I used to just use Tomcat and JSP pages which I can execute query, then assign query result into the array or object then pass that data onto client side via response.
request.setAttribute("errorMessage", "this is error!!");
request.getRequestDispatcher("report.jsp").forward(request, response);
In client jsp code, I could do something like:
${errorMessage}
Then the "this is error!!" message would show up.
I want to do the same thing with REST JAX-RS GlassFish v3.
@Path("schedule/test")
@POST
@Consumes("application/x-www-form-urlencoded")
@Produces("application/vnd.ms-excel")
public Object tmpTest(String content) {
try {
//just my method to execute query and get result
Vector out = (Vector)QueryManager.executeQuery;
//if query result is empty, I want user to redirect to report.jsp page
if(out.isEmpty()) {
request.setAttribute("errorMessage", "This is error!!");
request.getRequestDispatcher("report.jsp").forward(request, response);
return null;
}
....continue code......
}
This results in mysterious exception I've never seen.
java.lang.ClassCastException: $Proxy109 cannot be cast to org.apache.catalina.core.ApplicationHttpRequest
at org.apache.catalina.core.ApplicationHttpRequest.getRequestFacade(ApplicationHttpRequest.java:1001)
at org.apache.catalina.core.ApplicationDispatcher.doDispatch(ApplicationDispatcher.java:472)
at org.apache.catalina.core.ApplicationDispatcher.dispatch(ApplicationDispatcher.java:379)
at org.apache.catalina.core.ApplicationDispatcher.dispatch(ApplicationDispatcher.java:336)
at org.apache.catalina.core.ApplicationDispatcher.forward(ApplicationDispatcher.java:314)
So how can I redirect a user to report.jsp and also pass message like "This is error" ?
The client jsp expects the error msg variable to have a value:
<b>${errorMessage}</b>
That's not RESTful. You need to throw a
WebApplicationException
with a specific status code so that the client understands what exactly went wrong. E.g. when it's actually the server's mistake:Or when it was after all client's mistake:
See also HTTP status code definitions for an overview.
The
ClassCastException
which you're facing is by the way occurring because the dispatchedrequest
is actually not an instance of the servletcontainer-provided implementation (in this particular case, the one of Tomcat or a Tomcat-fork). After all, you shouldn't be doing it this way. You're developing a REST webservice, not a JSP/Servlet website. It are two distinct worlds.As mentioned before, you should try WebApplicationException.
I believe you this would give you your desired answer:
Try this: