can do whatever you want. I don't know how solid idea is this, it's just an approach that came to my mind.

Also suppose user is login and then suddenly closed the browser. Closing browser close the session. Now when you open your browser then you get a message that your session has expire. I want to ask when you open a browser can i use this check

 if (httpServletRequest.getRequestedSessionId() != null && !httpServletRequest.isRequestedSessionIdValid()) {

     System.out.println("Session has expired");

     if (session.isNew()) {

          /**
            * getSession() (or, equivalently, getSession(true)) creates a new session if no
            * session already exists.
            */
           session = httpServletRequest.getSession(true);
           session.setAttribute("logedin", "0");    // public user

           filterChain.doFilter(httpServletRequest, httpServletResponse);

     } else {

             httpServletResponse.sendRedirect("http://www.google.com");


      }

}

I used isNew() check because i want to do that if user is entering your site first time, like open his browser, then he didn't see the redirection message although his session has been expired because of closing browser.

Thanks



标签: session jsf-2