1 / 43

JSR 168 portlets in IBM WebSphere Portal

Session Number: D19. JSR 168 portlets in IBM WebSphere Portal. Oliver Koeth (okoeth@de.ibm.com). Agenda. JSR 168 overview Model and goals of the specification Support for two portlet APIs in WebSphere portal JSR 168 content Important new API features of JSR 168 Best practices + outlook

vherrera
Télécharger la présentation

JSR 168 portlets in IBM WebSphere Portal

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Session Number: D19 JSR 168 portlets in IBM WebSphere Portal Oliver Koeth (okoeth@de.ibm.com)

  2. Agenda • JSR 168 overview • Model and goals of the specification • Support for two portlet APIs in WebSphere portal • JSR 168 content • Important new API features of JSR 168 • Best practices + outlook • IBM extensions for JSR portlets • Features of the portal framework • Additional APIs for portlet functionality • Additional APIs for better integration of portlets + portal • Contrasting IBM and JSR API features • Resources

  3. Objectives • After this session you should… • know what can you achieve with JSR portlets in WebSphere Portal: • know which concepts and features are supported by the JSR 168 standard and what is not part of the standard • be able to make good use of portlet-specific programming concepts • know additional non-standard features WebSphere Portal provide for portlet programming and what they are good for • understand what the transition from IBM to JSR portlets means

  4. JSR 168 Overview The Java Portlet Specification v1.0

  5. JSR 168 Goals • Portability of portlets between portal implementations • Simple programming model, aligned with J2EE and other Java technologies • Aligned with WebServices for Remote Portlets (WSRP) Result: The “Java Portlet Specification 1.0” • A standard that describes how a portal interacts with Java portlets • Portlet API and deployment unit (portlet WAR file) • It is not a goal of JSR 168 to define a complete standard for portal implementations • leave as much freedom for portal vendors as possible • Not part of the standard: • Aggregation of portlets into pages, layout management • Portal organization and navigation, selection of portlets • Page personalization and configuration engines • Portal administration and configuration, access control…

  6. Navigation etc. A B C Scope of JSR 168 JSR 168 scope Portlet A Portal Client Portlet C Portlet B Portal Page

  7. The JSR 168 model revisited • JSR 168 is based on a strict separation between portal and portlets • Needs to accommodate many portal vendors coming from different angles • Fits well with a remote portlet setup where portal and portlet are running in different JVMs (like the WSRP standard) • Fits well with a „building bricks“ approach that wants to integrate ready-made components → Idea of a „portlet marketplace“ • Fits well a with „workplace“ approach, where many independent components are combined in a presentation environment (desktop metaphor) • Customer requirements often dictate a solution where portal and portlets are tied together more closely • Portlets should interact with each other • Portlets should influence portal navigation and vice versa • Portal needs to pass more information to the portlets than defined by the spec • JSR 168 does not cover such requirements – but WebSphere Portal provides additional functions to address them

  8. Portlet APIs in WebSphere Portal v1.1 v4.1 v5.0.2 v5.1.0.3 (today) • The IBM Portlet API: since version 4.1 • IBM Portlets are servlets, APIs extend the servlet APIs • Many new features were added over time • Planned to be deprecated in the future • Will still be supported for at least two major releases after deprecation • The Java Portlet API (JSR 168): since version 5.0.2 • Fully spec-compliant implementation • IBM extensions for areas that are not covered by the spec • This is the future programming model for portlets • New features will target this API only Jetspeed API IBM Portlet API Java Portlet API

  9. Supporting two Portlet APIs • Since 5.0.2, WebSphere Portal supports two portlet containers • “IBM Portlet API” and “Java Portlet API” • Coexistence of portlet types • Portlets of both types can be on the same page • Transparent to the users of the portal • Same deployment and administration UI for both portlet types • Communication between IBM and JSR portlets is not well supported • For new projects, use the JSR 168 API if possible • Some features are still supported only for IBM portlets; use the IBM API if you really need them • You don’t need to migrate your IBM portlets right away • The IBM Portlet API will be supported for several releases to go • More migration tooling may become available over the next releases • Migration of configuration data (portlet data) is not yet supported

  10. Content of the Java Portlet Specification A new way to write web components

  11. What makes programming portlets special • Portlets are web components and have a lot in common with servlets • A lot of the concepts (like sessions, JSP include etc.) similar for servlets and portlets • This section focuses on what is special for JSR portlets • Some of these concepts are also different from the IBM portlet API • IBM portlet API was a direct extension of the servlet API

  12. Request processing phases • Stand-alone webapps are in complete control – portlets have to live in a shared environment • Coordination requires a refined processing model with two phases • Action Request (“processing phase”) processAction (ActionRequest, ActionResponse) • Invoked only when the URL is an action targeted to the portlet, • Render Request (“render phase”) render (RenderRequest, RenderResponse) • Invoked whenever a page with the portlet is displayed (even if user interacts with another portlet on the page) • Produces output to create the portal page • IBM portlets have a distinction between events and rendering too, but the APIs do not make that very explicit

  13. Typical Portal Request Portlets A B C User Portal Action on B A processAction B C render These requests may be done in parallel or skipped (caching!) render render A’ B’ C Outside of the scope of the Portlet specification Scope of the Portlet specification

  14. Distinction between phases is important • Action phase does the processing • Set session attributes or render parameters, write to the backend • Example: processing an input form should be done in the action phase • Render phase generates output • Assumption: calling render two times with no action inbetween generates the same output  allows caching and parallelization • Portlets that display different output for the first and subsequent render requests are “not well behaved”!

  15. Request attributes • Visibility is governed by the spec and different from IBM portlets • Attributes of the portal request are not visible • JSR portlets cannot transfer request attributes from action to render phase • Restrictions make sense when you think of remote portlets • If you really need a dirty trick for attribute passing • The attribute namespaces “java.” and “javax.” directly access the underlying servlet request (as defined by the spec) • You can exploit that e.g. to pass information from theme to portlets • Of course, this only works for local portlets that share the same portal request • The normal communication method for portlets is property broker (see later)

  16. Render parameters • Navigational state • For every render call, portal keeps resending the last set of parameters  allow the portlet to store interaction state • Portal is responsible for tracking render parameters • Intention is that render parameters are kept in the URL • Allows to keep interaction state without a session • Render parameters are an explicit API concept, because URL generation is not controlled by the portlet (parameters must be put into every portal URL) • Using render parameters provides enhanced usability • Better use of the browser back button, avoids problems where the session state and the displayed view get out of sync • Bookmarking: internal state of the portlet is part of the bookmark • Portal applies similar techniques for storing portlet mode, window state and other information

  17. Bookmark example • Fictous sample: JSR document viewer portlet that displays technotes • Displayed technote is tracked as a render parameter • You can send the URL to a friend and she will see the same technote in the maximized viewer http:/sample.ibm.com/../portlet6/state=max/param.article=12345/… URL stores information that the technote viewer is maximized and that technote 12345 is displayed In reality, of course, URLs are encoded more efficiently

  18. Portlet URLs • Portlets need to use API calls to create URLs to themselves • ActionURL – processAction method of portlet is called (state changes) • RenderURL – new render parameters are set, only render is called • URLs for portlets are always generated programmatically • Do not call encodeURL; the implementation takes care of that • Never make any assumptions about the URL format! • URLs may only be tokens that are rewritten later • Caching and remote portlets require this • You can only expect valid URLs in the eventual output, but not in your code • Never do string manipulation (like adding query parameters) on Portlet URLs

  19. Portlet URLs • JSR 168 API allows switching between http and https (optional feature) • PortletURL.setSecure(true/false) • Supported since WP 5.1.0.1, if portal is configured appropriately • FORM GET with portlet URLs is ok since WP 5.1 • Portal does not use query strings in its own URLs • But the spec does not guarantee that • Resource URLs (Images etc.) are not portlet URLs • Constructed as strings, but must call encodeURL • No relative URLs allowed • response.encodeURL(request.getContextPath() + “/img/wombat.gif”)

  20. Configuration levels in IBM and JSR portlets

  21. Some best practices (general) • Separate processing and rendering • Respect action and render phase, use MVC, use JSPs for rendering • Use render parameters where appropriate • Session is not the only way to keep information across requests • Be robust against invalid parameters • Consider outdated bookmarks etc. • Implement edit and help mode • Portal knows what the portlet is doing, can apply access control or enter the mode directly • Use portlet preferences for storing configuration data • Avoid additional property files • Preferences can be modified during runtime, protected by portal access control • Can easily make use of WP multi-layer configuration feature (user/admin)

  22. Some best practices (in WebSphere portal) • Specify a unique ID for your portlet in the deployment descriptor • optional “id” attribute for the main <portlet-application> tag • Helps for upgrading and migration • Make judicious use of IBM extensions • Make use of IBM extensions if they are available during runtime • If possible, avoid hard dependencies on IBM extensions – write your portlets so that they can still run on any JSR 168-compliant portal • Don’t spend time to re-invent IBM extensions (like portlet communication etc.) • Don’t rely on anything not defined by the spec or by WP documentation • No calls to non-public IBM code; • Do not depend on behavior that is not explicitly guaranteed • These things may break when you apply the portal fixpack that is absolutely needed to solve your urgent production problem (and when the only developer who knows is not around) • If you think you really need to rely on internals to solve your use case, contact portal support to obtain a “Document of Understanding” (DOU)

  23. Outlook on JSR 286 – Java Portlet API 2.0 • A new Java Specification Request that defines the next version of the API • Another full discussion / draft / approval cycle • New reference implementation and compliance testkit • Lead by IBM; all major companies dealing with Java portals are involved • Current ideas for the spec content • Inter-portlet communication as defined in WSRP 2.0 • Public render parameters as defined in WSRP 2.0 • J2EE 1.4 support • Portlet filters (intercept API flow between portal and portlets) • Enhanced caching support and portlet tag library • Alignment with WSRP versions 2.0 and with JSF • Proposed schedule • JSR accepted on Dec 12, 2005 • early public draft beginning of 2006, public draft by mid 2006 • final version by end of 2006.

  24. IBM Extensions for JSR Portlets

  25. Extensions of the WP container • Parallel portlet rendering (WP 5.0.2) • Improves performance if portlets have latencies (network access) • Possible through tight coupling of portlet container to application server • Fragment caching (WP 5.0.2) • Caches output of individual portlets on the server • Caching definitions in the DD must be set appropriately • Requires that the portlet does not change state during rendering • Full-page caching (WP 5.1) • Pages can be cached on the proxy • Portal can be as fast as a static website • Requires extended caching information supplied by the portlet

  26. Programming extensions • Property broker (WP 5.1) • Information exchange between JSR portlets • Output information from one portlet action (like request or session attributes) can trigger actions on other portlets • Output of the source action can be passed as input to the target actions • Information flow is governed by „wires“ between the portlets. These wires can be dynamically configured by portal administrators • Easy to program • Information always flows in and out of portlet actions; you can re-use the same action handling as for GUI interaction • You need to use common data types (Strings are often sufficient ) • You need to declare how information („properties“) flows in and out of actions; this is done declaratively in a WSDL file • No dependency on new APIs! • Portal detects how input and output properties can be matched and lets you define appropriate wires

  27. Property Broker – Shipping example Customer info portlet Order list portlet Wire connectssource andtarget for order ID; Selecting an order pushesorder ID Orderdetail portlet Cascaded wiring: Order detail pushes the tracking ID to the tracking portlet Order ID can be entered manually; order ID from wiretriggers the same code!

  28. Programming extensions • Multiple configuration levels for portlets • Configuration seen by the portlets is a combination of multiple configuration sources • Administrator can define global values, users can personalize some values • Governed by portal access control • Handling is mostly transparent to the portlet code, logic is triggered by additional portlet modes: • “config” mode: set administrator configuration (affects all pages) • other modes (esp. “edit”): set user configuration (affects only a single user) • If programmed properly, the administrator can decide at deployment time which configuration values may be personalized and which may not

  29. Programming extensions • Credential vault (WP 5.0.2) • Portlets often need authentication info to access backed system  common API that allows portlets to manage this information • Helps for realizing a SSO experience while keeping sensitive data under control • CC/PP support (WP 5.1.0.1) • Allows portlets to detect different devices (different types of non-HTML devices like WAP phones, but also different browser types) and produce appropriate markup • Device profile available as request attribute • Puma SPI (WP 5.1.0.1) for extended User/Group functions • JSR 168 covers only retrieval of user attributes • Puma SPI allows to query the group structure and modify user attributes and group assignment

  30. Programming extensions • Integration with the portal navigation (WP 5.1.0.1) • Create links to other portlets and pages • Pass parameters to portlets along with those links • Set portlet mode and window state of target portlets • Extensive, feature-rich API in WP 5.1.0.1 (state API) • Model SPI (WP 5.1.0.1) • Allows to query the portal page hierarchy • Useful for dynamic navigation (“Sitemap”) and other customer requirements that dictate a tight integration between portlets and the portal

  31. Example – default UI in WebSphere Portal 5.1 • Functions like “edit this page” or “edit user profile” are realized as portlets on special hidden pages • Other places in the portal (theme and portlets) link to these pages and pass information to the portlets • Available as public APIs – custom portal setups can do similar things!

  32. Dynamic User Interfaces (WP 5.1.0.1) • Portlets can launch dynamic pages in the portal UI • Pages live in the session (not in the portal DB) and are only visible to the current user • Pages are created as copies of a persistent “template page” • Pages are closed by the user or programmatically • API allows to add portlets to the page and remove them • API allows to set configuration for the portlets • Useful for programming task-oriented applications (“Process portal”) • Multiple tasks can be spawned on separate pages • User can switch between the tasks  temporarily leave the page and later return to the same task context • User does not lose entered data if interrupted by a higher-priority task • Spawned tasks remain visible until they are completed and the page is closed • Generic API, can also be applied to other use cases • A bit similar to the “tabbed browsing” concept in web browsers

  33. Example – Travel Booking Launch portlet displays links to start the booking processClicking on a link opens a dynamic page

  34. Example – Travel Booking As the user progresses through filling out the form, the flight booking portlet dynamically shows other portlets on its dynamic page.In this case, a specialized portlet is shown for entering departure/ arrival dates Initially, the dynamic page contains the flight booking portlet

  35. IBM vs. JSR portlets – reprise • A lot of the differences between the portlet APIs are merely syntactical • like using PortletPreferences instead of PortletData/Settings • Some notable differences • Render parameters, application scope for sessions • Stricter separation from portal issues, e.g. request parameters or attributes • JSR portlet API builds on our experience with the IBM portlet API • Simpler, more explicit APIs • API behavior is now explicitly specified (Not “works as coded”) • Avoid some performance pitfalls (like action objects in the IBM API) • Some IBM portlet features have been added as IBM extension • and maybe more will be, depending on demand • Hacks in IBM portlet implementations don’t translate easily to JSR • Most of the dirty tricks for IBM portlets (like accessing the portal request) do have an equivalent, but try to avoid them

  36. Features currently not supported for JSR Portlets • Click-2-Action – hot on the list for future support • Dynamic titles (optional part of JSR168 spec) • Not supported out of the box – JSR portlet API is not compatible with existing portal aggregation tags • Next release will allow a work-around to support dynamic titles; requires changes to skin JSPs and needs DHTML • Solo state – on the list for future support • Portlet filters – waiting for standardization in the next portlet specification • Portlet menus • May be superseded by more general plug-in mechanisms for the portal navigation • PortletSessionListener interface • Same functionality can be achieved with ordinary HTTP session listeners • some more XXXListener interfaces • Currently not considered as important features

  37. Conclusion

  38. Summary – Revisiting the objectives • Know which concepts and features are supported by the JSR 168 standard and what is not part of the standard • portlets vs. portal front-end • request processing phases • Make good use of portlet-specific programming concepts • render parameters, portlet modes, URL handling • Know additional non-standard features WebSphere Portal provide for portlet programming and what they are good for • programming extensions for interacting with the portal environment • features that you need to create a tightly coupled portal solution • Understand what the transition from IBM to JSR portlets means • differences are not too significant • use JSR portlets for new projects – get all the new features • think carefully when migrating existing solutions – you have plenty of time

  39. Resources • JSR 168 specification (Java Portlet API 1.0) • For IBMers http://w3.hursley.ibm.com/java/jim/jsrtechnology/ jsr168portletspecification/index.html (requires approval) • For non-IBMers: http://www.jcp.org/en/jsr/detail?id=168 • JSR 286 progress (Java Portlet API 2.0) • http://www.jcp.org/en/jsr/detail?id=286 • Product information • http://www-306.ibm.com/software/genservers/portal/library • DeveloperWorks • http://www-128.ibm.com/developerworks/websphere/zones/portal/ • Best practices article:www-128.ibm.com/developerworks/websphere/library/techarticles/ 0403_hepper/0403_hepper.html • IBM to JSR API migration:http://www-128.ibm.com/developerworks/websphere/library/techarticles/ 0412_paeffgen/0412_paeffgen.html

  40. Resources • Public newsgroup • ibm.software.websphere.portal-server • IBM internal portal developer newsgroup • forums.software.websphere.portal-server • Weekly portal practitioner confcall, Thu 11am ESThosted by Michael Dockter

  41. Backup

  42. Portlet modes and window states • Portlet mode declares what the portlet does • Normal operation: view • Customizing user configuration: edit • Display help information: help • More optional modes (config, print) • Window state declares how much space the portlet should use for its output • normal, maximized, minimized • Mode and state changes can either be requested by the portlet or be triggered by the portal • You don‘t need to program a „help“ or „edit“ button, the portal does that • Portal may restrict the modes and states a portlet can use • E.g. “only administrators can enter the edit mode of the mail portlet that allows to modify the mailserver settings” • Realized by access control features in WebSphere Portal

  43. Portlet Preferences • Provide persistent configuration to the portlet • initialized in the deployment descriptor • can be changed by the portlet (typically in „edit“ mode) • allow to customize appearance of the same portlet in different contexts/on different pages (e.g. Notes mailbox and POP3 mailbox) • Writeable in action phase, read-only in render phase • Preferences can be locked for users („read-only“) • Only the administrator can change such preferences (optional feature, supported by WebSphere Portal) • Simple persistence API for portlets (key-value pairs) • If you need a more sophisticated data model, you can still use JDBC or other persistence mechanisms • Special features in WebSphere Portal (more on that later) • Multiple layers, write access protected by portal access control

More Related