| Simply Lift | |
| David Pollak | |
| September 8, 2011 | |
| ii | |
| Copyright © 2010-2011 by David Pollak | |
| This document is licensed Creative Commons Attribution, Non Commercial, No Derivatives: | |
| http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ | |
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| Contents | |
| Contents | |
| List of Figures | |
| List of Listings | |
| I The Lift Web Framework | |
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| Introduction | |
| 2 The ubiquitous Chat app | |
| 2.1 The View . | |
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| 2.2 The Chat Comet component . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . | |
| 2.3 The ChatServer . | |
| 2.4 User Input | |
| 2.5 Chat In . | |
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| 2.6 Running it | |
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| 2.7 What you don’t see . | |
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| 3 Snippets and SiteMap | |
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| 3.1 | |
| Starting at the beginning: Boot.scala . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 | |
| 3.1.1 LiftRules rules . | |
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| 3.1.2 Properties and Run modes | |
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| 3.1.3 By convention . | |
| 3.1.4 Misc Rules . | |
| 3.1.5 Html5 . | |
| 3.2 SiteMap . | |
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| 3.2.1 Defining the SiteMap . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 | |
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| CONTENTS | |
| 3.2.2 | |
| Simplest SiteMap . | |
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| 3.2.3 Menu and Loc[_] . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . | |
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| 3.2.4 Access Control | |
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| 3.2.5 Hidden and Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 | |
| 3.2.6 | |
| Submenus . | |
| 3.2.7 Parameters . | |
| 3.2.8 Wildcards . | |
| 3.2.9 | |
| Summary . | |
| 3.3 View First | |
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| 3.3.1 Page source . | |
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| 3.3.2 Dynamic content | |
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| 3.3.3 | |
| Surround and page chrome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . | |
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| 3.3.4 Embed . | |
| 3.3.5 Results . | |
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| 3.4 | |
| Snippets and Dynamic content | |
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| 3.4.1 | |
| Snippets in markup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 | |
| 3.4.2 | |
| Snippet resolution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 | |
| 3.4.3 Dynamic Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 | |
| 3.4.4 Embedded Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 | |
| 3.4.5 Param Example . | |
| 3.4.6 Recursive . | |
| 3.4.7 | |
| Summary . | |
| 3.5 Wrap up . | |
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| 4 Forms | |
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| 4.1 Old Fashioned Dumb Forms . | |
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| 4.2 OnSubmit | |
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| 4.3 | |
| Stateful Snippets | |
| 4.4 RequestVars . | |
| 4.5 Field Errors | |
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| 4.6 LiftScreen . | |
| 4.7 Wizard . | |
| 4.8 Ajax . | |
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| 4.9 But sometimes Old Fashioned is good . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 | |
| 4.10 Conclusion . | |
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| CONTENTS | |
| 5 HTTP and REST | |
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| 5.1 | |
| Introduction . | |
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| 5.2 REST the hard way . | |
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| 5.3 Making it easier with RestHelper . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 | |
| 5.4 A complete REST example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 | |
| 5.5 Wrap Up . | |
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| 6 Wiring | |
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| 6.1 Cells . | |
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| 6.2 Hooking it up to the UI . | |
| 6.3 | |
| Shared Shopping . | |
| 6.4 Wrap up . | |
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| 7 Core Concepts | |
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| 7.1 | |
| Snippets | |
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| 7.1.1 | |
| Snippet NodeSeq => NodeSeq . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 | |
| 7.1.2 | |
| Snippet instances . | |
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| 7.1.3 Multiple methods on a snippet class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . | |
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| 7.1.4 | |
| Inter-snippet communication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79 | |
| 7.1.5 Recursive Snippets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79 | |
| 7.1.6 | |
| Snippet parameters . | |
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| 7.2 Box/Option . | |
| 7.3 | |
| S/SHtml | |
| 7.4 Boot . | |
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| 7.5 | |
| SiteMap . | |
| 7.6 GUIDs | |
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| 7.6.1 How GUIDs are generated . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84 | |
| 7.6.2 Where they are used . | |
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| 7.7 LiftRules . | |
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| 7.8 | |
| SessionVars and RequestVars . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . | |
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| 7.9 Helpers . | |
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| 7.10 CSS Selector Transforms . | |
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| 7.11 Client-side behavior invoking server-side functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . | |
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| 7.12 Ajax . | |
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| 7.13 Comet . | |
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| CONTENTS | |
| 7.14 LiftActor . | |
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| 7.15 Pattern Matching . | |
| 7.16 Type safety . | |
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| 7.17 Page rewriting . | |
| 7.18 Security . | |
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| 8 Common Patterns | |
| 91 | |
| 8.1 Localization . | |
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| 8.1.1 Localizing Templates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92 | |
| 8.1.2 Resource Lookup . | |
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| 8.1.3 Accessing Resources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93 | |
| 8.1.4 Conclusion . | |
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| 8.2 Dependency Injection . | |
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| 8.2.1 Lift Libraries and Injector . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94 | |
| 8.2.2 Lift WebKit and enhanced injection scoping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95 | |
| 8.2.3 Conclusion . | |
| 8.3 Modules . | |
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| 8.4 HtmlProperties, XHTML and HTML5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98 | |
| 8.4.1 XHTML via OldHtmlProperties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98 | |
| 8.4.2 HTML5 via Html5Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98 | |
| 8.4.3 Changing behavior mid-session or mid-request | |
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| 9 Built-in Snippets | |
| 101 | |
| 9.1 CSS . | |
| 9.2 Msgs | |
| 9.3 Msg . | |
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| 9.4 Menu . | |
| 9.5 A . | |
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| 9.6 Children . | |
| 9.7 Comet . | |
| 9.8 Form . | |
| 9.9 | |
| Ignore . | |
| 9.10 Loc . | |
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| 9.11 Surround . | |
| 9.12 TestCond . | |
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| . 102 | |
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| . 102 | |
| CONTENTS | |
| vii | |
| 9.13 Embed . | |
| 9.14 Tail | |
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| 9.15 WithParam . | |
| 9.16 VersionInfo . | |
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| 9.17 SkipDocType . | |
| 9.18 XmlGroup . | |
| 9.19 LazyLoad . | |
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| 9.20 WithResourceId . | |
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| . 102 | |
| 10 SiteMap | |
| 11 REST | |
| 12 MVC (If you really want it) | |
| 13 From MVC | |
| 103 | |
| 105 | |
| 109 | |
| 111 | |
| 13.1 First things first | |
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| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 | |
| 13.2 Making a SiteMap entry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112 | |
| 13.3 Creating the view . | |
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| 13.4 Creating the Snippet | |
| 13.5 Getting Ajaxy . | |
| 13.6 Next Steps . | |
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| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114 | |
| II Recipes | |
| 14 Dynamic html tables created from DB.runQuery() | |
| 115 | |
| 117 | |
| 14.1 Problem . | |
| 14.2 Solution . | |
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| 15 Dynamically choosing content | |
| 15.1 Problem . | |
| 15.2 Solution . | |
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| 119 | |
| 16 Ajax Forms | |
| 17 Protecting REST APIs | |
| 121 | |
| 123 | |
| 17.1 Problem . | |
| 17.2 Solution . | |
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| viii | |
| 18 URI-based locale selection | |
| 18.1 Problem . | |
| 18.2 Solution . | |
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| CONTENTS | |
| 125 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125 | |
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| 19 Embedding JavaScript in an HTML page | |
| 127 | |
| 19.1 Problem . | |
| 19.2 Solution . | |
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| III Questions and Answers | |
| 20 Scaling | |
| 21 How Lift does function/GUID mapping | |
| 22 How Lift does Comet | |
| 23 Advanced Concepts | |
| 129 | |
| 131 | |
| 137 | |
| 139 | |
| 141 | |
| 23.1 Snippet Resolution . | |
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| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141 | |
| 23.1.1 LiftSession.liftTagProcessing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142 | |
| 23.1.2 LiftRules.liftTagProcessing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . | |
| . 142 | |
| 23.1.3 Snippet name resolution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142 | |
| 23.1.4 Post-processing of results . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 144 | |
| 23.2 The Merging Phase . | |
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| IV Misc | |
| 24 Releases | |
| 145 | |
| 147 | |
| 24.1 Lift 2.2-RC1 . | |
| 24.2 Lift 2.2 . | |
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| List of Figures | |
| ix | |
| x | |
| LIST OF FIGURES | |
| List of Listings | |
| 2.1 | |
| index.html | |
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| 2.2 Chat.scala . | |
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| 2.3 ChatServer.scala . | |
| 2.4 ChatIn.scala . | |
| 3.1 Boot.scala . | |
| 3.2 | |
| index.html | |
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| 3.3 dynamic.html | |
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| 3.4 HelloWorld.scala . | |
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| 5 | |
| 6 | |
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| 9 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 | |
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| samples/snippet_and_sitemap/src/main/webapp/_embedme.html | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 | |
| 3.5 Embedded.scala . | |
| 3.6 param.html | |
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| 3.7 Param.scala . | |
| 3.8 | |
| recurse.html | |
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| 3.9 Recurse.scala . | |
| 4.1 dumb.html . | |
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| 4.2 DumbForm.scala . | |
| 4.3 onsubmit.html . | |
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| 4.4 OnSubmit.scala . | |
| 4.5 | |
| 4.6 | |
| 4.7 | |
| stateful.html | |
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| Stateful.scala . | |
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| requestvar.html | |
| 4.8 ReqVar.scala . | |
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| 4.9 fielderror.html . | |
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| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 | |
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| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 | |
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| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 | |
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| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 | |
| 4.10 FieldErrorExample.scala . | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 | |
| 4.11 screen.html . | |
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| 4.12 ScreenExample.scala . | |
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| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 | |
| xi | |
| xii | |
| LIST OF LISTINGS | |
| 4.13 WizardExample.scala . | |
| 4.14 ajax.html | |
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| 4.15 AjaxExample.scala . | |
| 4.16 Query.scala . | |
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| 5.1 BasicExample.scala . | |
| 5.2 | |
| Item.scala . | |
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| 5.3 BasicWithHelper.scala . | |
| 5.4 FullRest.scala . | |
| 6.1 Cart.scala . | |
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| 6.2 AllItemsPage.scala . | |
| 6.3 | |
| items.html | |
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| 6.4 AnItemPage.scala . | |
| 6.5 CometCart.scala . | |
| 6.6 Link.scala . | |
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| 6.7 | |
| ShareCart.scala . | |
| 13.1 index.html | |
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| 13.2 TimeNow.scala . | |
| 13.3 ClickMe.scala . | |
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| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 | |
| . | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 | |
| . | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 | |
| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 | |
| Part I | |
| The Lift Web Framework | |
| 1 | |
| Chapter 1 | |
| Introduction | |
| The Lift Web Framework provides web application developers tools to make writing security, in- | |
| teracting, scalable web applications easier than with any other web framework. After reading Part | |
| I of this book, you should understand Lift’s core concepts and be able to write Lift applications. | |
| But with anything, practice is important. I have been writing Lift and Scala for 4 years, and even | |
| I learn new things about the language and the framework on a weekly basis. Please consider Lift | |
| an path and an exploration, rather than an end point. | |
| “Yo, David, stop yer yappin’. I’m coming from Rails|Spring|Struts|Django and I want to get | |
| started super fast with Lift.” See From MVC ( 13 on page 111). | |
| Lift is built on top of the Scala programming language. Scala runs on the Java Virtual Machine. Lift | |
| applications are typically packaged as WAR files and run as a J/EE Servlets or Servlet Filters. This | |
| book will provide you with the core concepts you need to successfully write Lift web applications. | |
| The book assumes knowledge of Servlets and Servlet containers, the Scala Language (Chapters 1-6 | |
| of Beginning Scala gives you a good grounding in the language), build tools, program editors, web | |
| development including HTML and JavaScript, etc. Further, this book will not explore persistence. | |
| Lift has additional modules for persisting to relational and non-relational data stores. Lift doesn’t | |
| distinguish as to how an object is materialized into the address space... Lift can treat any object | |
| any old way you want. There are many resources (including Exploring Lift) that cover ways to | |
| persist data from a JVM. | |
| Lift is different from most web frameworks and it’s likely that Lift’s differences will present a | |
| challenge and a friction if you are familiar with the MVC school of web frameworks1. But Lift | |
| is different and Lift’s differences give you more power to create interactive applications. Lift’s | |
| differences lead to more concise web applications. Lift’s differences result in more secure and | |
| scalable applications. Lift’s differences let you be more productive and make maintaining appli- | |
| cations easier for the future you or whoever is writing your applications. Please relax and work to | |
| understand Lift’s differences... and see how you can make best use of Lift’s features to build your | |
| web applications. | |
| Lift creates abstractions that allow easier expression of business logic and then maps those ab- | |
| stractions to HTTP and HTML. This approach differs from traditional web frameworks which | |
| build abstractions on top of HTTP and HTML and require the developer to bridge between com- | |
| mon business logic patterns and the underlying protocol. The difference means that you spend | |
| more time thinking about your application and less time thinking about the plumbing. | |
| 1This includes Ruby on Rails, Struts, Java Server Faces, Django, TurboGears, etc. | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| CHAPTER 1. INTRODUCTION | |
| I am a “concept learner.” I learn concepts and then apply them over and over again as situations | |
| come up. This book focuses a lot on the concepts. If you’re a concept learner and like my stream | |
| on conciousness style, this book will likely suit you well. On the other hand, it may not. | |
| Up to date versions of | |
| liftweb.net/Simply_Lift.pdf. | |
| https://github.com/dpp/simply_lift. | |
| this book are available in PDF form at http://simply. | |
| this book is available at | |
| The source code for | |
| If you’ve got questions, feedback, or improvements to this document, please join the conversation | |
| on the Lift Google Group. | |
| I’m a “roll up your sleaves and get your hands dirty with code” kinda guy... so let’s build a simple | |
| Chat application in Lift. This application will allow us to demonstrate some of Lift’s core features | |
| as well as giving a “smack in the face” demonstration of how Lift is different. | |
| Chapter 2 | |
| The ubiquitous Chat app | |
| Writing a multi-user chat application in Lift is super-simple and illustrates many of Lift’s core | |
| concepts. | |
| The Source Code can be found at https://github.com/dpp/simply_lift/tree/master/chat. | |
| 2.1 The View | |
| When writing a Lift app, it’s often best to start off with the user interface... build what the user | |
| will see and then add behavior to the HTML page. So, let’s look at the Lift template that will make | |
| up our chat application. | |
| 1 <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" | |
| 2 | |
| 3 <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> | |
| "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> | |
| Listing 2.1: index.html | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| 13 | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| <head><title>Home</title></head> | |
| <body class="lift:content_id=main"> | |
| <div id="main" class="lift:surround?with=default;at=content"> | |
| <!-- the behavior of the div --> | |
| <div class="lift:comet?type=Chat"> | |
| Some chat messages | |
| <ul> | |
| <li>A message</li> | |
| <li class="clearable">Another message</li> | |
| <li class="clearable">A third message</li> | |
| </ul> | |
| </div> | |
| <div> | |
| <form class="lift:form.ajax"> | |
| <input class="lift:ChatIn" id="chat_in"/> | |
| <input type="submit" value="Say Something"/> | |
| </form> | |
| </div> | |
| </div> | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| </body> | |
| 24 | |
| 25 </html> | |
| CHAPTER 2. THE UBIQUITOUS CHAT APP | |
| It’s a valid HTML page, but there are some hinky looking class attributes. The first one is <body | |
| class="lift:content_id=main">. The class in this case says “the actual page content is | |
| contained by the element with id=’main’.” This allows you to have valid HTML pages for each of | |
| your templates, but dynamically add “chrome” around the content based on one or more chrome | |
| templates. | |
| at | |
| the | |
| look | |
| <div id="main">. | |
| It’s | |
| as well: | |
| Let’s | |
| lift:surround?with=default;at=content. | |
| This class invokes a snippet which sur- | |
| rounds the <div> with the default template and inserts the <div> and its children at the element | |
| with id “content” in the default template. Or, it wraps the default chrome around the <div>. For | |
| more on snippets, see 7.1 on page 78. | |
| funky | |
| class | |
| got | |
| a | |
| Next, we define how we associate dynamic behavior with the list of chat elements: <div | |
| class="lift:comet?type=Chat">. The “comet” snippet looks for a class named Chat that | |
| extends CometActor and enables the mechanics of pushing content from the CometActor to the | |
| browser when the state of the CometActor changes. | |
| 2.2 The Chat Comet component | |
| The Actor Model provides state in functional languages include Erlang. Lift has an Actor library | |
| and LiftActors (see 7.14) provides a powerful state and concurrency model. This may all seem | |
| abstract, so let’s look at the Chat class. | |
| Listing 2.2: Chat.scala | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package comet | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 5 import http._ | |
| 6 import util._ | |
| 7 import Helpers._ | |
| 8 | |
| 9 /** | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| * The screen real estate on the browser will be represented | |
| * by this component. When the component changes on the server | |
| * the changes are automatically reflected in the browser. | |
| */ | |
| 13 | |
| 14 class Chat extends CometActor with CometListener { | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| private var msgs: Vector[String] = Vector() // private state | |
| /** | |
| * When the component is instantiated, register as | |
| * a listener with the ChatServer | |
| */ | |
| def registerWith = ChatServer | |
| /** | |
| 2.3. THE CHATSERVER | |
| 7 | |
| * The CometActor is an Actor, so it processes messages. | |
| * In this case, we're listening for Vector[String], | |
| * and when we get one, update our private state | |
| * and reRender() the component. reRender() will | |
| * cause changes to be sent to the browser. | |
| */ | |
| override def lowPriority = { | |
| case v: Vector[String] => msgs = v; reRender() | |
| } | |
| /** | |
| * Put the messages in the li elements and clear | |
| * any elements that have the clearable class. | |
| */ | |
| def render = "li *" #> msgs & ClearClearable | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| 31 | |
| 32 | |
| 33 | |
| 34 | |
| 35 | |
| 36 | |
| 37 | |
| 38 | |
| 39 } | |
| The Chat component has private state, registers with the ChatServer, handles incoming mes- | |
| sages and can render itself. Let’s look at each of those pieces. | |
| The private state, like any private state in prototypical object oriented code, is the state that defines | |
| the object’s behavior. | |
| registerWith is a method that defines what component to register the Chat component with. Reg- | |
| istration is a part of the Listener (or Observer) pattern. We’ll look at the definition of the Chat- | |
| Server in a minute. | |
| The lowPriority method defines how to process incoming messages. In this case, we’re Pat- | |
| tern Matching (see Section 7.15) the incoming message and if it’s a Vector[String], then we | |
| perform the action of setting our local state to the Vector and re-rendering the component. The | |
| re-rendering will force the changes out to any browser that is displaying the component. | |
| We define how to render the component by defining the CSS to match and the replacement (See | |
| Section 7.10). We match all the <li> tags of the template and for each message, create an <li> | |
| tag with the child nodes set to the message. Additionally, we clear all the elements that have the | |
| clearable in the class attribute. | |
| That’s it for the Chat CometActor component. | |
| 2.3 The ChatServer | |
| The ChatServer code is: | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package comet | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 5 import http._ | |
| 6 import actor._ | |
| 7 | |
| 8 /** | |
| Listing 2.3: ChatServer.scala | |
| 8 | |
| CHAPTER 2. THE UBIQUITOUS CHAT APP | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| * A singleton that provides chat features to all clients. | |
| * It's an Actor so it's thread-safe because only one | |
| * message will be processed at once. | |
| */ | |
| 12 | |
| 13 object ChatServer extends LiftActor with ListenerManager { | |
| private var msgs = Vector("Welcome") // private state | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| 31 | |
| /** | |
| * When we update the listeners, what message do we send? | |
| * We send the msgs, which is an immutable data structure, | |
| * so it can be shared with lots of threads without any | |
| * danger or locking. | |
| */ | |
| def createUpdate = msgs | |
| /** | |
| * process messages that are sent to the Actor. In | |
| * this case, we're looking for Strings that are sent | |
| * to the ChatServer. We append them to our Vector of | |
| * messages, and then update all the listeners. | |
| */ | |
| override def lowPriority = { | |
| case s: String => msgs :+= s; updateListeners() | |
| } | |
| 32 | |
| 33 } | |
| The ChatServer is defined as an object rather than a class. This makes it a singleton which | |
| can be referenced by the name ChatServer anywhere in the application. Scala’s singletons differ | |
| from Java’s static in that the singleton is an instance of an object and that instance can be passed | |
| around like any other instance. This is why we can return the ChatServer instance from the | |
| registerWith method in that Chat component. | |
| The ChatServer has private state, a Vector[String] representing the list of chat messages. Note | |
| that Scala’s type inferencer infers the type of msgs so you do not have to explicitly define it. | |
| The createUpdate method generates an update to send to listeners. This update is sent when a | |
| listener registers with the ChatServer or when the updateListeners() method is invoked. | |
| Finally, the lowPriority method defines the messages that this component can handle. If the | |
| ChatServer receives a String as a message, it appends the String to the Vector of messages | |
| and updates listeners. | |
| 2.4 User Input | |
| Let’s go back to the view and see how the behavior is defined for adding lines to the chat. | |
| <form class="lift:form.ajax"> defines an input form and the form.ajax snippet turns a | |
| form into an Ajax (see Section 7.12) form that will be submitted back to the server without causing | |
| a full page load. | |
| Next, we define the input form element: <input class="lift:ChatIn" id="chat_in"/>. | |
| It’s a plain old input form, but we’ve told Lift to modify the <input>’s behavior by calling the | |
| ChatIn snippet. | |
| 2.5. CHAT IN | |
| 2.5 Chat In | |
| 9 | |
| The ChatIn snippet (See Section 7.1) is defined as: | |
| Listing 2.4: ChatIn.scala | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package snippet | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 5 import http._ | |
| 6 import js._ | |
| 7 import JsCmds._ | |
| 8 import JE._ | |
| 9 | |
| 10 import comet.ChatServer | |
| 11 | |
| 12 /** | |
| 13 | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| * A snippet transforms input to output... it transforms | |
| * templates to dynamic content. Lift's templates can invoke | |
| * snippets and the snippets are resolved in many different | |
| * ways including "by convention". The snippet package | |
| * has named snippets and those snippets can be classes | |
| * that are instantiated when invoked or they can be | |
| * objects, singletons. Singletons are useful if there's | |
| * no explicit state managed in the snippet. | |
| */ | |
| 21 | |
| 22 object ChatIn { | |
| 23 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| 31 | |
| 32 | |
| 33 | |
| 34 | |
| /** | |
| * The render method in this case returns a function | |
| * that transforms NodeSeq => NodeSeq. In this case, | |
| * the function transforms a form input element by attaching | |
| * behavior to the input. The behavior is to send a message | |
| * to the ChatServer and then returns JavaScript which | |
| * clears the input. | |
| */ | |
| def render = SHtml.onSubmit(s => { | |
| ChatServer ! s | |
| SetValById("chat_in", "") | |
| }) | |
| 35 | |
| 36 } | |
| The code is very simple. The snippet is defined as a method that associates a function with form | |
| element submission, onSubmit. When the element is submitted, be that normal form submission, | |
| Ajax, or whatever, the function is applied to the value of the form. In English, when the user | |
| submits the form, the function is called with the user’s input. | |
| The function sends the input as a message to the ChatServer and returns JavaScript that sets the | |
| value of the input box to a blank string. | |
| 10 | |
| CHAPTER 2. THE UBIQUITOUS CHAT APP | |
| 2.6 Running it | |
| Running the application is easy. Make sure you’ve got Java 1.6 or better installed on your machine. | |
| Change directories into the chat directory and type sbt update ~jetty-run. The Simple | |
| Build Tool will download all necessary dependencies, compile the program and run it. | |
| You can point a couple of browsers to http://localhost:8080 and start chatting. | |
| Oh, and for fun, try entering <script>alert(’I ownz your browser’);<script> and | |
| see what happens. You’ll note it’s what you want to happen. | |
| 2.7 What you don’t see | |
| Excluding imports and comments, there are about 20 lines of Scala code to implement a multi- | |
| threaded, multi-user chat application. That’s not a lot. | |
| The first thing that’s missing is synchronization or other explicit forms of thread locking. The | |
| application takes advantage of Actors and immutable data structures, thus the developer can focus | |
| on the business logic rather than the threading and locking primatives. | |
| The next thing that’s missing is routing and controllers and other stuff that you might have to do | |
| to wire up Ajax calls and polling for server-side changes (long or otherwise). In our application, | |
| we associated behavior with display and Lift took care of the rest (see Section 7.17). | |
| We didn’t do anything to explicitly to avoid cross-site scripting in our application. Because Lift | |
| takes advantage of Scala’s strong typing and type safety (see Section 7.16), Lift knows the differ- | |
| ence between a String that must be HTML encoded and an HTML element that’s already properly | |
| encoded. By default, Lift applications are resistant to many of the OWASP top 10 security vulner- | |
| abilities (see Section 7.18). | |
| This example shows many of Lift’s strengths. Let’s expand the application and see how Lift’s | |
| strengths continue to support the development of the application. | |
| Chapter 3 | |
| Snippets and SiteMap | |
| Lift services HTTP request in three ways: generating HTML pages, low level HTTP responses | |
| (e.g., REST), and responding to Ajax/Comet requests. Lift treats each type of request differently | |
| to make the semantics for responding to each type of request most natural. Put another way, it’s | |
| different to build a complex HTML page with lots of different components than to send back some | |
| JSON data that corresponds to a database record. | |
| In this chapter, we’re going to explore how Lift does dynamic HTML page generation based on | |
| the incoming HTTP request and URL including putting “chrome” around the HTML page (menus, | |
| etc.), placing dynamic content on each page, and site navigation including access control. | |
| The code for this chapter can be found in the samples/snippet_and_sitemap directory of the | |
| Simply Lift distribution. | |
| 3.1 Starting at the beginning: Boot.scala | |
| When your Lift application first starts up, it executes the code in Boot.scala: | |
| Listing 3.1: Boot.scala | |
| 1 package bootstrap.liftweb | |
| 2 | |
| 3 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 4 import util._ | |
| 5 import Helpers._ | |
| 6 | |
| 7 import common._ | |
| 8 import http._ | |
| 9 import sitemap._ | |
| 10 import Loc._ | |
| 11 | |
| 12 import code.snippet._ | |
| 13 | |
| 14 /** | |
| 15 | |
| * A class that's instantiated early and run. It allows the application | |
| * to modify lift's environment | |
| */ | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| 18 class Boot { | |
| CHAPTER 3. SNIPPETS AND SITEMAP | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| 31 | |
| 32 | |
| 33 | |
| 34 | |
| 35 | |
| 36 | |
| 37 | |
| 38 | |
| 39 | |
| 40 | |
| 41 | |
| 42 | |
| 43 | |
| 44 | |
| 45 | |
| 46 | |
| 47 | |
| 48 | |
| 49 | |
| 50 | |
| 51 | |
| 52 | |
| 53 | |
| 54 | |
| 55 | |
| 56 | |
| 57 | |
| 58 | |
| 59 | |
| 60 | |
| 61 | |
| 62 | |
| 63 | |
| 64 | |
| 65 | |
| 66 | |
| 67 | |
| 68 | |
| 69 | |
| 70 | |
| 71 | |
| /** | |
| * Calculate if the page should be displayed. | |
| * In this case, it will be visible every other minute | |
| */ | |
| def displaySometimes_? : Boolean = | |
| (millis / 1000L / 60L) % 2 == 0 | |
| def boot { | |
| // where to search snippet | |
| LiftRules.addToPackages("code") | |
| // Build SiteMap | |
| def sitemap(): SiteMap = SiteMap( | |
| Menu.i("Home") / "index", // the simple way to declare a menu | |
| Menu.i("Sometimes") / "sometimes" >> If(displaySometimes_? _, | |
| S ? "Can't view now"), | |
| // A menu with submenus | |
| Menu.i("Info") / "info" submenus( | |
| Menu.i("About") / "about" >> Hidden >> LocGroup("bottom"), | |
| Menu.i("Contact") / "contact", | |
| Menu.i("Feedback") / "feedback" >> LocGroup("bottom") | |
| ), | |
| Menu.i("Sitemap") / "sitemap" >> Hidden >> LocGroup("bottom"), | |
| Menu.i("Dynamic") / "dynamic", // a page with dynamic content | |
| Param.menu, | |
| Menu.param[Which]("Recurse", "Recurse", | |
| {case "one" => Full(First()) | |
| case "two" => Full(Second()) | |
| case "both" => Full(Both()) | |
| case _ => Empty}, | |
| w => w.toString) / "recurse", | |
| // more complex because this menu allows anything in the | |
| // /static path to be visible | |
| Menu.i("Static") / "static" / **) | |
| // set the sitemap. Note if you don't want access control for | |
| // each page, just comment this line out. | |
| LiftRules.setSiteMapFunc(() => sitemap()) | |
| //Show the spinny image when an Ajax call starts | |
| LiftRules.ajaxStart = | |
| Full(() => LiftRules.jsArtifacts.show("ajax-loader").cmd) | |
| // Make the spinny image go away when it ends | |
| LiftRules.ajaxEnd = | |
| 3.1. STARTING AT THE BEGINNING: BOOT.SCALA | |
| 13 | |
| Full(() => LiftRules.jsArtifacts.hide("ajax-loader").cmd) | |
| // Force the request to be UTF-8 | |
| LiftRules.early.append(_.setCharacterEncoding("UTF-8")) | |
| // Use HTML5 for rendering | |
| LiftRules.htmlProperties.default.set((r: Req) => | |
| new Html5Properties(r.userAgent)) | |
| 72 | |
| 73 | |
| 74 | |
| 75 | |
| 76 | |
| 77 | |
| 78 | |
| 79 | |
| } | |
| 80 | |
| 81 } | |
| Rather than keeping configuration parameters in XML files, Lift keeps configuration parameters | |
| in code in Boot. Boot is executed once when the servlet container loads the Lift application. You | |
| can change many of Lift’s execution rules in the LiftRules singleton during boot, but after boot, | |
| these parameters are frozen. | |
| 3.1.1 LiftRules rules | |
| Most of the configuration parameters that define how Lift will convert an HTTP request into a | |
| response are contained in the LiftRules singleton. Some of the parameters for LiftRules are | |
| used commonly and some are very infrequently changed from their default. LiftRules can be | |
| changed during boot, but not at other times. So, set all your configuration in boot (or in methods | |
| that are called from boot). | |
| 3.1.2 Properties and Run modes | |
| While many properties for your running application can be defined in Boot.scala, there are | |
| some properties that are best defined in a text file. Lift supports multiple properties files per | |
| project. The properties files are loaded based on the user, machine and run mode. | |
| If you want to provide a configuration file for a subset of your application or for a specific envi- | |
| ronment, Lift expects configuration files to be named in a manner relating to the context in which | |
| they are being used. The standard name format is: | |
| modeName.userName.hostName.props | |
| examples: | |
| dpp.yak.props | |
| test.dpp.yak.props | |
| production.moose.props | |
| staging.dpp.props | |
| test.default.props | |
| default.props | |
| with hostName and userName being optional, and modeName being one of "test", "staging", "pro- | |
| duction", "pilot", "profile", or blank (for development mode). The standard Lift properties file | |
| extension is "props". | |
| Place properties files in the src/main/resources/props directory in your project and they | |
| will be packaged up as part of the build process. | |
| 14 | |
| CHAPTER 3. SNIPPETS AND SITEMAP | |
| you’re | |
| developing | |
| (see | |
| When | |
| net.liftweb.util.Props.mode) will be Development. When you deploy your appli- | |
| cation, pass -Drun.mode=production to your web container. | |
| In production mode, Lift | |
| aggressively caches templates, snippet classes, etc. | |
| application, | |
| mode | |
| your | |
| run | |
| Lift | |
| the | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3.1.3 By convention | |
| Lift, like Rails, will look for items in certain locations by convention. For example, Lift will look | |
| for classes that implement snippets in the xxx.snippet package where the xxx part is the main | |
| package for your application. You define one or more packages for Lift to look in with: | |
| // where to search snippet | |
| LiftRules.addToPackages("code") | |
| Here, we’ve added the code package to the list of packages that Lift will search through. You can | |
| also do LiftRules.addToPackages("com.fruitbat.mydivision.myapplication"). | |
| 3.1.4 Misc Rules | |
| We’ll skip the sitemap definition until the next section. This rule defines how to show a spinning | |
| icon during Ajax calls (Lift will automatically show the spinning icon if this function is enabled): | |
| //Show the spinny image when an Ajax call starts | |
| LiftRules.ajaxStart = | |
| Full(() => LiftRules.jsArtifacts.show("ajax-loader").cmd) | |
| And this rule sets the default character encoding to UTF-8 rather than the default platform encod- | |
| ing: | |
| // Force the request to be UTF-8 | |
| LiftRules.early.append(_.setCharacterEncoding("UTF-8")) | |
| Okay... you get the idea... there are plenty of parameters to tune during boot. | |
| 3.1.5 Html5 | |
| Prior to Lift 2.2, Lift treated all templates as XHTML and emitted XHTML to the browser. When | |
| the Lift project started in early 2007, this seemed like a Really Good Idea™. Turns out the world has | |
| not adopted XHTML and some JavaScript libraries, e.g. Google Maps, doesn’t work on XHTML | |
| pages. Lift 2.2 introduced optional Html5 support both in the parser (so it could read Html5 | |
| templates rather than requiring well formed XML in templates) and emits Html5 to the browser. | |
| Lift still processes pages as Scala NodeSeq elements, so no changes are required to the application. | |
| In order to keep Lift 2.2 apps backward compatible with Lift’s XHTML support, by default the | |
| XHTML parser/serializer are used. However, it’s recommended to use the Html5 support which | |
| can be turned on in boot with: | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 3.2. SITEMAP | |
| 15 | |
| // Use HTML5 for rendering | |
| LiftRules.htmlProperties.default.set((r: Req) => | |
| new Html5Properties(r.userAgent)) | |
| 3.2 SiteMap | |
| Lift has an optional feature called SiteMap. You don’t have to use it. But if you do set a sitemap | |
| in boot, then Lift will use the sitemap as a white list of HTML pages for your site (note that REST | |
| URLs do not need to be listed in the sitemap). SiteMap defines navigation and access control, | |
| allows you to create hierarchical menus, grouped menu items, display the entire sitemap, a relative | |
| sitemap, as well breadcrumbs. This section will discuss some of SiteMap’s capabilities. | |
| 3.2.1 Defining the SiteMap | |
| The SiteMap must be defined in boot and is only defined once1. Typically, you will define a | |
| function that returns a SiteMap instance: | |
| // Build SiteMap | |
| def sitemap(): SiteMap = ... | |
| And then define the SiteMap in LiftRules: | |
| // set the sitemap. Note if you don't want access control for | |
| // each page, just comment this line out. | |
| LiftRules.setSiteMapFunc(() => sitemap()) | |
| In development mode, the function will be called on each page load to rebuilt the SiteMap. In all | |
| other Lift run modes, the sitemap will be built once during boot. | |
| A SiteMap is a collection of Menu instances. Each Menu has one Loc[_] and a set of Menu | |
| instances as submenus (zero or more). Each Menu instance has a unique name. | |
| If an HTML page is not defined in the sitemap, Lift will not serve it. SiteMap is a white list of | |
| pages to serve. Further, the Loc[_] has parameters that can include multiple access control rules. | |
| 3.2.2 Simplest SiteMap | |
| The simplest sitemap defines a single page: | |
| 1 | |
| def sitemap(): SiteMap = SiteMap(Menu.i("Home") / "index") | |
| 1In development mode, the sitemap can be changed dynamically to support changes to site content without having | |
| to re-start your application each time navigation changes. This is a development-time feature only. There are significant | |
| performance penalties associated with rebuilding the sitemap on each page load including forcing the serialization | |
| of serving pages. There are plenty of features in SiteMap that allow you to enable/disable menu items and have | |
| dynamically generated submenus. Don’t rely on Lift’s development-mode menu reloading for your application design. | |
| 16 | |
| CHAPTER 3. SNIPPETS AND SITEMAP | |
| This is a SiteMap with a single menu item. The Menu has the name “Home” and will be displayed | |
| as the localized (see 8.1 on page 92) string “Home”. The Menu.i method generates a Menu with a | |
| Loc[Unit]. | |
| 3.2.3 Menu and Loc[_] | |
| You may be wondering why a Menu and a Loc[_] (short for location, pronouned “Loke”) are | |
| separate and why the Loc takes a type parameter. | |
| A Menu contains a location and many submenus. The original thought was that you could have a | |
| single Loc[_] that might be placed in different places in the menu hierarchy. So, historically, they | |
| are separated, but there’s a one to one relation between them. | |
| The Loc[_] takes a type parameter which defines a current value type for the Loc. For example, | |
| if the Loc refers to a page that will display a wiki page, then the type parameter of the Loc would | |
| be WikiPage: Loc[WikiPage]. | |
| Each Loc can have many parameters (know as LocParam, “loke param”) that define behavior for | |
| the Loc[_]. These parameters include access control testing, template definition, title, group, etc. | |
| 3.2.4 Access Control | |
| You can control access to the URL/page represented by the Loc with the If() LocParam: | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| /** | |
| * Calculate if the page should be displayed. | |
| * In this case, it will be visible every other minute | |
| */ | |
| def displaySometimes_? : Boolean = | |
| (millis / 1000L / 60L) % 2 == 0 | |
| Menu.i("Sometimes") / "sometimes" >> If(displaySometimes_? _, | |
| S ? "Can't view now") | |
| We define a method that returns true if access is allowed. Adding the If() LocParam will | |
| restrict access to the page unless the function returns true. Menu items will not be visible for | |
| pages that do not pass the access control rules and even if the user types the URL into the browser, | |
| the page will not be displayed (by default, the user will be redirected by to the home page and an | |
| error will be displayed.) | |
| 3.2.5 Hidden and Group | |
| Menu items can be hidden from the default menu hierarchy even if the page is accessible. The | |
| Hidden LocParam says “hide from default menu.” | |
| 1 | |
| Menu.i("About") / "about" >> Hidden >> LocGroup("bottom") | |
| Menu items can also be grouped together in a named group and then displayed: | |
| 3.2. SITEMAP | |
| 17 | |
| <span class="lift:Menu.group?group=bottom"></span> | |
| Which results in: | |
| <a href="/about">About</a> <a href="/feedback">Feedback</a> <a href="/sitemap">Sitemap</a> | |
| 3.2.6 Submenus | |
| You can nest menus: | |
| // A menu with submenus | |
| Menu.i("Info") / "info" submenus( | |
| Menu.i("About") / "about" >> Hidden >> LocGroup("bottom"), | |
| Menu.i("Contact") / "contact", | |
| Menu.i("Feedback") / "feedback" >> LocGroup("bottom")) | |
| The About, Contact and Feedback pages are nested under the Info page. | |
| 1 | |
| 1 | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 3.2.7 Parameters | |
| You can parse the incoming URL and extract parameters from it into type-safe variables: | |
| 1 // capture the page parameter information | |
| 2 case class ParamInfo(theParam: String) | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| // Create a menu for /param/somedata | |
| val menu = Menu.param[ParamInfo]("Param", "Param", | |
| s => Full(ParamInfo(s)), | |
| pi => pi.theParam) / "param" | |
| The above code creates a menu called “Param”. The menu is for the url /param/xxx where xxx | |
| can match anything. | |
| When the URL /param/dogfood or /param/fruitbat is presented, it matches the Loc and | |
| the function (s => Full(ParamInfo(s))) is invoked. If it returns a Full Box, the value is | |
| placed in the Loc’s currentValue. | |
| It’s possible to hand-write Loc implementation that will match many URL parameters. | |
| For information on accessing the captured parameters (in this case the ParamInfo), see 3.4.5 on | |
| page 23. | |
| 3.2.8 Wildcards | |
| You can create menus that match all the contents of a given path. In this case, all the html files in | |
| /static/ will be served. That includes /static/index, /static/fruitbat, and /stat- | |
| ic/moose/frog/wombat/meow. | |
| 18 | |
| CHAPTER 3. SNIPPETS AND SITEMAP | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| // more complex because this menu allows anything in the | |
| // /static path to be visible | |
| Menu.i("Static") / "static" / ** | |
| Note that Lift will not serve any files or directories that start with . (period) or _ (underscore) or | |
| end with -hidden. | |
| 3.2.9 Summary | |
| We’ve demonstrated how to create a SiteMap with many different kinds of menu items. Next, | |
| let’s look at the views. | |
| 3.3 View First | |
| Once the access control is granted by SiteMap, Lift loads the view related to the URL. There are | |
| many mechanisms that Lift uses to resolve a path to a view, but the simplest is a one to one | |
| mapping between the URL path and the files in /src/main/webapp. If the URL is /index, then | |
| Lift will look for the localized (see 8.1 on page 92) version of /src/main/webapp/index.html. | |
| Once Lift loads the template, Lift processes it to transform it into the dynamic content you want | |
| to return in response to the URL input. | |
| 3.3.1 Page source | |
| Let’s look at the page source: | |
| 1 <!DOCTYPE html> | |
| 2 <html> | |
| Listing 3.2: index.html | |
| <head> | |
| <meta content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" http-equiv="content-type" /> | |
| <title>Home</title> | |
| </head> | |
| <body class="lift:content_id=main"> | |
| <div id="main" class="lift:surround?with=default&at=content"> | |
| <div>Hello World. Welcome to your Lift application.</div> | |
| <div>Check out a page with <a href="/param/foo">query parameters</a>.</div> | |
| <span class="lift:embed?what=_embedme"> | |
| replaced with embedded content | |
| </span> | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| 13 | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| <div> | |
| 16 | |
| 17 BADTAB<ul> | |
| 18 BADTAB <li>Recursive: <a href="/recurse/one">First snippet</a></li> | |
| 19 BADTAB <li>Recursive: <a href="/recurse/two">Second snippet</a></li> | |
| 20 BADTAB <li>Recursive: <a href="/recurse/both">Both snippets</a></li> | |
| 21 BADTAB</ul> | |
| 3.3. VIEW FIRST | |
| </div> | |
| 19 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| </div> | |
| </body> | |
| 24 | |
| 25 </html> | |
| We can open the page in our browser: | |
| 3.3.2 Dynamic content | |
| The template is a legal HTML page. But there are marker in the page to tell Lift how to interpret | |
| the HTML. | |
| If the <body> tag contains a class attribute lift:content_id=xxxx, then Lift will find the | |
| element with the matching id and use that as the starting point for rendering the page. This | |
| allows your designers to edit and maintain the pages in the same hierarchy that you use for your | |
| application. | |
| 3.3.3 Surround and page chrome | |
| The template processing starts with: | |
| 1 | |
| <div id="main" class="lift:surround?with=default&at=content"> | |
| The class attribute lift:surround?with=default;at=content instructs Lift to surround | |
| the current Element with the template named default.html (typically located in the /templates- | |
| hidden/ directory), and place the current page’s content at the element with the “content” id. | |
| This pattern allows us to wrap a common chrome around every page on our site. You can also | |
| specify different template to use for surrounding. Further, the template itself can choose different | |
| templates to use for surrounding. | |
| 3.3.4 Embed | |
| In addition to surrounding the page with chrome, you can also embed another file. For example, | |
| you could have a shopping cart component that is embedded in certain pages. We embed with: | |
| 1 <span class="lift:embed?what=_embedme"> | |
| replaced with embedded content | |
| 2 | |
| 3 </span> | |
| Once again, the command is signalled with a class attribute that starts with lift:. In this case, | |
| we embed a template from the file _embedme.html. | |
| 20 | |
| 3.3.5 Results | |
| The resulting dynamically generated page looks like: | |
| CHAPTER 3. SNIPPETS AND SITEMAP | |
| 3.4 Snippets and Dynamic content | |
| Lift templates contain no executable code. They are pure, raw, valid HTML. | |
| Lift uses snippets to transform sections of the HTML page from static to dynamic. The key word | |
| is transform. | |
| Lift’s snippets are Scala functions: NodeSeq => NodeSeq. A NodeSeq is a collection of XML | |
| nodes. An snippet can only transform input NodeSeq to output NodeSeq. Well, not exactly... | |
| a snippet may also have side effects including setting cookies, doing database transactions, etc. | |
| But the core transformation concept is important. First, it isolates snippet functionality to discrete | |
| parts of the page. This means that each snippet, each NodeSeq => NodeSeq, is a component. | |
| Second, it means that pages are recursively built, but remain as valid HTML at all times. This | |
| means that the developer has to work hard to introduce a cross site scripting vulnerability. Third, | |
| the designers don’t have to worry about learning to program anything in order to design HTML | |
| pages because the program execution is abstracted away from the HTML rather than embedded | |
| in the HTML. | |
| 3.4.1 Snippets in markup | |
| In order to indicate that content is dynamic, the markup contains a snippet invocation. That typ- | |
| ically takes the form class="someclass someothercss lift:mysnippet". If a class at- | |
| tribute contains lift:xxx, the xxx will be resolved to a snippet. The snippet may take attributes. | |
| Attributes are encoded like URL parameters... offset by a ? (question mark), then name=value, | |
| separted by ? (question mark), ; (semicolon) or & (ampersand). name and value are URL en- | |
| coded. | |
| You may also invoke snippets with XML tags: | |
| 1 <lift:my_snippet cat="foo"> | |
| <div>xxxx</div> | |
| 2 | |
| 3 </lift:my_snippet> | |
| 3.4. SNIPPETS AND DYNAMIC CONTENT | |
| 21 | |
| Note that the Html5 parser will force all tags to lower case so <lift:MySnipet> will become | |
| <lift:mysnippet>. | |
| 2.3 | |
| Lift | |
| snippet | |
| l="mysnippet?param=value">xxx</div>. | |
| allow | |
| also | |
| will | |
| invocation | |
| in | |
| the | |
| form | |
| <div | |
| The latter two mechanisms for invoking snippets will not result in valid Html5 templates. | |
| 3.4.2 Snippet resolution | |
| Lift has a very complex set of rules to resolve from snippet name to NodeSeq => NodeSeq (see 23.1 | |
| on page 141). For now, the simplest mechanism is to have a class or object in the snippet | |
| package that matches the snippet name. | |
| So lift:HelloWorld will look for the code.snippet.HelloWorld class and invoke the ren- | |
| der method. | |
| lift:CatFood.fruitbat will look for the code.snippet.CatFood class and invoke the | |
| fruitbat method. | |
| 3.4.3 Dynamic Example | |
| Let’s look at the dynamic.html page: | |
| 1 <!DOCTYPE html> | |
| 2 <html> | |
| Listing 3.3: dynamic.html | |
| <head> | |
| <meta content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" http-equiv="content-type" /> | |
| <title>Dynamic</title> | |
| </head> | |
| <body class="lift:content_id=main"> | |
| <div id="main" class="lift:surround?with=default;at=content"> | |
| This page has dynamic content. | |
| The current time is <span class="lift:HelloWorld">now</span>. | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| </div> | |
| </body> | |
| 12 | |
| 13 </html> | |
| This template invokes the HelloWorld snippet defined in HelloWorld.scala: | |
| Listing 3.4: HelloWorld.scala | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package snippet | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import lib._ | |
| 5 | |
| 6 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 7 import util.Helpers._ | |
| 8 import common._ | |
| 9 import java.util.Date | |
| 22 | |
| CHAPTER 3. SNIPPETS AND SITEMAP | |
| 10 | |
| 11 class HelloWorld { | |
| lazy val date: Box[Date] = DependencyFactory.inject[Date] // inject the date | |
| def render = "* *" #> date.map(_.toString) | |
| 12 | |
| 13 | |
| 14 | |
| 15 } | |
| And the dynamic content becomes: | |
| 1 <span>Thu Dec 30 16:31:13 PST 2010</span> | |
| The HelloWorld snippet code is simple. | |
| 1 lazy val date: Box[Date] = DependencyFactory.inject[Date] | |
| Uses dependency injection (see 8.2 on page 94) to get a Date instance. | |
| Then: | |
| 1 def render = "* *" #> date.map(_.toString) | |
| Creates a CSS Selector Transform (see 7.10 on page 85) that inserts the String value of the injected | |
| Date into the markup, in this case the <span> that invoked the snippet. | |
| 3.4.4 Embedded Example | |
| We’ve seen how we can embed a template using: <div class="lift:embed?what=_em- | |
| bedme">xxx</div>. | |
| Let’s look at the _embedme.html template: | |
| 1 <!DOCTYPE html> | |
| 2 <html> | |
| <head> | |
| <meta content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" http-equiv="content-type" /> | |
| <title>I'm embeded</title> | |
| </head> | |
| <body class="lift:content_id=main"> | |
| <div id="main"> | |
| Howdy. I'm a bit of embedded content. I was | |
| embedded from <span class="lift:Embedded.from">???</span>. | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| </div> | |
| </body> | |
| 12 | |
| 13 </html> | |
| And the invoked Embedded.scala program: | |
| Listing 3.5: Embedded.scala | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package snippet | |
| 3 | |
| 3.4. SNIPPETS AND DYNAMIC CONTENT | |
| 23 | |
| 4 import lib._ | |
| 5 | |
| 6 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 7 import http._ | |
| 8 import util.Helpers._ | |
| 9 import common._ | |
| 10 import java.util.Date | |
| 11 | |
| 12 /** | |
| 13 | |
| * A snippet that lists the name of the current page | |
| */ | |
| 14 | |
| 15 object Embedded { | |
| def from = "*" #> S.location.map(_.name) | |
| 16 | |
| 17 } | |
| The template invokes the from method on the Embedded snippet. In this case, the snippet is | |
| an object singleton because it does not take any constructor parameters and has no instance | |
| variabled. | |
| The from method: | |
| 1 | |
| def from = "*" #> S.location.map(_.name) | |
| Creates a CSS Selector Transform that replaces the contents with the name of the current loca- | |
| tion. | |
| 3.4.5 Param Example | |
| Above, we saw how to create a Loc[ParamInfo] to capture URL parameters. Let’s look at the | |
| /param/xxx page and see how we can access the parameters: | |
| 1 <!DOCTYPE html> | |
| 2 <html> | |
| Listing 3.6: param.html | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| 13 | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| <head> | |
| <meta content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" http-equiv="content-type" /> | |
| <title>Param</title> | |
| </head> | |
| <body class="lift:content_id=main"> | |
| <div id="main" class="lift:surround?with=default;at=content"> | |
| <div> | |
| Thanks for visiting this page. The parameter is | |
| <span class="lift:ShowParam">???</span>. | |
| </div> | |
| <div> | |
| Another way to get the param: <span class="lift:Param">???</span>. | |
| </div> | |
| </div> | |
| </body> | |
| 24 | |
| 20 </html> | |
| CHAPTER 3. SNIPPETS AND SITEMAP | |
| And let’s look at two different snippets that can access the ParamInfo for the page: | |
| Listing 3.7: Param.scala | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package snippet | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import lib._ | |
| 5 | |
| 6 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 7 import util.Helpers._ | |
| 8 import common._ | |
| 9 import http._ | |
| 10 import sitemap._ | |
| 11 import java.util.Date | |
| 12 | |
| 13 // capture the page parameter information | |
| 14 case class ParamInfo(theParam: String) | |
| 15 | |
| 16 // a snippet that takes the page parameter information | |
| 17 class ShowParam(pi: ParamInfo) { | |
| def render = "*" #> pi.theParam | |
| 18 | |
| 19 } | |
| 20 | |
| 21 object Param { | |
| // Create a menu for /param/somedata | |
| val menu = Menu.param[ParamInfo]("Param", "Param", | |
| s => Full(ParamInfo(s)), | |
| pi => pi.theParam) / "param" | |
| lazy val loc = menu.toLoc | |
| def render = "*" #> loc.currentValue.map(_.theParam) | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 } | |
| Each snippet has a render method. However, the ShowParam class takes a constructor parameter | |
| which contains the ParamInfo from the current Loc[_]. If the current Loc does not have the | |
| type parameter ParamInfo, no instance of ShowParam would be created and the snippet could | |
| not be resolved. But we do have a Loc[ParamInfo], so Lift constructs a ShowParam with the Loc’s | |
| currentValue and then the render method is invoked and it returns a CSS Selector Transform | |
| which is a NodeSeq => NodeSeq. | |
| The object Param’s render method accesses the Loc[ParamInfo] directly. The render | |
| method gets the Loc’s currentValue and uses that to calculate the return value, the CSS Se- | |
| lector Transform. | |
| 3.4.6 Recursive | |
| Lift’s snippets are evaluated lazily. This means that the body of the snippet is not executed until | |
| the outer snippet is executed which allows you to return markup from a snippet that itself contains | |
| 3.4. SNIPPETS AND DYNAMIC CONTENT | |
| 25 | |
| a snippet or alternatively, choose part of the snippet body that itself contains a snippet invocation. | |
| For example, in this markup: | |
| 1 <div id="main" class="lift:surround?with=default&at=content"> | |
| Listing 3.8: recurse.html | |
| <div> | |
| This demonstrates Lift's recursive snippets | |
| </div> | |
| <div class="lift:Recurse"> | |
| <div id="first" class="lift:FirstTemplate"> | |
| The first template. | |
| </div> | |
| <div id="second" class="lift:SecondTemplate"> | |
| The second template. | |
| </div> | |
| </div> | |
| <div> | |
| <ul> | |
| <li>Recursive: <a href="/recurse/one">First snippet</a></li> | |
| <li>Recursive: <a href="/recurse/two">Second snippet</a></li> | |
| <li>Recursive: <a href="/recurse/both">Both snippets</a></li> | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| 13 | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| </ul> | |
| </div> | |
| 22 | |
| 23 </div> | |
| The Recurse snippet chooses one of both of the <div>’s, each of which invokes a snippet them- | |
| selves. Here’s the Scala: | |
| Listing 3.9: Recurse.scala | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package snippet | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import lib._ | |
| 5 | |
| 6 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 7 import util._ | |
| 8 import Helpers._ | |
| 9 import http._ | |
| 10 import scala.xml.NodeSeq | |
| 11 | |
| 12 /** | |
| 13 | |
| * The choices | |
| */ | |
| 14 | |
| 15 sealed trait Which | |
| 16 final case class First() extends Which | |
| 17 final case class Second() extends Which | |
| 18 final case class Both() extends Which | |
| 19 | |
| 20 /** | |
| 21 | |
| * Choose one or both of the templates | |
| 26 | |
| CHAPTER 3. SNIPPETS AND SITEMAP | |
| */ | |
| 22 | |
| 23 class Recurse(which: Which) { | |
| // choose the template | |
| def render = which match { | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| case First() => "#first ^^" #> "*" // choose only the first template | |
| case Second() => "#second ^^" #> "*" // choose only the second template | |
| case Both() => ClearClearable // it's a passthru | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| } | |
| 29 | |
| 30 } | |
| 31 | |
| 32 /** | |
| 33 | |
| * The first template snippet | |
| */ | |
| 34 | |
| 35 object FirstTemplate { | |
| 36 | |
| 37 | |
| 38 | |
| 39 | |
| // it's a passthru, but has the notice side effect | |
| def render(in: NodeSeq) = { | |
| S.notice("First Template Snippet executed") | |
| in | |
| } | |
| 40 | |
| 41 } | |
| 42 | |
| 43 /** | |
| 44 | |
| * The second template snippet | |
| */ | |
| 45 | |
| 46 object SecondTemplate { | |
| 47 | |
| 48 | |
| 49 | |
| 50 | |
| // it's a passthru, but has the notice side effect | |
| def render(in: NodeSeq) = { | |
| S.notice("Second Template Snippet executed") | |
| in | |
| } | |
| 51 | |
| 52 } | |
| Depending on the value of which, one or both parts of the markup will be chosen. And each part | |
| of the markup itself invokes a snippet which displays a notice and passes the markup through. | |
| Using this technique, you can have a snippet that chooses one or many different snippets or re- | |
| turns a lift:embed snippet, thus allowing for very dynamic markup generation. | |
| 3.4.7 Summary | |
| We’ve seen some simple examples of Lift’s snippet mechanism used to generate dynamic content. | |
| You can read more on snippets (see 7.1 on page 78). | |
| 3.5 Wrap up | |
| In this chapter, we’ve seen how to define application behavior on Boot.scala. We’ve explored | |
| Lift’s SiteMap which is used to generate navigation and enforce access control. We’ve seen how | |
| Lift’s templating system works (well, there are actually a bunch of different ways to template in | |
| Lift, but we’ve explored to most common mechanism.) We’ve seen how snippets work. | |
| In the next chapter, we’ll take a dive into Lift’s form handling. | |
| Chapter 4 | |
| Forms | |
| In this chapter, we’ll see how Lift processes templates. We’ll start with form processing the old | |
| fashioned way (where the designer names the inputs and the application maps those names to | |
| variables) through multi-page input forms and Ajax form support. | |
| 4.1 Old Fashioned Dumb Forms | |
| Let’s take a look at the HTML for a form: | |
| 1 <div id="main" class="lift:surround?with=default&at=content"> | |
| Listing 4.1: dumb.html | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| 13 | |
| <div> | |
| This is the simplest type of form processing... plain old | |
| mechanism of naming form elements and processing the form elements | |
| in a post-back. | |
| </div> | |
| <div> | |
| <form action="/dumb" method="post" class="lift:DumbForm"> | |
| Name: <input name="name"><br> | |
| Age: <input name="age"><br> | |
| <input type="submit" value="Submit"> | |
| </form> | |
| </div> | |
| 14 | |
| 15 </div> | |
| Okay... looks pretty normal... we define a form. The only thing we do is associate the behavior | |
| with the form with the class="lift:DumbForm" attribute on the <form> tag. The page is a | |
| post-back which means that the form is posted to the same URL that served the original content. | |
| Let’s see the code to process the form: | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package snippet | |
| Listing 4.2: DumbForm.scala | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| CHAPTER 4. FORMS | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 5 import http._ | |
| 6 import scala.xml.NodeSeq | |
| 7 | |
| 8 /** | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| * A snippet that grabs the query parameters | |
| * from the form POST and processes them | |
| */ | |
| 11 | |
| 12 object DumbForm { | |
| 13 | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| 31 | |
| def render(in: NodeSeq): NodeSeq = { | |
| // use a Scala for-comprehension to evaluate each parameter | |
| for { | |
| r <- S.request if r.post_? // make sure it's a post | |
| name <- S.param("name") // get the name field | |
| age <- S.param("age") // get the age field | |
| } { | |
| // if everything goes as expected, | |
| // display a notice and send the user | |
| // back to the home page | |
| S.notice("Name: "+name) | |
| S.notice("Age: "+age) | |
| S.redirectTo("/") | |
| } | |
| // pass through the HTML if we don't get a post and | |
| // all the parameters | |
| in | |
| } | |
| 32 | |
| 33 } | |
| It’s pretty simple. If the request is a post and the query parameters exist, then display notices with | |
| the name and age and redirect back the application’s home page. | |
| There are plenty of reasons not to do things this way. | |
| First, if there’s a naming mis-match between the HTML and the Scala code, you might miss a form | |
| field... and keeping the naming aligned is not always easy. | |
| Second, forms with predictable names lead to replay attacks. If an attacker can capture the form | |
| submits you’ve made and substitute new values for import fields, they can more easily hack your | |
| application. | |
| Third, keeping state around becomes very difficult with manual forms. You have to resort to | |
| hidden fields that contain primary keys or other information that can be tampered with. | |
| Lift provides you with much more powereful and secure mechanisms for dealing with HTML | |
| forms. | |
| 4.2. ONSUBMIT | |
| 4.2 OnSubmit | |
| 29 | |
| Some of Lift’s design reflects VisualBasic... associating user behavior with a user interface element. | |
| It’s a simple, yet very powerful concept. Each form element is associated with a function on the | |
| server1. Further, because functions in Scala close over scope (capture the variables currently in | |
| scope), it’s both easy and secure to keep state around without exposing that state to the web | |
| client. | |
| So, let’s see how it works. First, the HTML: | |
| 1 <div id="main" class="lift:surround?with=default&at=content"> | |
| Listing 4.3: onsubmit.html | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| <div> | |
| Using Lift's SHtml.onSubmit, we've got better control | |
| over the form processing. | |
| </div> | |
| <div> | |
| <form class="lift:OnSubmit?form=post"> | |
| Name: <input name="name"><br> | |
| Age: <input name="age" value="0"><br> | |
| <input type="submit" value="Submit"> | |
| </form> | |
| </div> | |
| 13 | |
| 14 </div> | |
| The only different thing in this HTML is <form class="lift:OnSubmit?form=post">. The | |
| snippet, behavior, of the form is to invoke OnSubmit.render. The form=post attribute makes | |
| the form into a post-back. It sets the method and action attributes on the <form> tag: <form | |
| method="post" action="/onsubmit">. | |
| Listing 4.4: OnSubmit.scala | |
| Let’s look at the snippet: | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package snippet | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 5 import http._ | |
| 6 import util.Helpers._ | |
| 7 import scala.xml.NodeSeq | |
| 8 | |
| 9 /** | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| * A snippet that binds behavior, functions, | |
| * to HTML elements | |
| */ | |
| 12 | |
| 13 object OnSubmit { | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| def render = { | |
| // define some variables to put our values into | |
| var name = "" | |
| 1Before you get all upset about statefulness and such, please read about Lift and State (see 20 on page 131). | |
| 30 | |
| CHAPTER 4. FORMS | |
| var age = 0 | |
| // process the form | |
| def process() { | |
| // if the age is < 13, display an error | |
| if (age < 13) S.error("Too young!") | |
| else { | |
| // otherwise give the user feedback and | |
| // redirect to the home page | |
| S.notice("Name: "+name) | |
| S.notice("Age: "+age) | |
| S.redirectTo("/") | |
| } | |
| } | |
| // associate each of the form elements | |
| // with a function... behavior to perform when the | |
| // for element is submitted | |
| "name=name" #> SHtml.onSubmit(name = _) & // set the name | |
| // set the age variable if we can convert to an Int | |
| "name=age" #> SHtml.onSubmit(s => asInt(s).foreach(age = _)) & | |
| // when the form is submitted, process the variable | |
| "type=submit" #> SHtml.onSubmitUnit(process) | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| 31 | |
| 32 | |
| 33 | |
| 34 | |
| 35 | |
| 36 | |
| 37 | |
| 38 | |
| 39 | |
| } | |
| 40 | |
| 41 } | |
| Like DumbForm.scala, the snippet is implemented as a singleton. The render method declares | |
| two variables: name and age. Let’s skip the process() method and look at the was we’re | |
| associating behavior with the form elements. | |
| "name=name" #> SHtml.onSubmit(name = _) takes the incoming HTML elements with | |
| the name attribute equal to “name” and, via the SHtml.onSubmit method, associating a function | |
| with the form element. The function takes a String parameter and sets the value of the name | |
| variable to the String. The resulting HTML is <input name="F10714412223674KM">. The | |
| new name attribute is a GUID (globally unique identifier) that associates the function (set the | |
| name to the input) with the form element. When the form is submitted, via normal HTTP post | |
| or via Ajax, the function will be executed with the value of the form element. On form submit, | |
| perform this function. | |
| see | |
| the | |
| about | |
| "name=age" #> SHtml.onSubmit(s => | |
| Let’s | |
| asInt(s).foreach(age = _)). | |
| The function that’s executed uses Helpers.asInt to | |
| try to parse the String to an Int. If the parsing is successful, the age variable is set to the parsed | |
| Int. | |
| form field: | |
| age | |
| associate | |
| "type=submit" #> | |
| Finally, we | |
| SHtml.onSubmitUnit method takes a function that | |
| SHtml.onSubmitUnit(process). | |
| takes no parameters (rather than a function that takes a single String as a parameter) and | |
| applies that function when the form is submitted. | |
| function with the | |
| submit button: | |
| a | |
| The process() method closes over the scope of the name and age variables and when that | |
| method is lifted to a function, it still closes over the variables... that means that when the function | |
| is applied, it refers to the same instances of the name and age variables as the other functions in | |
| this method. However, if we had 85 copies of the form open in 85 browsers, each would be closing | |
| 4.3. STATEFUL SNIPPETS | |
| 31 | |
| over different instances of the name and age variables. In this way, Lift allows your application | |
| to contain complex state without exposing that complex state to the browser. | |
| The problem with this form example is that if you type an incorrect age, the whole form is reset. | |
| Let’s see how we can do better error handling. | |
| 4.3 Stateful Snippets | |
| In order for us to give the user a better experience, we need to capture the state of the name and age | |
| variables across the multiple form submissions. The mechanism that Lift has for doing this is the | |
| Stateful Snippet2. A snippet that subclasses StatefulSnippet has an extra hidden parameter | |
| automatically inserted into the form which ensures that during processing of that form, the same | |
| instance of the StatefulSnippet will be used3. | |
| Let’s look at the HTML template: | |
| 1 <div id="main" class="lift:surround?with=default&at=content"> | |
| Listing 4.5: stateful.html | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| <div> | |
| Using stateful snippets for a better | |
| user experience | |
| </div> | |
| <div> | |
| <div class="lift:Stateful?form=post"> | |
| Name: <input name="name"><br> | |
| Age: <input name="age" value="0"><br> | |
| <input type="submit" value="Submit"> | |
| </div> | |
| </div> | |
| 13 | |
| 14 </div> | |
| The template looks pretty much like the template in onsubmit.html. Let’s look at the snippet | |
| itself: | |
| Listing 4.6: Stateful.scala | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package snippet | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 5 import http._ | |
| 6 import common._ | |
| 7 import util.Helpers._ | |
| 8 import scala.xml.NodeSeq | |
| 2There are no stateless snippets. A Stateful Snippet doesn’t consume any more server-side resources than does a | |
| form composed via SHtml.onSubmit(). Oh, and state is not a barier to scalaing. See Chapter 20. | |
| 3Earlier I talked about the security implications of hidden form parameters. The hidden parameter mechanism is not | |
| vulnerable to the same issues because the hidden parameter itself is just a GUID that causes a function to be invoked | |
| on the server. No state is exposed to the client, so there’s nothing for a hacker to capture or mutate that would allow | |
| for the exploitation of a vulnerability. | |
| 32 | |
| CHAPTER 4. FORMS | |
| 9 | |
| 10 /** | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| * A stateful snippet. The state associated with this | |
| * snippet is in instance variables | |
| */ | |
| 13 | |
| 14 class Stateful extends StatefulSnippet { | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| 31 | |
| 32 | |
| 33 | |
| 34 | |
| 35 | |
| 36 | |
| 37 | |
| 38 | |
| 39 | |
| 40 | |
| 41 | |
| 42 | |
| 43 | |
| // state unique to this instance of the stateful snippet | |
| private var name = "" | |
| private var age = "0" | |
| // capture from whence the user came so we | |
| // can send them back | |
| private val whence = S.referer openOr "/" | |
| // StatefulSnippet requires an explicit dispatch | |
| // to the method. | |
| def dispatch = {case "render" => render} | |
| // associate behavior with each HTML element | |
| def render = | |
| "name=name" #> SHtml.text(name, name = _, "id" -> "the_name") & | |
| "name=age" #> SHtml.text(age, age = _) & | |
| "type=submit" #> SHtml.onSubmitUnit(process) | |
| // process the form | |
| private def process() = | |
| asInt(age) match { | |
| case Full(a) if a < 13 => S.error("Too young!") | |
| case Full(a) => { | |
| S.notice("Name: "+name) | |
| S.notice("Age: "+a) | |
| S.redirectTo(whence) | |
| } | |
| case _ => S.error("Age doesn't parse as a number") | |
| } | |
| 44 | |
| 45 } | |
| There’s a fair amount different here. First, the class definition: class Stateful extends | |
| StatefulSnippet. Because the snippet instance itself contains state, it can’t be an object sin- | |
| gleton. It must be declared as a class so there are multiple instances. | |
| We capture state (name, age and from whence the user came), in instance variables. | |
| StatefulSnippets require a dispatch method which does method dispatching explicitly | |
| rather than “by-convention.” | |
| The render method uses familiar CSS Selector Transforms to associate markup with behavior. | |
| However, rather than using SHtml.onSubmit, we’re using SHtml.text to explicitly generate | |
| an HTML <input> element with both the name and value attributes set. In the case of the first | |
| input, we’re also explicitly setting the id attribute. We’re not using it in the application, but it’s a | |
| way to demonstrate how to add extra attributes. | |
| Finally, the process() method attempts to covert the age String into an Int. If it’s an Int, but | |
| 4.4. REQUESTVARS | |
| 33 | |
| less than 13, we present an error. If the String cannot be parsed to an Int, we present an error, | |
| otherwise we do notify the user and go back to the page the user came from. | |
| Note in this example, we preserve the form values, so if you type something wrong in the name | |
| or age fields, what you typed is presented to you again. | |
| The big difference between the resulting HTML for StatefulSnippets and other snippets is | |
| the insertion of <input name="F1071441222401LO3" type="hidden" value="true"> | |
| in the form. This hidden field associates the snippet named “Stateful” with the instance of State- | |
| ful that was used to initially generate the form. | |
| Let’s look at an alternative mechanism for creating a nice user experience. | |
| 4.4 RequestVars | |
| In this example, we’re going to preserve state during the request by placing state in RequestVars | |
| (see 7.8 on page 84). | |
| Lift has type-safe containers for state called XXXVars. There are SessionVars that have session | |
| scope, WizardVars that are scoped to a Wizard and RequestVars that are scoped to the cur- | |
| rent request4. Vars are defined as singletons: private object name extends Request- | |
| Var(""). They are typed (in this case, the type is String) and they have a default value. | |
| So, let’s look at the HTML which looks shockingly like the HTML in the last two examples: | |
| 1 <div id="main" class="lift:surround?with=default&at=content"> | |
| Listing 4.7: requestvar.html | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| <div> | |
| Using RequestVars to store state | |
| </div> | |
| <div> | |
| <form class="lift:ReqVar?form=post"> | |
| Name: <input name="name"><br> | |
| Age: <input name="age" id="the_age" value="0"><br> | |
| <input type="submit" value="Submit"> | |
| </form> | |
| </div> | |
| 12 | |
| 13 </div> | |
| Now, let’s look at the snippet code: | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package snippet | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 5 import http._ | |
| 6 import common._ | |
| Listing 4.8: ReqVar.scala | |
| 4In this case, “request” means full HTML page load and all subsquent Ajax operations on that page. There’s also a | |
| TransientRequestVar that has the scope of the current HTTP request. | |
| 34 | |
| CHAPTER 4. FORMS | |
| 7 import util.Helpers._ | |
| 8 import scala.xml.NodeSeq | |
| 9 | |
| 10 /** | |
| 11 | |
| * A RequestVar-based snippet | |
| */ | |
| 12 | |
| 13 object ReqVar { | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| 31 | |
| 32 | |
| 33 | |
| 34 | |
| 35 | |
| 36 | |
| 37 | |
| 38 | |
| 39 | |
| 40 | |
| 41 | |
| 42 | |
| 43 | |
| 44 | |
| 45 | |
| 46 | |
| // define RequestVar holders for name, age, and whence | |
| private object name extends RequestVar("") | |
| private object age extends RequestVar("0") | |
| private object whence extends RequestVar(S.referer openOr "/") | |
| def render = { | |
| // capture the whence... which forces evaluation of | |
| // the whence RequestVar unless it's already been set | |
| val w = whence.is | |
| // we don't need an explicit function because RequestVar | |
| // extends Settable{type=String}, so Lift knows how to | |
| // get/set the RequestVar for text element creation | |
| "name=name" #> SHtml.textElem(name) & | |
| // add a hidden field that sets whence so we | |
| // know where to go | |
| "name=age" #> (SHtml.textElem(age) ++ | |
| SHtml.hidden(() => whence.set(w))) & | |
| "type=submit" #> SHtml.onSubmitUnit(process) | |
| } | |
| // process the same way as | |
| // in Stateful | |
| private def process() = | |
| asInt(age.is) match { | |
| case Full(a) if a < 13 => S.error("Too young!") | |
| case Full(a) => { | |
| S.notice("Name: "+name) | |
| S.notice("Age: "+a) | |
| S.redirectTo(whence) | |
| } | |
| case _ => S.error("Age doesn't parse as a number") | |
| } | |
| 47 | |
| 48 } | |
| The snippet is a singleton because the state is kept in the RequestVars. | |
| We use SHtml.textElem() to generate the <input> tag. We can pass the RequestVar into the | |
| method and the function that gets/sets the RequestVar is generated for us. | |
| The use of this mechanism for doing stateful forms versus the StatefulSnippet mechanism is one | |
| of personal choice. Neither one is better, they are just different. | |
| Next, let’s look at how to get more granular with error messages. | |
| 4.5. FIELD ERRORS | |
| 4.5 Field Errors | |
| 35 | |
| In the prior examples, we displayed an error to the user. However, we didn’t tell the user what | |
| field resulted in the error. Let’s be a little more granular about error reporting. | |
| First, let’s look at the HTML: | |
| 1 <div id="main" class="lift:surround?with=default&at=content"> | |
| Listing 4.9: fielderror.html | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| <div> | |
| Let's get granular about error messages | |
| </div> | |
| <div> | |
| <div class="lift:FieldErrorExample?form=post"> | |
| Name: <input name="name"><br> | |
| Age: <span class="lift:Msg?id=age&errorClass=error">error</span> | |
| <input name="age" id="the_age" value="0"><br> | |
| <input type="submit" value="Submit"> | |
| </div> | |
| </div> | |
| 13 | |
| 14 </div> | |
| This HTML is different. Note: Age: <span class="lift:Msg?id=age&errorClass=error">error</span>. | |
| We mark an area in the markup to put the error message. | |
| Let’s look at our snippet code which is very similar to Stateful.scala with a small, but impor- | |
| tant difference: | |
| Listing 4.10: FieldErrorExample.scala | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package snippet | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 5 import http._ | |
| 6 import common._ | |
| 7 import util.Helpers._ | |
| 8 import scala.xml.NodeSeq | |
| 9 | |
| 10 /** | |
| 11 | |
| * A StatefulSnippet like Stateful.scala | |
| */ | |
| 12 | |
| 13 class FieldErrorExample extends StatefulSnippet { | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| private var name = "" | |
| private var age = "0" | |
| private val whence = S.referer openOr "/" | |
| def dispatch = {case _ => render} | |
| def render = | |
| "name=name" #> SHtml.text(name, name = _) & | |
| "name=age" #> SHtml.text(age, age = _) & | |
| "type=submit" #> SHtml.onSubmitUnit(process) | |
| 36 | |
| CHAPTER 4. FORMS | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| 31 | |
| 32 | |
| 33 | |
| 34 | |
| 35 | |
| 36 | |
| 37 | |
| 38 | |
| 39 | |
| // like Stateful | |
| private def process() = | |
| asInt(age) match { | |
| // notice the parameter for error corresponds to | |
| // the id in the Msg span | |
| case Full(a) if a < 13 => S.error("age", "Too young!") | |
| case Full(a) => { | |
| S.notice("Name: "+name) | |
| S.notice("Age: "+a) | |
| S.redirectTo(whence) | |
| } | |
| // notice the parameter for error corresponds to | |
| // the id in the Msg span | |
| case _ => S.error("age", "Age doesn't parse as a number") | |
| } | |
| 40 | |
| 41 } | |
| The key difference is: case Full(a) if a < 13 => S.error("age", "Too young!"). | |
| Note that we pass "age" to S.error and this corresponds to the id in the Msg snippet in markup. | |
| This tells Lift how to associate the error message and the markup. | |
| But there’s a better way to do complex forms in Lift: LiftScreen. | |
| 4.6 LiftScreen | |
| Much of what we do to build web applications is generating screens that associate input with | |
| dynamic content. Lift provides Screen and Wizard for building single page and multi-page input | |
| forms with validation, back-button support, etc. | |
| So, let’s look at the HTML for a screen: | |
| 1 <div id="main" class="lift:surround?with=default&at=content"> | |
| Listing 4.11: screen.html | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| <div> | |
| Let's use Lift's LiftScreen to build complex | |
| simple screen input forms. | |
| </div> | |
| <div class="lift:ScreenExample"> | |
| Put your form here | |
| </div> | |
| 9 | |
| 10 </div> | |
| We don’t explicitly declare the form elements. We just point to the snippet which looks like: | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package snippet | |
| Listing 4.12: ScreenExample.scala | |
| 4.7. WIZARD | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 5 import http._ | |
| 37 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 /** | |
| 8 | |
| * Declare the fields on the screen | |
| */ | |
| 9 | |
| 10 object ScreenExample extends LiftScreen { | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| 13 | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| // here are the fields and default values | |
| val name = field("Name", "") | |
| // the age has validation rules | |
| val age = field("Age", 0, minVal(13, "Too Young")) | |
| def finish() { | |
| S.notice("Name: "+name) | |
| S.notice("Age: "+age) | |
| } | |
| 20 | |
| 21 } | |
| In the screen, we define the fields and their validation rules and then what to do when the screen | |
| is finished. Lift takes care of the rest. | |
| The markup for generating the form, by default, is found in /templates-hidden/wizard- | |
| all.html. You can also select templates on a screen-by-screen basis. | |
| 4.7 Wizard | |
| LiftScreen is great for single screen applications. If you’ve got input and validation that re- | |
| quires multiple screens, Wizard is what you want. We’ll skip the markup ’cause it’s just a snippet | |
| invocation. Here’s the wizard code: | |
| Listing 4.13: WizardExample.scala | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package snippet | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 5 import http._ | |
| 6 import wizard._ | |
| 7 import util._ | |
| 8 | |
| 9 /** | |
| 10 | |
| * Define the multi-page input screen | |
| */ | |
| 11 | |
| 12 object WizardExample extends Wizard { | |
| 13 | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| // define the first screen | |
| val screen1 = new Screen { | |
| val name = field("Name", "") | |
| val age = field("Age", 0, minVal(13, "Too Young")) | |
| } | |
| 38 | |
| CHAPTER 4. FORMS | |
| // define the second screen | |
| val screen2 = new Screen { | |
| // a radio button | |
| val rad = radio("Radio", "Red", List("Red", "Green", "Blue")) | |
| // a select | |
| val sel = select("Select", "Archer", List("Elwood", "Archer", "Madeline")) | |
| // want a text area... yeah, we got that | |
| val ta = textarea("Text Area", "") | |
| // here are password inputs with minimum lenght | |
| val pwd1 = password("Password", "", valMinLen(6, "Password too short")) | |
| // and a custom validator | |
| val pwd2 = password("Password (re-enter)", "", mustMatch _) | |
| // return a List[FieldError]... there's an implicit conversion | |
| // from String to List[FieldError] that inserts the field's ID | |
| def mustMatch(s: String): List[FieldError] = | |
| if (s != pwd1.is) "Passwords do not match" else Nil | |
| } | |
| def finish() { | |
| S.notice("Name: "+screen1.name) | |
| S.notice("Age: "+screen1.age) | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| 31 | |
| 32 | |
| 33 | |
| 34 | |
| 35 | |
| 36 | |
| 37 | |
| 38 | |
| 39 | |
| 40 | |
| 41 | |
| 42 | |
| 43 | |
| 44 | |
| 45 | |
| 46 | |
| 47 | |
| } | |
| 48 | |
| 49 } | |
| It’s declarative just like the screen example above. The back button works. You can have multiple | |
| wizards active in multiple tabs in your browser and they don’t intefer with each other. | |
| 4.8 Ajax | |
| In addition to full-page HTML, Lift support Ajax forms. Because Lift’s forms are functions on the | |
| server-side associated with GUIDs in the browser, switching a form from full page load to Ajax is, | |
| well, pretty trivial. Let’s look at the markup: | |
| 1 <div id="main" class="lift:surround?with=default&at=content"> | |
| Listing 4.14: ajax.html | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| <div> | |
| An example of doing forms with Ajax. | |
| </div> | |
| <form class="lift:form.ajax"> | |
| <div class="lift:AjaxExample"> | |
| Name: <input name="name"><br> | |
| Age: <span class="lift:Msg?id=age&errorClass=error">error</span><input name="age" id="the_age" value="0"><br> | |
| 4.8. AJAX | |
| 39 | |
| <input type="submit" value="Submit"> | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| </div> | |
| </form> | |
| 12 | |
| 13 </div> | |
| The key difference is: <form class="lift:form.ajax">. This invokes Lift’s built-in form | |
| snippet and designates the current form as an Ajax form. Then the snippet does the following: | |
| Listing 4.15: AjaxExample.scala | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package snippet | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 5 import http._ | |
| 6 import common._ | |
| 7 import util.Helpers._ | |
| 8 import js._ | |
| 9 import JsCmds._ | |
| 10 import JE._ | |
| 11 import scala.xml.NodeSeq | |
| 12 | |
| 13 /** | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 object AjaxExample { | |
| def render = { | |
| 17 | |
| * Ajax for processing... it looks a lot like the Stateful example | |
| */ | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| 31 | |
| 32 | |
| 33 | |
| 34 | |
| 35 | |
| 36 | |
| 37 | |
| 38 | |
| 39 | |
| 40 | |
| 41 | |
| 42 | |
| 43 | |
| 44 | |
| // state | |
| var name = "" | |
| var age = "0" | |
| val whence = S.referer openOr "/" | |
| // our process method returns a | |
| // JsCmd which will be sent back to the browser | |
| // as part of the response | |
| def process(): JsCmd= { | |
| // sleep for 400 millis to allow the user to | |
| // see the spinning icon | |
| Thread.sleep(400) | |
| // do the matching | |
| asInt(age) match { | |
| // display an error and otherwise do nothing | |
| case Full(a) if a < 13 => S.error("age", "Too young!"); Noop | |
| // redirect to the page that the user came from | |
| // and display notices on that page | |
| case Full(a) => { | |
| RedirectTo(whence, () => { | |
| S.notice("Name: "+name) | |
| S.notice("Age: "+a) | |
| }) | |
| } | |
| // more errors | |
| case _ => S.error("age", "Age doesn't parse as a number"); Noop | |
| CHAPTER 4. FORMS | |
| 40 | |
| } | |
| } | |
| // binding looks normal | |
| "name=name" #> SHtml.text(name, name = _, "id" -> "the_name") & | |
| "name=age" #> (SHtml.text(age, age = _) ++ SHtml.hidden(process)) | |
| 45 | |
| 46 | |
| 47 | |
| 48 | |
| 49 | |
| 50 | |
| 51 | |
| 52 | |
| 53 | |
| } | |
| 54 | |
| 55 } | |
| The code looks a lot like the Stateful code. Except that we don’t bind to the submit button (the | |
| submit button is not serialized over Ajax), so we have to add a hidden field to the age field which | |
| does the processing. | |
| The process() method returns a JsCmd which is the JavaScript command to send back to the | |
| browser in response to the Ajax form submission. In this case, we’re either using S.error to | |
| display error notices followed by a Noop or we’re doing a redirect. | |
| We pause for 400 milliseconds in the process() method so that the user can see the spinner in | |
| the browser indicating that an Ajax operation is taking place. | |
| But the core take-away is that normal HTML processing and Ajax processing are almost identical | |
| and both are super-easy. | |
| 4.9 But sometimes Old Fashioned is good | |
| In this chapter, we’ve explored Lift’s form building and processing features and demonstrated | |
| the power and value of associating GUIDs on the client with functions on the server. However, | |
| sometimes it’s nice to have parameter processing via URL parameters... and that’s easy to do with | |
| Lift as well. | |
| Every page in the examples for this chapter contain: | |
| 1 BADTAB<form action="/query"> | |
| 2 BADTAB <input name="q"> | |
| 3 BADTAB <input type="submit" value="Search"> | |
| 4 BADTAB</form> | |
| This is a plain old form that generates a URL like: http://localhost:8080/query?q=catfood | |
| This URL can be copied, pasted, shared, etc. | |
| Processing this URL is easy: | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package snippet | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 5 import http._ | |
| Listing 4.16: Query.scala | |
| 4.10. CONCLUSION | |
| 6 import util._ | |
| 7 import Helpers._ | |
| 8 | |
| 9 object Query { | |
| 41 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| 13 | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| def results = ClearClearable andThen | |
| "li *" #> S.param("q"). // get the query parameter | |
| toList. // convert the Box to a List | |
| flatMap(q => { | |
| ("You asked: "+q) :: // prepend the query | |
| (1 to toInt(q)).toList.map(_.toString) // if it can be converted to an Int | |
| // convert it and return a sequence of Ints | |
| }) | |
| 17 | |
| 18 } | |
| Using S.param("param_name") we can extract the query parameter and do something with it. | |
| 4.10 Conclusion | |
| Lift’s form generation and processing tools offer a wide variety of mechanisms to securely, simply | |
| and powerfully generate and process HTML forms either as part of full HTTP requests or via Ajax | |
| requests. | |
| 42 | |
| CHAPTER 4. FORMS | |
| Chapter 5 | |
| HTTP and REST | |
| We explored Lift’s HTML generation features. Let’s dive down to a lower level and handle HTTP | |
| requests REST-style. The code for this chapter can be found at https://github.com/dpp/simply_- | |
| lift/tree/master/samples/http_rest | |
| 5.1 Introduction | |
| Lift gives you access to low level HTTP requests, either within the scope of an session or outside | |
| the scope of a session. In sessionless or stateless mode, Lift does not use the container’s session | |
| management machinery to add a cookie to the HTTP response and does not make SessionVar | |
| or ContainerVar available during the request. Stateless REST requests do not require session | |
| affinity. Authentication for stateless REST handling can be done via OAuth. If the requests are | |
| handled statefully, a container session will be created if the JSESSIONID cookie is not supplied | |
| as part of the request and the JSESSIONID cookie will be included with the response. | |
| Lift makes use of Scala’s pattern matching to allow you match incoming HTTP requests, extract | |
| values as part of the pattern matching process and return the results. Scala’s pattern matching | |
| is very, very powerful. It allows both the declaration of a pattern that must be matched, wild- | |
| card values (a sub-expression may match any supplied value), wildcard values extracted into | |
| variables, and explicit extractors (imperative logic applied to a value to determine if it should | |
| match and if it does, extract it into a variable). Lift tests a Scala PartialFunction[Req, () => | |
| Box[LiftResponse]] to see if it is defined for a given Req, which represents an HTTP request. | |
| If there is a match, Lift will take the resulting function, apply it to get a Box[LiftResponse] | |
| and if the Box is full, the response will be sent back to the browser. That’s a mouth-full. Let’s look | |
| at examples. | |
| 5.2 REST the hard way | |
| Let’s take a look at the raw level of doing REST with Lift: taking an incoming HTTP request | |
| and transforming it into a function that returns a Box[LiftResponse] (and don’t worry, it gets | |
| easier, but we’re starting with the ugly verbose stuff so you get an idea of what’s happening under | |
| the covers): | |
| 43 | |
| 44 | |
| CHAPTER 5. HTTP AND REST | |
| Listing 5.1: BasicExample.scala | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package lib | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import model._ | |
| 5 | |
| 6 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 7 import common._ | |
| 8 import http._ | |
| 9 | |
| 10 /** | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| * A simple example of a REST style interface | |
| * using the basic Lift tools | |
| */ | |
| 13 | |
| 14 object BasicExample { | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| 31 | |
| 32 | |
| 33 | |
| 34 | |
| 35 | |
| 36 | |
| 37 | |
| 38 | |
| 39 | |
| 40 | |
| 41 | |
| 42 | |
| 43 | |
| /* | |
| * Given a suffix and an item, make a LiftResponse | |
| */ | |
| private def toResponse(suffix: String, item: Item) = | |
| suffix match { | |
| case "xml" => XmlResponse(item) | |
| case _ => JsonResponse(item) | |
| } | |
| /** | |
| * Find /simple/item/1234.json | |
| * Find /simple/item/1234.xml | |
| */ | |
| lazy val findItem: LiftRules.DispatchPF = { | |
| case Req("simple" :: "item" :: itemId :: Nil, // path | |
| suffix, // suffix | |
| GetRequest) => | |
| () => Item.find(itemId).map(toResponse(suffix, _)) | |
| } | |
| /** | |
| * Find /simple2/item/1234.json | |
| */ | |
| lazy val extractFindItem: LiftRules.DispatchPF = { | |
| // path with extractor | |
| case Req("simple2" :: "item" :: Item(item) :: Nil, | |
| suffix, GetRequest) => | |
| // a function that returns the response | |
| () => Full(toResponse(suffix, item)) | |
| } | |
| 44 | |
| 45 } | |
| One additional piece of the puzzle is hooking up the handlers to Lift. This is done in Boot.scala | |
| with the following lines: | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| // the stateless REST handlers | |
| LiftRules.statelessDispatchTable.append(BasicExample.findItem) | |
| LiftRules.statelessDispatchTable.append(BasicExample.extractFindItem) | |
| 5.2. REST THE HARD WAY | |
| 45 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| // stateful versions of the same | |
| // LiftRules.dispatch.append(BasicExample.findItem) | |
| // LiftRules.dispatch.append(BasicExample.extractFindItem) | |
| First, each handler is a PartialFunction[Req, () => | |
| Let’s break down the code. | |
| Box[LiftResponse]], but we can use a shorthand of LiftRules.dispatchPF which is a | |
| Scala type that aliases the partial function. | |
| 1 lazy val findItem: LiftRules.DispatchPF = | |
| defines findItem which has the type signature of a request dispatch handler. | |
| case Req("simple" :: "item" :: itemId :: Nil, // path | |
| suffix, // suffix | |
| GetRequest) => | |
| Defines a pattern to match. In this case, any 3 part path that has the first two parts /simple/item | |
| will be matched. The third part of the path will be extracted to the variable itemId. The suffix of | |
| the last path item will be extracted to the variable suffix and the request must be a GET. | |
| If the above criteria is met, then the partial function is defined and Lift will apply the partial | |
| function to get the resulting () => Box[LiftResponse]. | |
| () => Item.find(itemId).map(toResponse(suffix, _)) | |
| This is a function that finds the itemId and converts the resulting Item to a response based on | |
| the request suffix. The toResponse method looks like: | |
| /* | |
| * Given a suffix and an item, make a LiftResponse | |
| */ | |
| private def toResponse(suffix: String, item: Item) = | |
| suffix match { | |
| case "xml" => XmlResponse(item) | |
| case _ => JsonResponse(item) | |
| } | |
| That’s all pretty straight forward, if a little verbose. Let’s look at the other example in this file. It | |
| uses an extractor to convert the String of the third element of the request path to an Item: | |
| // path with extractor | |
| case Req("simple2" :: "item" :: Item(item) :: Nil, | |
| suffix, GetRequest) => | |
| In this case, the pattern will not be matched unless that third element of the path is a valid Item. | |
| If it is, the variable item will contain the Item for processing. Converting this to a valid response | |
| looks like: | |
| // a function that returns the response | |
| () => Full(toResponse(suffix, item)) | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 1 | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 46 | |
| CHAPTER 5. HTTP AND REST | |
| Let’s look at the object Item’s unapply method to see how the extraction works: | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| /** | |
| * Extract a String (id) to an Item | |
| */ | |
| def unapply(id: String): Option[Item] = Item.find(id) | |
| In fact, let’s look at the entire Item code listing. As promised, Simply Lift, does not explicitly | |
| cover persistence. This class is an in-memory mock persistence class, but it behaves like any other | |
| persistence mechanism in Lift. | |
| Listing 5.2: Item.scala | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package model | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 5 import util._ | |
| 6 import Helpers._ | |
| 7 import common._ | |
| 8 import json._ | |
| 9 | |
| 10 import scala.xml.Node | |
| 11 | |
| 12 /** | |
| 13 | |
| * An item in inventory | |
| */ | |
| 14 | |
| 15 case class Item(id: String, name: String, | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| description: String, | |
| price: BigDecimal, taxable: Boolean, | |
| weightInGrams: Int, qnty: Int) | |
| 19 | |
| 20 /** | |
| 21 | |
| * The Item companion object | |
| */ | |
| 22 | |
| 23 object Item { | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| 31 | |
| 32 | |
| 33 | |
| 34 | |
| 35 | |
| 36 | |
| 37 | |
| 38 | |
| 39 | |
| 40 | |
| 41 | |
| private implicit val formats = | |
| net.liftweb.json.DefaultFormats + BigDecimalSerializer | |
| private var items: List[Item] = parse(data).extract[List[Item]] | |
| private var listeners: List[Item => Unit] = Nil | |
| /** | |
| * Convert a JValue to an Item if possible | |
| */ | |
| def apply(in: JValue): Box[Item] = Helpers.tryo{in.extract[Item]} | |
| /** | |
| * Extract a String (id) to an Item | |
| */ | |
| def unapply(id: String): Option[Item] = Item.find(id) | |
| /** | |
| 5.2. REST THE HARD WAY | |
| 47 | |
| * Extract a JValue to an Item | |
| */ | |
| def unapply(in: JValue): Option[Item] = apply(in) | |
| /** | |
| * The default unapply method for the case class. | |
| * We needed to replicate it here because we | |
| * have overloaded unapply methods | |
| */ | |
| def unapply(in: Any): Option[(String, String, | |
| String, | |
| BigDecimal, Boolean, | |
| Int, Int)] = { | |
| in match { | |
| case i: Item => Some((i.id, i.name, i.description, | |
| i.price, i.taxable, | |
| i.weightInGrams, i.qnty)) | |
| case _ => None | |
| } | |
| } | |
| /** | |
| * Convert an item to XML | |
| */ | |
| implicit def toXml(item: Item): Node = | |
| <item>{Xml.toXml(item)}</item> | |
| /** | |
| * Convert the item to JSON format. This is | |
| * implicit and in the companion object, so | |
| * an Item can be returned easily from a JSON call | |
| */ | |
| implicit def toJson(item: Item): JValue = | |
| Extraction.decompose(item) | |
| /** | |
| * Convert a Seq[Item] to JSON format. This is | |
| * implicit and in the companion object, so | |
| * an Item can be returned easily from a JSON call | |
| */ | |
| implicit def toJson(items: Seq[Item]): JValue = | |
| Extraction.decompose(items) | |
| /** | |
| * Convert a Seq[Item] to XML format. This is | |
| * implicit and in the companion object, so | |
| * an Item can be returned easily from an XML REST call | |
| */ | |
| implicit def toXml(items: Seq[Item]): Node = | |
| <items>{ | |
| items.map(toXml) | |
| }</items> | |
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| 48 | |
| CHAPTER 5. HTTP AND REST | |
| /** | |
| * Get all the items in inventory | |
| */ | |
| def inventoryItems: Seq[Item] = items | |
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| // The raw data | |
| private def data = | |
| 102 | |
| 103 """[ | |
| {"id": "1234", "name": "Cat Food", | |
| "description": "Yummy, tasty cat food", | |
| "price": 4.25, | |
| "taxable": true, | |
| "weightInGrams": 1000, | |
| "qnty": 4 | |
| }, | |
| {"id": "1235", "name": "Dog Food", | |
| "description": "Yummy, tasty dog food", | |
| "price": 7.25, | |
| "taxable": true, | |
| "weightInGrams": 5000, | |
| "qnty": 72 | |
| }, | |
| {"id": "1236", "name": "Fish Food", | |
| "description": "Yummy, tasty fish food", | |
| "price": 2, | |
| "taxable": false, | |
| "weightInGrams": 200, | |
| "qnty": 45 | |
| }, | |
| {"id": "1237", "name": "Sloth Food", | |
| "description": "Slow, slow sloth food", | |
| "price": 18.33, | |
| "taxable": true, | |
| "weightInGrams": 750, | |
| "qnty": 62 | |
| }, | |
| 131 | |
| 132 ] | |
| 133 """ | |
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| /** | |
| * Select a random Item | |
| */ | |
| def randomItem: Item = synchronized { | |
| items(Helpers.randomInt(items.length)) | |
| } | |
| /** | |
| * Find an item by id | |
| */ | |
| def find(id: String): Box[Item] = synchronized { | |
| items.find(_.id == id) | |
| } | |
| /** | |
| 5.2. REST THE HARD WAY | |
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| * Add an item to inventory | |
| */ | |
| def add(item: Item): Item = { | |
| synchronized { | |
| items = item :: items.filterNot(_.id == item.id) | |
| updateListeners(item) | |
| } | |
| } | |
| /** | |
| * Find all the items with the string in their name or | |
| * description | |
| */ | |
| def search(str: String): List[Item] = { | |
| val strLC = str.toLowerCase() | |
| items.filter(i => | |
| i.name.toLowerCase.indexOf(strLC) >= 0 || | |
| i.description.toLowerCase.indexOf(strLC) >= 0) | |
| } | |
| /** | |
| * Deletes the item with id and returns the | |
| * deleted item or Empty if there's no match | |
| */ | |
| def delete(id: String): Box[Item] = synchronized { | |
| var ret: Box[Item] = Empty | |
| val Id = id // an upper case stable ID for pattern matching | |
| items = items.filter { | |
| case i@Item(Id, _, _, _, _, _, _) => | |
| ret = Full(i) // side effect | |
| false | |
| case _ => true | |
| } | |
| ret.map(updateListeners) | |
| } | |
| /** | |
| * Update listeners when the data changes | |
| */ | |
| private def updateListeners(item: Item): Item = { | |
| synchronized { | |
| listeners.foreach(f => | |
| Schedule.schedule(() => f(item), 0 seconds)) | |
| listeners = Nil | |
| } | |
| item | |
| } | |
| /** | |
| 50 | |
| CHAPTER 5. HTTP AND REST | |
| * Add an onChange listener | |
| */ | |
| def onChange(f: Item => Unit) { | |
| synchronized { | |
| // prepend the function to the list of listeners | |
| listeners ::= f | |
| } | |
| } | |
| 204 | |
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| 210 | |
| 211 | |
| 212 | |
| 213 } | |
| 214 | |
| 215 /** | |
| 216 | |
| * A helper that will JSON serialize BigDecimal | |
| */ | |
| 217 | |
| 218 object BigDecimalSerializer extends Serializer[BigDecimal] { | |
| 219 | |
| 220 | |
| 221 | |
| 222 | |
| 223 | |
| 224 | |
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| 228 | |
| 229 | |
| 230 | |
| private val Class = classOf[BigDecimal] | |
| def deserialize(implicit format: Formats): PartialFunction[(TypeInfo, JValue), BigDecimal] = { | |
| case (TypeInfo(Class, _), json) => json match { | |
| case JInt(iv) => BigDecimal(iv) | |
| case JDouble(dv) => BigDecimal(dv) | |
| case value => throw new MappingException("Can't convert " + value + " to " + Class) | |
| } | |
| } | |
| def serialize(implicit format: Formats): PartialFunction[Any, JValue] = { | |
| case d: BigDecimal => JDouble(d.doubleValue) | |
| } | |
| 231 | |
| 232 } | |
| Let’s take a look at what the resulting output is: | |
| 1 dpp@raptor:~/proj/simply_lift/samples/http_rest$ curl http://localhost:8080/simple/item/1234 | |
| 2 { | |
| "id":"1234", | |
| "name":"Cat Food", | |
| "description":"Yummy, tasty cat food", | |
| "price":4.25, | |
| "taxable":true, | |
| "weightInGrams":1000, | |
| "qnty":4 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 } | |
| 11 | |
| 12 dpp@raptor:~/proj/simply_lift/samples/http_rest$ curl http://localhost:8080/simple/item/1234.xml | |
| 13 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> | |
| 14 <item> | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| <id>1234</id> | |
| <name>Cat Food</name> | |
| <description>Yummy, tasty cat food</description> | |
| <price>4.25</price> | |
| <taxable>true</taxable> | |
| <weightInGrams>1000</weightInGrams> | |
| <qnty>4</qnty> | |
| 21 | |
| 22 </item> | |
| 5.3. MAKING IT EASIER WITH RESTHELPER | |
| 51 | |
| 23 dpp@raptor:~/proj/simply_lift/samples/http_rest$ | |
| 5.3 Making it easier with RestHelper | |
| The above example shows you how Lift deals with REST calls. However, it’s a tad verbose. Lift’s | |
| RestHelper trait contains a lot of very helpful shortcuts that make code more concise, easier to | |
| read and easier to maintain. Let’s look at a bunch of examples and then we’ll work through each | |
| one: | |
| Listing 5.3: BasicWithHelper.scala | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package lib | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import model._ | |
| 5 | |
| 6 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 7 import common._ | |
| 8 import http._ | |
| 9 import rest._ | |
| 10 import json._ | |
| 11 import scala.xml._ | |
| 12 | |
| 13 /** | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| * A simple example of a REST style interface | |
| * using the basic Lift tools | |
| */ | |
| 16 | |
| 17 object BasicWithHelper extends RestHelper { | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
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| 32 | |
| 33 | |
| 34 | |
| 35 | |
| 36 | |
| 37 | |
| 38 | |
| 39 | |
| 40 | |
| /* | |
| * Serve the URL, but have a helpful error message when you | |
| * return a 404 if the item is not found | |
| */ | |
| serve { | |
| case "simple3" :: "item" :: itemId :: Nil JsonGet _ => | |
| for { | |
| // find the item, and if it's not found, | |
| // return a nice message for the 404 | |
| item <- Item.find(itemId) ?~ "Item Not Found" | |
| } yield item: JValue | |
| case "simple3" :: "item" :: itemId :: Nil XmlGet _ => | |
| for { | |
| item <- Item.find(itemId) ?~ "Item Not Found" | |
| } yield item: Node | |
| } | |
| serve { | |
| // Prefix notation | |
| case JsonGet("simple4" :: "item" :: Item(item) :: Nil, _) => | |
| 52 | |
| CHAPTER 5. HTTP AND REST | |
| 41 | |
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| // no need to explicitly create a LiftResponse | |
| // Just make it JSON and RestHelper does the rest | |
| item: JValue | |
| // infix notation | |
| case "simple4" :: "item" :: Item(item) :: Nil XmlGet _ => | |
| item: Node | |
| } | |
| // serve a bunch of items given a single prefix | |
| serve ( "simple5" / "item" prefix { | |
| // all the inventory | |
| case Nil JsonGet _ => Item.inventoryItems: JValue | |
| case Nil XmlGet _ => Item.inventoryItems: Node | |
| // a particular item | |
| case Item(item) :: Nil JsonGet _ => item: JValue | |
| case Item(item) :: Nil XmlGet _ => item: Node | |
| }) | |
| /** | |
| * Here's how we convert from an Item | |
| * to JSON or XML depending on the request's | |
| * Accepts header | |
| */ | |
| implicit def itemToResponseByAccepts: JxCvtPF[Item] = { | |
| case (JsonSelect, c, _) => c: JValue | |
| case (XmlSelect, c, _) => c: Node | |
| } | |
| /** | |
| * serve the response by returning an item | |
| * (or a Box[Item]) and let RestHelper determine | |
| * the conversion to a LiftResponse using | |
| * the itemToResponseByAccepts partial function | |
| */ | |
| serveJx[Item] { | |
| case "simple6" :: "item" :: Item(item) :: Nil Get _ => item | |
| case "simple6" :: "item" :: "other" :: item :: Nil Get _ => | |
| Item.find(item) ?~ "The item you're looking for isn't here" | |
| } | |
| /** | |
| * Same as the serveJx example above, but we've | |
| * used prefixJx to avoid having to copy the path | |
| * prefix over and over again | |
| */ | |
| serveJx[Item] { | |
| "simple7" / "item" prefixJx { | |
| case Item(item) :: Nil Get _ => item | |
| case "other" :: item :: Nil Get _ => | |
| Item.find(item) ?~ "The item you're looking for isn't here" | |
| } | |
| } | |
| 5.3. MAKING IT EASIER WITH RESTHELPER | |
| 53 | |
| 95 | |
| 96 } | |
| The first thing is how we declare and register the RestHelper-based service: | |
| 1 /** | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| * A simple example of a REST style interface | |
| * using the basic Lift tools | |
| */ | |
| 4 | |
| 5 object BasicWithHelper extends RestHelper { | |
| Our BaseicWithHelper singleton extends the net.liftweb.http.rest.RestHelper trait. | |
| We register the dispatch in Boot.scala: | |
| LiftRules.statelessDispatchTable.append(BasicWithHelper) | |
| This means that the whole BasicWithHelper singleton is a PartialFunction[Req, () => | |
| Box[LiftResponse]] that aggregates all the sub-patterns contained inside it. We defined the | |
| sub-patterns in a serve block which contains the pattern to match. For example: | |
| serve { | |
| case "simple3" :: "item" :: itemId :: Nil JsonGet _ => | |
| for { | |
| // find the item, and if it's not found, | |
| // return a nice message for the 404 | |
| item <- Item.find(itemId) ?~ "Item Not Found" | |
| } yield item: JValue | |
| case "simple3" :: "item" :: itemId :: Nil XmlGet _ => | |
| for { | |
| item <- Item.find(itemId) ?~ "Item Not Found" | |
| } yield item: Node | |
| } | |
| Let’s break this down further: | |
| 1 | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| 13 | |
| 1 case "simple3" :: "item" :: itemId :: Nil JsonGet _ => | |
| The above matches /simple3/item/xxx where xxx is extracted to the itemId variable. The | |
| request must also have an Accepts header that calls for JSON. | |
| If the pattern matches, execute the following code: | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| for { | |
| // find the item, and if it's not found, | |
| // return a nice message for the 404 | |
| item <- Item.find(itemId) ?~ "Item Not Found" | |
| } yield item: JValue | |
| Some things to notice, we didn’t explicitly create a function that returns a Box[LiftResponse]. | |
| RestHelper provides implicit conversions from | |
| Instead, | |
| the type is Box[JValue]. | |
| 54 | |
| CHAPTER 5. HTTP AND REST | |
| Box[JValue] to () => Box[LiftResponse]. Specifically, if the Box is a Failure, Res- | |
| tHelper will generate a 404 response with the Failure message as the 404’s body. If the Box is | |
| Full, RestHelper will create a JsonResponse with the value in the payload. Let’s take a look | |
| at the two cases: | |
| 1 dpp@raptor:~/proj/simply_lift/samples/http_rest$ curl http://localhost:8080/simple3/item/12999 | |
| 2 Item Not Found | |
| 3 | |
| 4 dpp@raptor:~/proj/simply_lift/samples/http_rest$ curl http://localhost:8080/simple3/item/1234 | |
| 5 { | |
| "id":"1234", | |
| "name":"Cat Food", | |
| "description":"Yummy, tasty cat food", | |
| "price":4.25, | |
| "taxable":true, | |
| "weightInGrams":1000, | |
| "qnty":4 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| 13 } | |
| The XML example is pretty much the same, except we coerse the response to Box[Node] which | |
| RestHelper converts into an XmlResponse: | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| case "simple3" :: "item" :: itemId :: Nil XmlGet _ => | |
| for { | |
| item <- Item.find(itemId) ?~ "Item Not Found" | |
| } yield item: Node | |
| Which results in the following: | |
| 1 dpp@raptor:~/proj/simply_lift/samples/http_rest$ curl -i -H "Accept: application/xml" http://localhost:8080/simple3/item/1234 | |
| 2 HTTP/1.1 200 OK | |
| 3 Expires: Wed, 9 Mar 2011 01:48:38 UTC | |
| 4 Content-Length: 230 | |
| 5 Cache-Control: no-cache; private; no-store | |
| 6 Content-Type: text/xml; charset=utf-8 | |
| 7 Pragma: no-cache | |
| 8 Date: Wed, 9 Mar 2011 01:48:38 UTC | |
| 9 X-Lift-Version: Unknown Lift Version | |
| 10 Server: Jetty(6.1.22) | |
| 11 | |
| 12 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> | |
| 13 <item> | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| <id>1234</id> | |
| <name>Cat Food</name> | |
| <description>Yummy, tasty cat food</description> | |
| <price>4.25</price> | |
| <taxable>true</taxable> | |
| <weightInGrams>1000</weightInGrams> | |
| <qnty>4</qnty> | |
| 20 | |
| 21 </item> | |
| 5.3. MAKING IT EASIER WITH RESTHELPER | |
| 55 | |
| that’s simpler because we define stuff in the serve block and the conversions from | |
| Okay... | |
| JValue and Node to the right response types is taken care of. Just to be explicit about where | |
| the implicit conversions are defined, they’re in the Item singleton: | |
| /** | |
| * Convert an item to XML | |
| */ | |
| implicit def toXml(item: Item): Node = | |
| <item>{Xml.toXml(item)}</item> | |
| /** | |
| * Convert the item to JSON format. This is | |
| * implicit and in the companion object, so | |
| * an Item can be returned easily from a JSON call | |
| */ | |
| implicit def toJson(item: Item): JValue = | |
| Extraction.decompose(item) | |
| Okay, so, yippee skippy, we can do simpler REST. Let’s keep looking at examples of how we can | |
| make it even simpler. This example uses extractors rather than doing the explicit Item.find: | |
| serve { | |
| // Prefix notation | |
| case JsonGet("simple4" :: "item" :: Item(item) :: Nil, _) => | |
| // no need to explicitly create a LiftResponse | |
| // Just make it JSON and RestHelper does the rest | |
| item: JValue | |
| // infix notation | |
| case "simple4" :: "item" :: Item(item) :: Nil XmlGet _ => | |
| item: Node | |
| } | |
| If you like DRY and don’t want to keep repeating the same path prefixes, you can use prefix, for | |
| example: | |
| // serve a bunch of items given a single prefix | |
| serve ( "simple5" / "item" prefix { | |
| // all the inventory | |
| case Nil JsonGet _ => Item.inventoryItems: JValue | |
| case Nil XmlGet _ => Item.inventoryItems: Node | |
| // a particular item | |
| case Item(item) :: Nil JsonGet _ => item: JValue | |
| case Item(item) :: Nil XmlGet _ => item: Node | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
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| 6 | |
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| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| }) | |
| The above code will list all the items in response to /simple5/item and will serve a specific item | |
| in response to /simple5/item/1234, as we see in: | |
| 1 dpp@raptor:~/proj/simply_lift/samples/http_rest$ curl http://localhost:8080/simple5/item | |
| 2 [{ | |
| 56 | |
| CHAPTER 5. HTTP AND REST | |
| "id":"1234", | |
| "name":"Cat Food", | |
| "description":"Yummy, tasty cat food", | |
| "price":4.25, | |
| "taxable":true, | |
| "weightInGrams":1000, | |
| "qnty":4 | |
| "id":"1237", | |
| "name":"Sloth Food", | |
| "description":"Slow, slow sloth food", | |
| "price":18.33, | |
| "taxable":true, | |
| "weightInGrams":750, | |
| "qnty":62 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 13 | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 }, | |
| 11 ... | |
| 12 ,{ | |
| 19 | |
| 20 }] | |
| 21 | |
| 22 dpp@raptor:~/proj/simply_lift/samples/http_rest$ curl http://localhost:8080/simple5/item/1237 | |
| 23 { | |
| "id":"1237", | |
| "name":"Sloth Food", | |
| "description":"Slow, slow sloth food", | |
| "price":18.33, | |
| "taxable":true, | |
| "weightInGrams":750, | |
| "qnty":62 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| 31 } | |
| In the above examples, we’ve explicitly coersed the results into a JValue or Node depending | |
| on the request type. With Lift, it’s possible to define a conversion from a given type to response | |
| types (the default response types are JSON and XML) based on the request type and then define | |
| the request patterns to match and RestHelper takes care of the rest (so to speak.) Let’s define | |
| the conversion from Item to JValue and Node (note the implicit keyword, that says that the | |
| conversion is available to serveJx statements: | |
| implicit def itemToResponseByAccepts: JxCvtPF[Item] = { | |
| case (JsonSelect, c, _) => c: JValue | |
| case (XmlSelect, c, _) => c: Node | |
| } | |
| This is pretty straight forward. If it’s a JsonSelect, return a JValue and if it’s an XmlSelect, | |
| convert to a Node. | |
| This is used in the serveJx statement: | |
| serveJx[Item] { | |
| case "simple6" :: "item" :: Item(item) :: Nil Get _ => item | |
| case "simple6" :: "item" :: "other" :: item :: Nil Get _ => | |
| Item.find(item) ?~ "The item you're looking for isn't here" | |
| } | |
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| 5.4. A COMPLETE REST EXAMPLE | |
| 57 | |
| So /simple6/item/1234 will match and result in an Item being returned and based on the | |
| above implicit conversion, we turn the Item into a JValue or Node depending on the Accepts | |
| header and then convert that to a () => Box[LiftResponse]. Let’s see what curl has to say | |
| about it: | |
| 1 dpp@raptor:~/proj/simply_lift/samples/http_rest$ curl http://localhost:8080/simple6/item/1237 | |
| 2 { | |
| "id":"1237", | |
| "name":"Sloth Food", | |
| "description":"Slow, slow sloth food", | |
| "price":18.33, | |
| "taxable":true, | |
| "weightInGrams":750, | |
| "qnty":62 | |
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| 10 } | |
| 11 | |
| 12 dpp@raptor:~/proj/simply_lift/samples/http_rest$ curl -H "Accept: application/xml" http://localhost:8080/simple6/item/1234 | |
| 13 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> | |
| 14 <item> | |
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| <id>1234</id> | |
| <name>Cat Food</name> | |
| <description>Yummy, tasty cat food</description> | |
| <price>4.25</price> | |
| <taxable>true</taxable> | |
| <weightInGrams>1000</weightInGrams> | |
| <qnty>4</qnty> | |
| 21 | |
| 22 </item> | |
| Note also that /simple6/item/other/1234 does the right thing. This is because the path is 4 | |
| elements long, so it won’t match the first part of the pattern, but does match the second part of the | |
| pattern. | |
| Finally, let’s combine serveJx and it’s DRY helper, prefixJx. | |
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| serveJx[Item] { | |
| "simple7" / "item" prefixJx { | |
| case Item(item) :: Nil Get _ => item | |
| case "other" :: item :: Nil Get _ => | |
| Item.find(item) ?~ "The item you're looking for isn't here" | |
| } | |
| } | |
| 5.4 A complete REST example | |
| The above code gives us the bits and pieces that we can combine into a full fledged REST service. | |
| Let’s do that combination and see what such a service looks like: | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package lib | |
| Listing 5.4: FullRest.scala | |
| 58 | |
| CHAPTER 5. HTTP AND REST | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import model._ | |
| 5 | |
| 6 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 7 import common._ | |
| 8 import http._ | |
| 9 import rest._ | |
| 10 import util._ | |
| 11 import Helpers._ | |
| 12 import json._ | |
| 13 import scala.xml._ | |
| 14 | |
| 15 /** | |
| 16 | |
| * A full REST example | |
| */ | |
| 17 | |
| 18 object FullRest extends RestHelper { | |
| 19 | |
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| // Serve /api/item and friends | |
| serve( "api" / "item" prefix { | |
| // /api/item returns all the items | |
| case Nil JsonGet _ => Item.inventoryItems: JValue | |
| // /api/item/count gets the item count | |
| case "count" :: Nil JsonGet _ => JInt(Item.inventoryItems.length) | |
| // /api/item/item_id gets the specified item (or a 404) | |
| case Item(item) :: Nil JsonGet _ => item: JValue | |
| // /api/item/search/foo or /api/item/search?q=foo | |
| case "search" :: q JsonGet _ => | |
| (for { | |
| searchString <- q ::: S.params("q") | |
| item <- Item.search(searchString) | |
| } yield item).distinct: JValue | |
| // DELETE the item in question | |
| case Item(item) :: Nil JsonDelete _ => | |
| Item.delete(item.id).map(a => a: JValue) | |
| // PUT adds the item if the JSON is parsable | |
| case Nil JsonPut Item(item) -> _ => Item.add(item): JValue | |
| // POST if we find the item, merge the fields from the | |
| // the POST body and update the item | |
| case Item(item) :: Nil JsonPost json -> _ => | |
| Item(mergeJson(item, json)).map(Item.add(_): JValue) | |
| // Wait for a change to the Items | |
| // But do it asynchronously | |
| case "change" :: Nil JsonGet _ => | |
| RestContinuation.async { | |
| satisfyRequest => { | |
| // schedule a "Null" return if there's no other answer | |
| 5.4. A COMPLETE REST EXAMPLE | |
| 59 | |
| // after 110 seconds | |
| Schedule.schedule(() => satisfyRequest(JNull), 110 seconds) | |
| // register for an "onChange" event. When it | |
| // fires, return the changed item as a response | |
| Item.onChange(item => satisfyRequest(item: JValue)) | |
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| }) | |
| 65 | |
| 66 } | |
| } | |
| } | |
| The whole service is JSON only and contained in a single serve block and uses the prefix helper | |
| to define all the requests under /api/item as part of the service. | |
| The first couple of patterns are a re-hash of what we’ve already covered: | |
| // /api/item returns all the items | |
| case Nil JsonGet _ => Item.inventoryItems: JValue | |
| // /api/item/count gets the item count | |
| case "count" :: Nil JsonGet _ => JInt(Item.inventoryItems.length) | |
| // /api/item/item_id gets the specified item (or a 404) | |
| case Item(item) :: Nil JsonGet _ => item: JValue | |
| The next is a search feature at /api/item/search. Using a little Scala library fun, we create a | |
| list of the request path elements that come after the search element and all the query parameters | |
| named q. Based on these, we search for all the Items that match the search term. We wind up with | |
| a List[Item] and we remove duplicates with distinct and finally coerse the List[Item] to | |
| a JValue: | |
| // /api/item/search/foo or /api/item/search?q=foo | |
| case "search" :: q JsonGet _ => | |
| (for { | |
| searchString <- q ::: S.params("q") | |
| item <- Item.search(searchString) | |
| } yield item).distinct: JValue | |
| Next, let’s see how to delete an Item: | |
| // DELETE the item in question | |
| case Item(item) :: Nil JsonDelete _ => | |
| Item.delete(item.id).map(a => a: JValue) | |
| The only real difference is we’re looking for a JsonDelete HTTP request. | |
| Let’s see how we add an Item with a PUT: | |
| // PUT adds the item if the JSON is parsable | |
| case Nil JsonPut Item(item) -> _ => Item.add(item): JValue | |
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| Note the Item(item) -> _ after JsonPut. | |
| (List[String], (JValue, Req)). The List[String] part is simple... | |
| The extraction signature for JsonPut is | |
| it’s a List that | |
| 60 | |
| CHAPTER 5. HTTP AND REST | |
| contains the request path. The second part of the Pair is a Pair itself that contains the JValue and | |
| the underlying Req (in case you need to do something with the request itself). Because there’s | |
| a def unapply(in: | |
| Option[Item] method in the Item singleton, we can ex- | |
| tract (pattern match) the JValue that is built from the PUT request body. This means if the user | |
| PUTs a JSON blob that can be turned into an Item the pattern will match and we’ll evaluate the | |
| right hand side of the case statement which adds the Item to inventory. That’s a big ole dense pile | |
| of information. So, we’ll try it again with POST. | |
| JValue): | |
| 1 | |
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| case Item(item) :: Nil JsonPost json -> _ => | |
| Item(mergeJson(item, json)).map(Item.add(_): JValue) | |
| In this case, we’re match a POST on /api/item/1234 that has some parsable JSON in the POST | |
| body. The mergeJson method takes all the fields in the found Item and replaces them with any | |
| of the fields in the JSON in the POST body. So a POST body of {"qnty": | |
| 123} would replace | |
| the qnty field in the Item. The Item is then added back into the backing store. | |
| Cool. So, we’ve got a variety of GET support in our REST service, a DELETE, PUT and POST. All | |
| using the patterns that RestHelper gives us. | |
| Now we have some fun. | |
| One of the features of Lift’s HTML side is support for Comet (server push via long-polling.) If | |
| the web container supports it, Lift will automatically use asynchronous support. That means that | |
| during a long poll, while no computations are being performed related to the servicing of the | |
| request, no threads will be consumed. This allows lots and lots of open long polling clients. Lift’s | |
| REST support includes asynchronous support. In this case, we’ll demonstrate opening an HTTP | |
| request to /api/item/change and wait for a change to the backing store. The request will be | |
| satisfied with a change to the backing store or a JSON JNull after 110 seconds: | |
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| case "change" :: Nil JsonGet _ => | |
| RestContinuation.async { | |
| satisfyRequest => { | |
| // schedule a "Null" return if there's no other answer | |
| // after 110 seconds | |
| Schedule.schedule(() => satisfyRequest(JNull), 110 seconds) | |
| // register for an "onChange" event. When it | |
| // fires, return the changed item as a response | |
| Item.onChange(item => satisfyRequest(item: JValue)) | |
| } | |
| } | |
| If we receive a GET request to /api/item/change, invoke RestContinuation.async. We | |
| pass a closure that sets up the call. We set up the call by scheduling a JNull to be sent after 110 | |
| seconds. We also register a function which is invoked when the backing store is changed. When | |
| either event (110 seconds elapses or the backing store changes), the functions will be invoked and | |
| they will apply the satifyRequest function which will invoke the continuation and send the | |
| response back to the client. Using this mechanism, you can create long polling services that do not | |
| consume threads on the server. Note too that the satisfyRequest function is fire-once so you | |
| can call it lots of times, but only the first time counts. | |
| 5.5. WRAP UP | |
| 5.5 Wrap Up | |
| 61 | |
| In this chapter, we’ve covered how you create web services in Lift. While there is a lot of implicit | |
| conversion stuff going on under the covers in RestHelper, the resulting code is pretty easy to | |
| read, create, and maintain. At the core, you match an incoming request against a pattern, if the | |
| pattern matches, evaluate the expression on the right hand side of the pattern. | |
| 62 | |
| CHAPTER 5. HTTP AND REST | |
| Chapter 6 | |
| Wiring | |
| Interactive web applications have many interdependent components on a single web page. For | |
| example (and this is the example we’ll use for this chapter), you may have a shopping cart in your | |
| application. The shopping cart will contain items and quantities. As you add/remove items from | |
| the cart, the cart should update, along with the sub-total, the tax, the shipping and the grand total. | |
| Plus, the count of the items in the cart may be displayed on some pages without the cart contents. | |
| Keeping track of all of these dependencies for all the different page layouts is pretty tough work. | |
| When it comes to updating the site, the team must remember where all of the items are and how | |
| to update them and if they get one wrong, the site looks broken. | |
| Lift’s Wiring provides a simple solution to managing complex dependencies on a single page and | |
| on multiple tabs. Lift’s Wiring allows you to declare the formulaic relationships among cells (like a | |
| spreadsheet) and then the user interface components (yes, there can be more than one component) | |
| associated with each cell. Lift will automatically update the dependent user interface components | |
| based on change in the predicates. Lift will do this on initial page render and with each Ajax | |
| or Comet update to the page. Put another way, Wiring is like a spreadsheet and the page will | |
| automatically get updated when any of the predicate values change such that the change results | |
| in a change in the display value. | |
| 6.1 Cells | |
| Like a spreadsheet, Lift’s Wiring is based on Cells. Cells come in three types: ValueCell, Dy- | |
| namicCell, and FuncCell. | |
| A ValueCell contains a value that is entered by a user or depends on some user action. A | |
| ValueCell may represent the items in our shopping cart or the tax rate. | |
| A DynamicCell contains a value that changes every time the cell is accessed. For example, a | |
| random number or the current time. | |
| A FuncCell has a value based on a formula applied to the value or other cells. | |
| Let’s see some code that demonstrates this: | |
| 1 val quantity = ValueCell(0) | |
| 2 val price = ValueCell(1d) | |
| 3 val total = price.lift(_ * quantity) | |
| 63 | |
| 64 | |
| CHAPTER 6. WIRING | |
| We define two ValueCells, one for quantity and the other for price. Next, define the total | |
| by “lifting” the price in a formula that multiplies it by quantity. Let’s see how it works in the | |
| console: | |
| 1 scala> import net.liftweb._ | |
| 2 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 3 | |
| 4 scala> import util._ | |
| 5 import util._ | |
| 6 | |
| 7 scala> val quantity = ValueCell(0) | |
| 8 quantity: net.liftweb.util.ValueCell[Int] = ValueCell(0) | |
| 9 | |
| 10 scala> val price = ValueCell(0d) | |
| 11 price: net.liftweb.util.ValueCell[Double] = ValueCell(0.0) | |
| 12 | |
| 13 scala> val total = price.lift(_ * quantity) | |
| 14 total: net.liftweb.util.Cell[Double] = FuncCell1(ValueCell(0.0),<function1>) | |
| 15 | |
| 16 scala> total.get | |
| 17 res1: Double = 0.0 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 scala> quantity.set(10) | |
| 20 res2: Int = 10 | |
| 21 | |
| 22 scala> price.set(0.5d) | |
| 23 res3: Double = 0.5 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 scala> total.get | |
| 26 res4: Double = 5.0 | |
| Okay... pretty nifty... we can define relationships that are arbitrarily complex between Cells and | |
| they know how to calculate themselves. | |
| 6.2 Hooking it up to the UI | |
| Now that we can declare relationships among cells, how do we associate the value of Cells with | |
| the user interface? | |
| Turns out that it’s pretty simple: | |
| "#total" #> WiringUI.asText(total) | |
| We associate the element with id="total" with a function that displays the value in total. | |
| Here’s the method definition: | |
| /** | |
| * Given a Cell register the | |
| * postPageJavaScript that will update the element with | |
| * a new value. | |
| * | |
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| 6.2. HOOKING IT UP TO THE UI | |
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| * @param cell the cell to associate with | |
| * | |
| * @return a function that will mutate the NodeSeq (an id attribute may be added if | |
| * there's none already defined) | |
| */ | |
| def asText[T](cell: Cell[T]): NodeSeq => NodeSeq = | |
| Huh? that’s a lot of mumbo-jumbo... what’s a postPageJavaScript? | |
| So, here’s the magic of WiringUI: Most web frameworks treat a page rendering as an event in | |
| time. Maybe (in the case of Seaside), there are some side effects of rendering that close over | |
| page rendering state such that when forms are submitted back, you get page state back. Lift | |
| treats a full HTML page render and subsequent Ajax requests on the page as a single event that | |
| has a single scope. This means that RequestVars populated during a page render are available | |
| during subsequent Ajax requests on that page. Part of the state that results in a page render is | |
| the postPageJavaScript which is a bucket of () => JsCmd or a collection of functions that | |
| return JavaScript. Before responding to any HTTP request associated with the page, Lift runs all | |
| these functions and appends the resulting JavaScript to the response sent back to the browser. | |
| HTTP requests associated with the page include the initial page render, subsequent Ajax request | |
| associated with the page and associated Comet (long poll) requests generated by the page. | |
| For each Cell that you wire up to the user interface, Lift captures the id of the DOM node (and | |
| if there’s no id, Lift will assign one) and the current value of the Cell. Lift generates a function | |
| that looks at the current Cell value and if it’s changed, Lift generates JavaScript that updates the | |
| DOM node with the Cell’s current value. | |
| The result is that if an Ajax operation changes the value of a ValueCell, then all the dependent | |
| cells will update and the associated DOM updates will be carried back with the HTTP response. | |
| The asText method creates a | |
| You have a lot of control over the display of the value. | |
| Text(cell.toString). However, WiringUI.apply allows you to associate a function that | |
| converts the Cell’s type T to a NodeSeq. Further, you can control the transition in the browser | |
| with a jsEffect (type signiture (String, Boolean, JsCmd) => JsCmd). There are pre- | |
| build jsEffects based on jQuery including my favorite, fade: | |
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| /** | |
| * Fade out the old value and fade in the new value | |
| * using jQuery fast fade. | |
| */ | |
| def fade: (String, Boolean, JsCmd) => JsCmd = { | |
| (id: String, first: Boolean, cmd: JsCmd) => { | |
| if (first) cmd | |
| else { | |
| val sel = "jQuery('#'+"+id.encJs+")" | |
| Run(sel+".fadeOut('fast', function() {"+ | |
| cmd.toJsCmd+" "+sel+".fadeIn('fast');})") | |
| } | |
| } | |
| } | |
| Which you can use as: | |
| 1 | |
| "#total" #> WiringUI.asText(total, JqWiringSupport.fade) | |
| 66 | |
| CHAPTER 6. WIRING | |
| Now, when the total field updates, the old value will fade out and the new value will fade in... | |
| cool. | |
| 6.3 Shared Shopping | |
| Let’s move onto a real code example. You can find this code at Shop with Me source. | |
| The example is going to be a simple shopping site. There are a bunch of items that you can view. | |
| You have a shopping cart. You can add items to the cart. If you’re viewing the cart in multiple tabs | |
| or browser windows, the cart in all tabs/windows will update when you change the cart. Further, | |
| you can share your cart with someone else and any changes to the cart will be propagated to all | |
| the different browsers sharing the same cart. | |
| The data model is the same that we used in the REST chapter (see 5.2 on page 46). | |
| Let’s look at the shopping cart definition: | |
| Listing 6.1: Cart.scala | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package lib | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import model.Item | |
| 5 | |
| 6 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 7 import util._ | |
| 8 | |
| 9 /** | |
| 10 | |
| * The shopping cart | |
| */ | |
| 11 | |
| 12 class Cart { | |
| 13 | |
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| /** | |
| * The contents of the cart | |
| */ | |
| val contents = ValueCell[Vector[CartItem]](Vector()) | |
| /** | |
| * The subtotal | |
| */ | |
| val subtotal = contents.lift(_.foldLeft(zero)(_ + | |
| _.qMult(_.price))) | |
| /** | |
| * The taxable subtotal | |
| */ | |
| val taxableSubtotal = contents.lift(_.filter(_.taxable). | |
| foldLeft(zero)(_ + | |
| _.qMult(_.price))) | |
| /** | |
| * The current tax rate | |
| */ | |
| val taxRate = ValueCell(BigDecimal("0.07")) | |
| 6.3. SHARED SHOPPING | |
| 67 | |
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| /** | |
| * The computed tax | |
| */ | |
| val tax = taxableSubtotal.lift(taxRate)(_ * _) | |
| /** | |
| * The total | |
| */ | |
| val total = subtotal.lift(tax)(_ + _) | |
| /** | |
| * The weight of the cart | |
| */ | |
| val weight = contents.lift(_.foldLeft(zero)(_ + | |
| _.qMult(_.weightInGrams))) | |
| // Helper methods | |
| /** | |
| * A nice constant zero | |
| */ | |
| def zero = BigDecimal(0) | |
| /** | |
| * Add an item to the cart. If it's already in the cart, | |
| * then increment the quantity | |
| */ | |
| def addItem(item: Item) { | |
| contents.atomicUpdate(v => v.find(_.item == item) match { | |
| case Some(ci) => v.map(ci => ci.copy(qnty = ci.qnty + | |
| case _ => v :+ CartItem(item, 1) | |
| (if (ci.item == item) 1 else 0))) | |
| }) | |
| } | |
| /** | |
| * Set the item quantity. If zero or negative, remove | |
| */ | |
| def setItemCnt(item: Item, qnty: Int) { | |
| if (qnty <= 0) removeItem(item) | |
| else contents.atomicUpdate(v => v.find(_.item == item) match { | |
| case Some(ci) => v.map(ci => ci.copy(qnty = | |
| case _ => v :+ CartItem(item, qnty) | |
| (if (ci.item == item) qnty | |
| else ci.qnty))) | |
| }) | |
| } | |
| /** | |
| * Removes an item from the cart | |
| */ | |
| def removeItem(item: Item) { | |
| contents.atomicUpdate(_.filterNot(_.item == item)) | |
| CHAPTER 6. WIRING | |
| 68 | |
| 89 | |
| 90 | |
| 91 } | |
| } | |
| 92 | |
| 93 /** | |
| 94 | |
| * An item in the cart | |
| */ | |
| 95 | |
| 96 case class CartItem(item: Item, qnty: Int, | |
| id: String = Helpers.nextFuncName) { | |
| /** | |
| * Multiply the quantity times some calculation on the | |
| * contained Item (e.g., getting its weight) | |
| */ | |
| def qMult(f: Item => BigDecimal): BigDecimal = f(item) * qnty | |
| 97 | |
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| 99 | |
| 100 | |
| 101 | |
| 102 | |
| 103 | |
| 104 } | |
| 105 | |
| 106 /** | |
| 107 | |
| * The CartItem companion object | |
| */ | |
| 108 | |
| 109 object CartItem { | |
| implicit def cartItemToItem(in: CartItem): Item = in.item | |
| 110 | |
| 111 } | |
| Looks pretty straight forward. You’ve got 2 ValueCells, the cart contents and the tax rate. You’ve | |
| gota bunch of calculated Cells. At the bottom of the Cart class definition are some helper meth- | |
| ods that allow you to add, remove and update cart contents. We also define the CartItem case | |
| class that contains the Item and the qnty (quantity). | |
| So far, so good. Next, let’s look at the way we display all the items: | |
| Listing 6.2: AllItemsPage.scala | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package snippet | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import model.Item | |
| 5 import comet._ | |
| 6 | |
| 7 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 8 import http._ | |
| 9 import sitemap._ | |
| 10 import util._ | |
| 11 import Helpers._ | |
| 12 | |
| 13 object AllItemsPage { | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| // define the menu item for the page that | |
| // will display all items | |
| lazy val menu = Menu.i("Items") / "item" >> | |
| Loc.Snippet("Items", render) | |
| // display the items | |
| def render = | |
| "tbody *" #> renderItems(Item.inventoryItems) | |
| 6.3. SHARED SHOPPING | |
| 69 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| 31 | |
| 32 } | |
| // for a list of items, display those items | |
| def renderItems(in: Seq[Item]) = | |
| "tr" #> in.map(item => { | |
| "a *" #> item.name & | |
| "a [href]" #> AnItemPage.menu.calcHref(item) & | |
| "@description *" #> item.description & | |
| "@price *" #> item.price.toString & | |
| "@add_to_cart [onclick]" #> | |
| SHtml.ajaxInvoke(() => TheCart.addItem(item))}) | |
| We define our SiteMap entry: | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| lazy val menu = Menu.i("Items") / "item" >> | |
| Loc.Snippet("Items", render) | |
| So, when the user browses to /item, they’re presented with all the items in inventory. | |
| The template for displaying Items looks like: | |
| 1 <table class="lift:Items"> | |
| Listing 6.3: items.html | |
| <tbody> | |
| <tr> | |
| <td name="name"><a href="#">Name</a></td> | |
| <td name="description">Desc</td> | |
| <td name="price">$50.00</td> | |
| <td><button name="add_to_cart">Add to Cart</button></td> | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| </tr> | |
| </tbody> | |
| 9 | |
| 10 </table> | |
| Next, let’s look at the code for displaying an Item: | |
| Listing 6.4: AnItemPage.scala | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package snippet | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import model.Item | |
| 5 import comet._ | |
| 6 | |
| 7 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 8 import util._ | |
| 9 import Helpers._ | |
| 10 import http._ | |
| 11 import sitemap._ | |
| 12 | |
| 13 import scala.xml.Text | |
| 14 | |
| 15 object AnItemPage { | |
| 16 | |
| // create a parameterized page | |
| 70 | |
| CHAPTER 6. WIRING | |
| def menu = Menu.param[Item]("Item", Loc.LinkText(i => Text(i.name)), | |
| Item.find _, _.id) / "item" / * | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 } | |
| 20 | |
| 21 class AnItemPage(item: Item) { | |
| def render = "@name *" #> item.name & | |
| "@description *" #> item.description & | |
| "@price *" #> item.price.toString & | |
| "@add_to_cart [onclick]" #> SHtml.ajaxInvoke(() => TheCart.addItem(item)) | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 } | |
| This defines what happens when the user goes to /item/1234. This is more “controller-like” | |
| than most of the other Lift code. Let’s look at the menu item definition: | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| def menu = Menu.param[Item]("Item", Loc.LinkText(i => Text(i.name)), | |
| Item.find _, _.id) / "item" / * | |
| We are defining a parameterized Menu entry. The parameter type is Item. That means that the | |
| page will display an Item and that we must be able to calculate the Item based on the request. | |
| "Item" is the name of the menu entry. | |
| Loc.LinkText(i => Text(i.name)) takes an item and generates the display text for the | |
| menu entry. | |
| Item.find _ is a function that takes a String and converts it to Box[Item]. It looks up the | |
| Item based on the parameter in the request that we’re interested in. | |
| _.id is a function (Item => String) that takes an Item and returns a String that represents | |
| how to build a URL that represents the Item page. This is used by "a [href]" #> AnItem- | |
| Page.menu.calcHref(item) to convert an Item to the HREF for the page that display the | |
| Item. | |
| Finally, the URL is defined by / "item" / * which is pretty much what it looks like. It’ll match | |
| an incoming request of the form /item/xxx and xxx is passed to the String => Box[Item] | |
| function to determine the Item associated with the URL. | |
| So, we can display all the items. Navigate from all the items to a single item. Each item has | |
| a button that allows you to add the Item to the shopping cart. The Item is added to the | |
| cart with this code: SHtml.ajaxInvoke(() => TheCart.addItem(item))}). The The- | |
| Cart.addItem(item) can be called from anywhere in the application without regard for what | |
| needs to be updated when the cart is changed. | |
| Let’s look at how the cart is displayed and managed: | |
| Listing 6.5: CometCart.scala | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package comet | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import lib._ | |
| 5 | |
| 6 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 7 import common._ | |
| 8 import http._ | |
| 6.3. SHARED SHOPPING | |
| 9 import util._ | |
| 10 import js._ | |
| 11 import js.jquery._ | |
| 12 import JsCmds._ | |
| 13 import scala.xml.NodeSeq | |
| 14 import Helpers._ | |
| 71 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 /** | |
| 17 | |
| * What's the current cart for this session | |
| */ | |
| 18 | |
| 19 object TheCart extends SessionVar(new Cart()) | |
| 20 | |
| 21 /** | |
| 22 | |
| * The CometCart is the CometActor the represents the shopping cart | |
| */ | |
| 23 | |
| 24 class CometCart extends CometActor { | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| 31 | |
| 32 | |
| 33 | |
| 34 | |
| 35 | |
| 36 | |
| 37 | |
| 38 | |
| 39 | |
| 40 | |
| 41 | |
| 42 | |
| 43 | |
| 44 | |
| 45 | |
| 46 | |
| 47 | |
| 48 | |
| 49 | |
| 50 | |
| 51 | |
| 52 | |
| 53 | |
| 54 | |
| 55 | |
| 56 | |
| 57 | |
| 58 | |
| 59 | |
| 60 | |
| 61 | |
| 62 | |
| // our current cart | |
| private var cart = TheCart.get | |
| /** | |
| * Draw yourself | |
| */ | |
| def render = { | |
| "#contents" #> ( | |
| "tbody" #> | |
| Helpers.findOrCreateId(id => // make sure tbody has an id | |
| // when the cart contents updates | |
| WiringUI.history(cart.contents) { | |
| (old, nw, ns) => { | |
| // capture the tr part of the template | |
| val theTR = ("tr ^^" #> "**")(ns) | |
| def ciToId(ci: CartItem): String = ci.id + "_" + ci.qnty | |
| // build a row out of a cart item | |
| def html(ci: CartItem): NodeSeq = { | |
| ("tr [id]" #> ciToId(ci) & | |
| "@name *" #> ci.name & | |
| "@qnty *" #> SHtml. | |
| ajaxText(ci.qnty.toString, | |
| s => { | |
| TheCart. | |
| setItemCnt(ci, | |
| Helpers.toInt(s)) | |
| }, "style" -> "width: 20px;") & | |
| "@del [onclick]" #> SHtml. | |
| ajaxInvoke(() => TheCart.removeItem(ci)))(theTR) | |
| } | |
| // calculate the delta between the lists and | |
| // based on the deltas, emit the current jQuery | |
| // stuff to update the display | |
| JqWiringSupport.calculateDeltas(old, nw, id)(ciToId _, html _) | |
| } | |
| })) & | |
| "#subtotal" #> WiringUI.asText(cart.subtotal) & // display the subttotal | |
| "#tax" #> WiringUI.asText(cart.tax) & // display the tax | |
| "#total" #> WiringUI.asText(cart.total) // display the total | |
| CHAPTER 6. WIRING | |
| 72 | |
| } | |
| 63 | |
| 64 | |
| 65 | |
| 66 | |
| 67 | |
| 68 | |
| 69 | |
| 70 | |
| 71 | |
| 72 | |
| 73 | |
| 74 | |
| 75 | |
| 76 | |
| 77 | |
| 78 | |
| 79 | |
| 80 | |
| 81 | |
| 82 | |
| 83 | |
| 84 | |
| 85 | |
| 86 | |
| 87 | |
| 88 | |
| 89 } | |
| /** | |
| * Process messages from external sources | |
| */ | |
| override def lowPriority = { | |
| // if someone sends us a new cart | |
| case SetNewCart(newCart) => { | |
| // unregister from the old cart | |
| unregisterFromAllDepenencies() | |
| // remove all the dependencies for the old cart | |
| // from the postPageJavaScript | |
| theSession.clearPostPageJavaScriptForThisPage() | |
| // set the new cart | |
| cart = newCart | |
| // do a full reRender including the fixed render piece | |
| reRender(true) | |
| } | |
| } | |
| 90 | |
| 91 /** | |
| 92 | |
| * Set a new cart for the CometCart | |
| */ | |
| 93 | |
| 94 case class SetNewCart(cart: Cart) | |
| Let’s walk through the code: | |
| 1 object TheCart extends SessionVar(new Cart()) | |
| We define a SessionVar that holds the shopping cart. | |
| Our CometActor captures the the current cart from the SessionVar: | |
| 1 class CometCart extends CometActor { | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| // our current cart | |
| private var cart = TheCart.get | |
| Next, let’s see how to draw the cart.total: | |
| 1 "#total" #> WiringUI.asText(cart.total) // display the total | |
| That’s pretty much the way it should be. | |
| Let’s look at the gnarly piece... how to draw or redraw the cart contents based on changes and | |
| only send the JavaScript the will manipulate the browser DOM to add or remove items from the | |
| 6.3. SHARED SHOPPING | |
| 73 | |
| cart: | |
| 1 "#contents" #> ( | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| 13 | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| 31 | |
| 32 | |
| "tbody" #> | |
| Helpers.findOrCreateId(id => // make sure tbody has an id | |
| // when the cart contents updates | |
| WiringUI.history(cart.contents) { | |
| (old, nw, ns) => { | |
| // capture the tr part of the template | |
| val theTR = ("tr ^^" #> "**")(ns) | |
| def ciToId(ci: CartItem): String = ci.id + "_" + ci.qnty | |
| // build a row out of a cart item | |
| def html(ci: CartItem): NodeSeq = { | |
| ("tr [id]" #> ciToId(ci) & | |
| "@name *" #> ci.name & | |
| "@qnty *" #> SHtml. | |
| ajaxText(ci.qnty.toString, | |
| s => { | |
| TheCart. | |
| setItemCnt(ci, | |
| Helpers.toInt(s)) | |
| }, "style" -> "width: 20px;") & | |
| "@del [onclick]" #> SHtml. | |
| ajaxInvoke(() => TheCart.removeItem(ci)))(theTR) | |
| } | |
| // calculate the delta between the lists and | |
| // based on the deltas, emit the current jQuery | |
| // stuff to update the display | |
| JqWiringSupport.calculateDeltas(old, nw, id)(ciToId _, html _) | |
| } | |
| })) | |
| First, we make sure we know the id of | |
| Helpers.findOrCreateId(id => | |
| the <tbody> element: | |
| "tbody" #> | |
| Next, wire the CometCart up to the cart.contents such that when the contents change, we | |
| get the old value (old), the new value (nw) and the memoized NodeSeq (the template used to do | |
| the rendering): WiringUI.history(cart.contents) { (old, nw, ns) => { | |
| Capture the part of the template associated with the <tr> element in the theTR variable: val | |
| theTR = ("tr ^^" #> "**")(ns) | |
| Based on a CartItem, return a stable id for the DOM node the represents the CartItem: | |
| The html method converts a CartItem to a NodeSeq including Ajax controls for changing quan- | |
| tity and removing the item from the cart. | |
| Finally, based on the deltas between the old list of CartItem and the new list, generate the | |
| JavaScript that will manipulate the DOM by inserting and removing the appropriate DOM ele- | |
| ments: JqWiringSupport.calculateDeltas(old, nw, id)(ciToId _, html _) | |
| Next, let’s see how to change the cart. If we want to share the shopping cart between two browser | |
| 74 | |
| CHAPTER 6. WIRING | |
| sessions... two people shopping at their browser, but putting things in a single cart, we need a | |
| way to change the cart. We process the SetNewCart message to CometCart: | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| 13 | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| // if someone sends us a new cart | |
| case SetNewCart(newCart) => { | |
| // unregister from the old cart | |
| unregisterFromAllDepenencies() | |
| // remove all the dependencies for the old cart | |
| // from the postPageJavaScript | |
| theSession.clearPostPageJavaScriptForThisPage() | |
| // set the new cart | |
| cart = newCart | |
| // do a full reRender including the fixed render piece | |
| reRender(true) | |
| } | |
| There are two lines | |
| Comet | |
| Lift’s | |
| sion.clearPostPageJavaScriptForThisPage() | |
| in the above code that hint at how Wiring interacts with | |
| theSes- | |
| unregisterFromAllDepenencies() | |
| support: | |
| and | |
| When a CometActor depends on something in WiringUI, Lift generates a weak reference be- | |
| tween the Cell and the CometActor. When the Cell changes value, it pokes the CometActor. | |
| The CometActor then updates the browser’s screen real estate associated with changes to Cells. | |
| unregisterFromAllDepenencies() disconnects the CometActor from the Cells. theSes- | |
| sion.clearPostPageJavaScriptForThisPage() removes all the postPageJavaScript | |
| associated with the CometActor. Because the CometActor is not associated with a single page, | |
| but can appear on many pages, it has its own postPageJavaScript context. | |
| The final piece of the puzzle is how we share a Cart across sessions. From the UI perspective, | |
| here’s how we display the modal dialog when the user presses the “Share Cart” button: | |
| Listing 6.6: Link.scala | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package snippet | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import model._ | |
| 5 import comet._ | |
| 6 import lib._ | |
| 7 | |
| 8 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 9 import http._ | |
| 10 import util.Helpers._ | |
| 11 import js._ | |
| 12 import JsCmds._ | |
| 13 import js.jquery.JqJsCmds._ | |
| 14 | |
| 15 class Link { | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| // open a modal dialog based on the _share_link.html template | |
| def request = "* [onclick]" #> SHtml.ajaxInvoke(() => { | |
| (for { | |
| 6.3. SHARED SHOPPING | |
| 75 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| template <- TemplateFinder.findAnyTemplate(List("_share_link")) | |
| } yield ModalDialog(template)) openOr Noop | |
| }) | |
| // close the modal dialog | |
| def close = "* [onclick]" #> SHtml.ajaxInvoke(() => Unblock) | |
| // Generate the href and link for sharing | |
| def generate = { | |
| val s = ShareCart.generateLink(TheCart) | |
| "a [href]" #> s & "a *" #> s | |
| } | |
| 31 | |
| 32 } | |
| Basically, we use jQuery’s ModalDialog plugin to put a dialog up that contains a link generated | |
| by the ShareCart object. Let’s look at ShareCart.scala: | |
| Listing 6.7: ShareCart.scala | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package lib | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import comet._ | |
| 5 | |
| 6 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 7 import common._ | |
| 8 import http._ | |
| 9 import rest.RestHelper | |
| 10 import util._ | |
| 11 import Helpers._ | |
| 12 | |
| 13 // it's a RestHelper | |
| 14 object ShareCart extends RestHelper { | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| 31 | |
| 32 | |
| 33 | |
| 34 | |
| // private state | |
| private var carts: Map[String, (Long, Cart)] = Map() | |
| // given a Cart, generate a unique sharing code | |
| def codeForCart(cart: Cart): String = synchronized { | |
| val ret = Helpers.randomString(12) | |
| carts += ret -> (10.minutes.later.millis -> cart) | |
| ret | |
| } | |
| /** | |
| * Generate the right link to this cart | |
| */ | |
| def generateLink(cart: Cart): String = { | |
| S.hostAndPath + "/co_shop/"+codeForCart(cart) | |
| } | |
| // An extractor that converts a String to a Cart, if | |
| 76 | |
| CHAPTER 6. WIRING | |
| // possible | |
| def unapply(code: String): Option[Cart] = synchronized { | |
| carts.get(code).map(_._2) | |
| } | |
| // remove any carts that are 10+ minutes old | |
| private def cleanup() { | |
| val now = Helpers.millis | |
| synchronized{ | |
| carts = carts.filter{ | |
| case (_, (time, _)) => time > now | |
| } | |
| } | |
| Schedule.schedule(() => cleanup(), 5 seconds) | |
| } | |
| // clean up every 5 seconds | |
| cleanup() | |
| // the REST part of the code | |
| serve { | |
| // match the incoming URL | |
| case "co_shop" :: ShareCart(cart) :: Nil Get _ => { | |
| // set the cart | |
| TheCart.set(cart) | |
| // send the SetNewCart message to the CometCart | |
| S.session.foreach( | |
| _.sendCometActorMessage("CometCart", Empty, | |
| SetNewCart(cart))) | |
| // redirect the browser to / | |
| RedirectResponse("/") | |
| } | |
| } | |
| 35 | |
| 36 | |
| 37 | |
| 38 | |
| 39 | |
| 40 | |
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| 63 | |
| 64 | |
| 65 | |
| 66 | |
| 67 | |
| 68 | |
| 69 | |
| 70 } | |
| The code manages the association between random IDs and Carts. If the user browses to /co_- | |
| shop/share_cart_id, ShareCart will set TheCart to the shared Cart and send a SetNew- | |
| Cart message to the CometCart instance associated with the session. | |
| 6.4 Wrap up | |
| In this chapter we’ve seen how Lift’s Wiring can be used to create complex inter-relationships | |
| among values and then surface those relationships in the web user interface. Wiring can be used | |
| with Ajax or Comet. Wiring makes it simple to build complex web pages that are user friendly | |
| and easy to maintain. | |
| Chapter 7 | |
| Core Concepts | |
| 77 | |
| 78 | |
| 7.1 Snippets | |
| CHAPTER 7. CORE CONCEPTS | |
| Lift is built on the Scala programming language. Scala is a hybrid of Functional and Object Ori- | |
| ented. Two core principles of functional programming languages are immutability and transfor- | |
| mation. | |
| Immutability means that once a data structure is instantiated, it will not change for its life. More | |
| concretely, once you instantiate an object, you can freely pass the object around and the object will | |
| always return the same values for all its methods. Java’s String class is immutable. Python | |
| requires immutable classes as indexes to dictionaries. | |
| Immutability is also very powerful for | |
| multithreaded applications because you can pass references to immutable objects across thread | |
| boundaries without having to worry about locking or synchronization because you are guaran- | |
| teed that the objects will not change state. | |
| 7.1.1 Snippet NodeSeq => NodeSeq | |
| Transformation provides an alternative to “writing to a stream” for composing web pages. Rather | |
| than having tags that cause characters to be streamed as part of the response, Lift loads the view | |
| and for each “snippet” encountered in the view, Lift transforms just the markup associated with | |
| the snippet invocation into a new set of HTML. | |
| Let’s make it more concrete, here’s some markup: | |
| 1 <span class="foo lift:WhatTime">The time is <span id="current_time">currentTime</span></span> | |
| And the associated snippet: | |
| 1 object WhatTime { | |
| def render = "#current_time" #> (new Date).toString | |
| 2 | |
| 3 } | |
| The resulting markup will look like: | |
| 1 <span class="foo">The time is Mon Dec 06 21:01:36 PST 2010</span> | |
| Let’s walk through how this works. First, the class attribute in the <span> has two classes, foo | |
| and lift:WhatTime. Any class attribute that starts with lift: indicates a snippet invocation. | |
| A snippet is a function that transforms HTML to HTML, or in Scala, NodeSeq => NodeSeq. | |
| Lift looks up the snippet named WhatTime (See Section 23.1) which in this case resolves to a | |
| singleton and invokes the render method. The render method returns a NodeSeq => NodeSeq | |
| built using Lift’s CSS Selector Transforms (See Section 7.10). The parameter to the function is the | |
| Element that caused the snippet invocation with the actual snippet invocation removed from the | |
| class attribute: | |
| 1 <span class="foo">The time is <span id="current_time">currentTime</span></span> | |
| The function is then applied and the resulting NodeSeq is inserted in the page where the origi- | |
| nal Element was. Because the page is composed of immutable XML objects, we can transform | |
| 7.1. SNIPPETS | |
| 79 | |
| NodeSeq => NodeSeq and not worry about anything getting changed out from under us. We | |
| also know that we’ve got valid markup through the entire page transformation process. | |
| Further, retaining the page as a well formed XML document allows certain tags to be put in the | |
| <head> tag and other tags to be inserted just before the close of the </body> tag (See Section | |
| 7.17). | |
| But the simplicity of the transform is simulateously easy to understand and very powerful. | |
| 7.1.2 Snippet instances | |
| The snippet could also be defined as: | |
| 1 class WhatTime { | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| private var x = 0 | |
| def render = { | |
| x += 1 | |
| "#current_time" #> ((new Date).toString + " and you've seen this message "+x+" times) | |
| } | |
| 7 | |
| 8 } | |
| 7.1.3 Multiple methods on a snippet class | |
| 7.1.4 | |
| Inter-snippet communication | |
| 7.1.5 Recursive Snippets | |
| 7.1.6 Snippet parameters | |
| 80 | |
| 7.2 Box/Option | |
| CHAPTER 7. CORE CONCEPTS | |
| Scala has a ton of nice features. One of the features that I was slow to adopt, until Burak Emir | |
| gently reminded me a bunch of times, is "Options". Read on about Options, Boxes, and how Lift | |
| makes good use of them to make clean, error resistant code. If you come from an imperative (Java, | |
| Ruby) background, you’ll probably recognize the following code: | |
| 1 x = someOperation | |
| 2 if !x.nil? | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| y = someOtherOperation | |
| if !y.nil? | |
| doSomething(x,y) return "it worked" | |
| end | |
| 6 | |
| 7 end | |
| 8 return "it failed" | |
| Okay, so that’s pseudo-code, but there are tons of operation, guard, operation, guard, blah blah | |
| constructs. | |
| Further, null/nil are passed around as failures. This is especially bad when it’s null, but it’s pretty | |
| bad when it’s nil because it’s not clear to the consumer of the API that there can be a "call failed" | |
| return value. | |
| In Java, null is a non-object. It has no methods. It is the exception to the statically typed rule | |
| (null has no class, but any reference of any class can be set to null.) Invoking a method on | |
| null has one and only one result: an exception is thrown. null is often returned from meth- | |
| ods as a flag indicating that the method ran successfully, but yielded no meaningful value. For | |
| example, CardHolder.findByCreditCardNumber("2222222222") In fact, the guy who in- | |
| vented null called it a billion dollar mistake. | |
| Ruby has nil which is marginally better than null. nil is a real, singleton object. There’s only | |
| one instance of nil in the whole system. It has methods. It is a subclass of Object. Object has | |
| a method called "nil?" which returns false, except the nil singleton overrides this method to | |
| return true. nil is returned much like null in Java. It’s the "no valid answer" answer. | |
| Scala does something different. | |
| There’s an abstract class, called Option. Options are strongly typed. They are declared Op- | |
| tion[T]. This means an Option can be of any type, but once its type is defined, it does not | |
| change. There are two subclasses of Option: Some and None. None is a singleton (like nil). | |
| Some is a container around the actual answer. So, you might have a method that looks like: | |
| 1 def findUser(name: String): Option[User] = { | |
| val query = buildQuery(name) | |
| val resultSet = performQuery(query) | |
| val retVal = if (resultSet.next) Some(createUser(resultSet)) else None | |
| resultSet.close | |
| retVal | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 } | |
| Some, you’ve got a findUser method that returns either Some(User) or None. So far, it doesn’t | |
| look a lot different than our example above. So, to confuse everyone, I’m going to talk about | |
| collections for a minute. | |
| 7.2. BOX/OPTION | |
| 81 | |
| A really nice thing in Scala (yes, Ruby has this too) is rich list operations. Rather than creating a | |
| counter and pulling list (array) elements out one by one, you write a little function and pass that | |
| function to the list. The list calls the function with each element and returns a new list with the | |
| values returned from each call. It’s easier to see it in code: | |
| 1 scala> List(1,2,3).map(x => x * 2) | |
| 2 line0: scala.List[scala.Int] = List(2,4,6) | |
| The above code multiplies each list item by two and "map" returns the resulting list. Oh, and you | |
| can be more terse, if you want: | |
| 1 scala> List(1,2,3).map(_ * 2) | |
| 2 line2: scala.List[scala.Int] = List(2,4,6) | |
| You can nest map operations: | |
| 1 scala> List(1,2,3).map(x => List(4,5,6).map(y => x * y)) | |
| 2 line13: scala.List[scala.List[scala.Int]] = List(List(4,5,6),List(8,10,12),List(12,15,18)) | |
| And, you can "flatten" the inner list: | |
| 1 scala> List(1,2,3).flatMap(x => List(4,5,6).map(y => x * y)) | |
| 2 line14: scala.List[scala.Int] = List(4,5,6,8,10,12,12,15,18) | |
| Finally, you can "filter" only the even numbers from the first list: | |
| 1 scala> List(1,2,3).filter(_ % 2 == 0). flatMap(x => List(4,5,6).map(y => x * y)) | |
| 2 line16: scala.List[scala.Int] = List(8,10,12) | |
| But, as you can see, the map/flatMap/filter stuff gets pretty verbose. Scala introduced a "for" | |
| comprehension to make the code more readable: | |
| 1 scala> for { | |
| 2 | |
| x <- List(1,2,3) if x % 2 == 0 | |
| y <- List(4,5,6)} yield x * y | |
| 3 | |
| 4 res0: List[Int] = List(8, 10, 12) | |
| Okay, but what does this have to do with Option[T]? | |
| Turns out that Option implements map, flatMap, and filter (the methods necessary for the | |
| Scala compiler to use in the ’for’ comprehension). Just as a side note, when I first encountered | |
| the phrase "’for’ comprehension", I got scared. I’ve been doing programming for years and never | |
| heard of a "comprenhension" let alone a ’for’ one. Turns out, that there’s nothing fancy going on, | |
| but "’for’ comprehension" is just a term of art for the above construct. | |
| So, the cool thing is that you can use this construct very effectively. The first example is simple: | |
| 1 scala> for {x <- Some(3); y <- Some(4)} yield x * y | |
| 2 res1: Option[Int] = Some(12) | |
| "That’s nice, you just wrote a lot of code to multiply 3 by 4." | |
| 82 | |
| CHAPTER 7. CORE CONCEPTS | |
| Let’s see what happens if we have a "None" in there: | |
| 1 scala> val yOpt: Option[Int] = None | |
| 2 yOpt: Option[Int] = None | |
| 3 scala> for {x <- Some(3); y <- yOpt} yield x * y | |
| 4 res3: Option[Int] = None | |
| So, we get a "None" back. How do we turn this into a default value? | |
| 1 scala> (for {x <- Some(3); y <- yOpt} yield x * y) getOrElse -1 | |
| 2 res4: Int = -1 | |
| 1 scala> (for {x <- Some(3); y <- Some(4)} yield x * y) getOrElse -1 | |
| 2 res5: Int = 12 | |
| Note that the "getOrElse" code is "passed by name". Put another way, that code is only executed | |
| if the "else" clause is valid. | |
| Lift has an analogous construct called Box. | |
| A Box can be Full or not. A non-Full Box can be the Empty singleton or a Failure. A Fail- | |
| ure carries around information about why the Box contains no value. | |
| Failure is very helpful because you can carry around information to display an error... an HTTP | |
| response code, a message, what have you. | |
| In Lift, I put this all together in the following way: | |
| • methods that return request parameters return Box[String] | |
| • finder methods on models (not find all, just the ones that return a single instance) return | |
| Box[Model] | |
| • any method that would have returned a null if I was writing in Java returns a Box[T] in Lift | |
| That means you get code that looks like: | |
| 1 scala> for {id <- S.param("id") ?~ "id param missing" | |
| 2 u <- getUser(id) ?~ "User not found" | |
| 3 } yield u.toXml | |
| 4 res6: net.liftweb.common.Box[scala.xml.Elem] = Failure(id param missing,Empty,Empty) | |
| There’s no explicit guard/test to see if the "id" parameter was passed in and there’s no explicit | |
| test to see if the user was found. | |
| Note also that this code is completely type-safe. While there was no explicit type declarations, the | |
| compiler was able to figure out what types the various objects were. | |
| So, let’s look at the code inside a REST handler: | |
| 1 serve { | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| case "user" :: "info" :: _ XmlGet _ => | |
| for { | |
| 7.2. BOX/OPTION | |
| 83 | |
| id <- S.param("id") ?~ "id param missing" ~> 401 | |
| u <- User.find(id) ?~ "User not found" | |
| } yield u.toXml | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 } | |
| If the id parameter is missing, present a nice error message and return a 401 (okay... this is ran- | |
| dom, but you get the point). And by default, if the user isn’t found, return a 404 with the error | |
| that the user isn’t found. | |
| Here’s what it looks like using wget: | |
| 1 dpp@bison:~/lift_sbt_prototype$ wget http://localhost:8080/user/info.xml | |
| 2 --2010-06-01 15:07:27-- http://localhost:8080/user/info.xml | |
| 3 Resolving localhost... ::1, 127.0.0.1 | |
| 4 Connecting to localhost|::1|:8080... connected. | |
| 5 HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 401 Unauthorized | |
| 6 Authorization failed. | |
| 7 | |
| 8 dpp@bison:~/lift_sbt_prototype$ wget http://localhost:8080/user/info.xml?id=2 | |
| 9 --2010-06-01 15:07:44-- http://localhost:8080/user/info.xml?id=2 | |
| 10 Resolving localhost... ::1, 127.0.0.1 | |
| 11 Connecting to localhost|::1|:8080... connected. | |
| 12 HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 404 Not Found | |
| 13 2010-06-01 15:07:44 ERROR 404: Not Found. | |
| 14 | |
| 15 dpp@bison:~/lift_sbt_prototype$ wget http://localhost:8080/user/info.xml?id=1 | |
| 16 --2010-06-01 15:24:12-- http://localhost:8080/user/info.xml?id=1 | |
| 17 Resolving localhost... ::1, 127.0.0.1 | |
| 18 Connecting to localhost|::1|:8080... connected. | |
| 19 HTTP request sent, awaiting response... | |
| 20 200 OK Length: 274 [text/xml] Saving to: `info.xml?id=1' | |
| 21 | |
| 22 dpp@bison:~/lift_sbt_prototype$ cat info.xml\?id\=1 | |
| 23 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> | |
| <User id="1" firstName="Elwood" ... validated="true" superUser="false"> | |
| 24 | |
| 25 </User> | |
| One more thing about Box and Option... they lead to less complex, more maintainable code. | |
| Even if you didn’t know anything about Scala or Lift, you can read the XML serving code and the | |
| console exchange and figure out what happened any why it happened. This is a lot more readable | |
| than deeply nested if statements. And if it’s readable, it’s maintainable. | |
| I hope this is an understandable introduction to Scala’s Option class and ’for’ comprehension | |
| and how Lift makes use of these tools. | |
| CHAPTER 7. CORE CONCEPTS | |
| 84 | |
| 7.3 S/SHtml | |
| 7.4 Boot | |
| 7.5 SiteMap | |
| 7.6 GUIDs | |
| A core concept in Lift is GUIDs. GUIDs are globally unique identifiers used to associate some- | |
| thing in the browser with a function on the server. GUIDs make Lift more secure because they | |
| make replay attacks very difficult and GUIDs make it easier to develop complex, stateful, interac- | |
| tive applications because the developer spends more time on business logic and less time on the | |
| plumbing of it. | |
| 7.6.1 How GUIDs are generated | |
| 7.6.2 Where they are used | |
| 7.7 LiftRules | |
| 7.8 SessionVars and RequestVars | |
| 7.9 Helpers | |
| 7.10. CSS SELECTOR TRANSFORMS | |
| 85 | |
| 7.10 CSS Selector Transforms | |
| Lift 2.2-M1 introduced a new mechanism for transforming XHTML: CSS Selector Transforms | |
| (CssBindFunc). The new mechanism provides a subset of CSS selectors that can be used to | |
| transform NodeSeq => NodeSeq. Examples of this feature include: | |
| • "#name" #> userName // replace the element with the id name with the variable user- | |
| Name | |
| • "#chat_lines *" #> listOfChats // replace the content of chat_lines with each ele- | |
| ment of listOfChats | |
| • ".pretty *" #> <b>Unicorn</b> // each element with CSS class pretty, replace con- | |
| tent with <b>Unicorn</b> | |
| • "dog=cat [href]" #> "http://dogscape.com" // set the href attribute of all ele- | |
| ments with the dog attribute set to cat | |
| • "#name" #> userName & "#age" #> userAge // set name to userName and age to | |
| userAge | |
| • "li *" #> userName & "li [class]" #> "foo" // set the contents of all <li> ele- | |
| ment with username and class to foo | |
| • "li *" #> userName & "li [class+]" #> "foo" // set the contents of all <li> el- | |
| ement with username and append foo to the class | |
| • "*" #> <span>{userName}</span> | |
| // | |
| set | |
| all | |
| the | |
| elements | |
| to | |
| <span>{userName}</span> | |
| CSS Selector Transforms extends NodeSeq => NodeSeq... they are quite literally functions and | |
| can be passes as a parameter to anything expecting NodeSeq => NodeSeq or returned as a result | |
| for any method that returns NodeSeq => NodeSeq. | |
| Let’s look at each of the pieces to see how they work. | |
| First, you must import net.liftweb.util._ and import Helpers._ These packages in- | |
| clude the classes and the implicit conversions that make the CSS Selector Tranforms work. | |
| The transform is defined by: String representing selector #> transform value. | |
| The selector is a String constant which implements the following subset of CSS Selectors: | |
| • #id - selects the element with the specified id | |
| • .class - selects all elements have a class attribute where one of the space-separated values | |
| equals class | |
| • attr_name=attr_value - selects all elements where the given attribute equals the given | |
| value | |
| • element_name - selects all the elements matching the name | |
| • * - selects all elements | |
| 86 | |
| CHAPTER 7. CORE CONCEPTS | |
| • @name - selects all elements with the specified name | |
| • :button - selects all the elements with type="button" | |
| • :checkbox - selects all the elements with type="checkbox" | |
| • :file - selects all the elements with type="file" | |
| • :password - selects all the elements with type="password" | |
| • :radio - selects all the elements with type="radio" | |
| • :reset - selects all the elements with type="reset" | |
| • :submit - selects all the elements with type="submit" | |
| • :text - selects all the elements with type="text" | |
| You can put replacement rules after the selector: | |
| • none (e.g., "#id") replaces all matching elements with the values | |
| "#name" #> "David" // <span><span id="name"/></span> -> | |
| <span>David</span> | |
| • * (e.g., "#id *") replaces the content children of the matching elements with the values | |
| "#name *" #> "David" // <span><span id="name"/></span> -> | |
| <span><span id="name>David</span></span> | |
| • *+ or *< (e.g., "#id *+") appends the value to the the content children nodes | |
| "#name *+" #> "David" // <span><span id="name">Name: </s- | |
| pan></span> -> <span><span id="name>Name: David</span></span> | |
| • -* or >* (e.g., "#id -*") prepends the value to the the content children nodes | |
| "#name -*" #> "David" // <span><span id="name"> Pol- | |
| lak</span></span> -> <span><span id="name>David Pol- | |
| lak</span></span> | |
| • [attr] (e.g., "#id [href]") replaces the matching attribute’s value with the values. | |
| "#link [href]" #> "http://dogscape.com" | |
| // <a href="#" id="link">Dogscape</a> -> <a href="http://dogscape.com" | |
| id="link">Dogscape</a> | |
| • [attr+] (e.g., "#id [class+]") appends the value to the existing attribute. | |
| "span [class+]" #> "error" | |
| // <span class"foo">Dogscape</span> -> <span class"foo er- | |
| ror">Dogscape</span> | |
| • [attr!] (e.g., "#id [class!]") removes the matching value to the existing from. | |
| "span [class!]" #> "error" | |
| // <span class"error foo">Dogscape</span> -> <span | |
| class"foo">Dogscape</span> | |
| 7.10. CSS SELECTOR TRANSFORMS | |
| 87 | |
| • ^^ - lifts the selected element to the root of the elements that are returned making it possible | |
| to choose an element from a template | |
| • ^* - lifts the selected element’s children to the root of the elements that are returned making | |
| it possible to choose an element’s children from a template | |
| The right hand side of the CSS Selector Transform can be one of the following: | |
| • String – a String constant, for example: | |
| "#name *" #> "David" // <span id="name"/> -> <span id="name">David</span> | |
| "#name *" #> getUserNameAsString | |
| • NodeSeq - a NodeSeq constant, for example: | |
| // | |
| <i>David</i> | |
| #> | |
| "#name | |
| id="name"><i>David</i></span> | |
| "#name *" #> getUserNameAsHtml | |
| *" | |
| <span | |
| id="name"/> | |
| -> | |
| <span | |
| • NodeSeq => NodeSeq – a function that transforms the node (yes, it can be a CssBind- | |
| Func): | |
| "#name" #> ((n: | |
| id="name"/> -> <span id="name" class="dog"/> | |
| NodeSeq) => n % ("class" -> "dog")) | |
| // | |
| <span | |
| • Bindable – something that implements the Bindable trait (e.g., MappedField and | |
| Record.Field) | |
| • StringPromotable – A constant that can be promoted to a String (Int, Symbol, Long | |
| or Boolean). There is an automatic (implicit) conversion from Int, Symbol, Long or Boolean | |
| to StringPromotable. | |
| "#id_like_cats" #> true & "#number_of_cats" #> 2 | |
| • IterableConst – A Box, Seq, or Option of NodeSeq => NodeSeq, String, NodeSeq, | |
| Implicit conversions automatically promote the likes of Box[String], | |
| or Bindable. | |
| List[String], List[NodeSeq], etc. to IterableConst. | |
| "#id" #> (Empty: | |
| -> <span/> | |
| "#id" #> List("a", "b", "c") // <span><span id="id"/></span> -> | |
| <span>abc</span> | |
| "#id [href]" #> (None: | |
| <a id="id"/> | |
| Option[String]) <a id="id" href="dog"/> -> | |
| Box[String]) // <span><span id="id">Hi</span></span> | |
| Note that if you bind to the children of a selected element, multiple copies of the element re- | |
| sult from bind to an IterableConst (if the element has an id attribute, the id attribute will be | |
| stripped after the first element): | |
| 1 "#line *" #> List("a", "b", "c") // <li id="line>sample</li> -> | |
| 2 | |
| // <li id="line">a</li><li>b</li><li>c</li> | |
| 3 | |
| 4 "#age *" #> (None: Option[NodeSeq]) // <span><span id="age">Dunno</span></span> -> | |
| 5 | |
| // <span/> | |
| 88 | |
| CHAPTER 7. CORE CONCEPTS | |
| The above use cases may seem a little strange (they are not quite orthogonal), but they address | |
| common use cases in Lift. * IterableFunc – A Box, Seq, or Option of functions that transform Node- | |
| Seq => String, NodeSeq, Seq[String], Seq[NodeSeq], Box[String], Box[NodeSeq], Option[String] or | |
| Option[NodeSeq]. The same rules for handling multiple values in IterableConst apply to Iterable- | |
| Func. Implicit conversions automatically promote the functions with the appropriate signature to | |
| an IterableFunc. | |
| You can chain CSS Selector Transforms with the & method: | |
| "#id" #> "33" & "#name" #> "David" & "#chat_line" #> List("a", "b", | |
| "c") & ClearClearable | |
| CSS Selector Transforms offer an alternative to Lift’s traditional binding (See Helpers.bind()). | |
| 7.11. CLIENT-SIDE BEHAVIOR INVOKING SERVER-SIDE FUNCTIONS | |
| 89 | |
| 7.11 Client-side behavior invoking server-side functions | |
| 7.12 Ajax | |
| 7.13 Comet | |
| 7.14 LiftActor | |
| 7.15 Pattern Matching | |
| 7.16 Type safety | |
| 7.17 Page rewriting | |
| 7.18 Security | |
| 90 | |
| CHAPTER 7. CORE CONCEPTS | |
| Chapter 8 | |
| Common Patterns | |
| 91 | |
| 92 | |
| CHAPTER 8. COMMON PATTERNS | |
| 8.1 Localization | |
| Lift has broad support for localization at the page and element level. | |
| 8.1.1 Localizing Templates | |
| for | |
| the | |
| locale | |
| in | |
| is | |
| The | |
| LiftRules.localeCalculator. By default, the function looks at the Locale in the HTTP | |
| request. But you can change this function to look at the Locale for the current user by changing | |
| LiftRules.localeCalculator. | |
| calculated | |
| function | |
| request | |
| current | |
| based | |
| the | |
| on | |
| When a template is requested, Lift’s TemplateFinder looks for a template with the suf- | |
| fix _langCOUNTRY.html, then _lang.html, then .html. So, if you’re loading /frog and | |
| your Locale is enUS, then Lift will look for /frog_enUS.html, then /frog_en.html, then | |
| /frog.html. But if your Locale is Czech, then Lift would look for /frog_csCZ.html, /frog_- | |
| cs.html, and /frog.html. The same lookup mechanism is used for templates accessed via the | |
| Surround (See Section 9.14) and Embed (See Section 9.13) snippets. So, at the template level, Lift | |
| offers very flexible templating. | |
| Note: Lift parses all templates in UTF-8. Please make sure your text editor is set to UTF-8 encod- | |
| ing. | |
| 8.1.2 Resource Lookup | |
| Lift uses the following mechanism to look up resources. Localized resources are stored in tem- | |
| plate files along-side your HTML pages. The same parser is used to load resources and the pages | |
| themselves. A global set of resources is searched for in the following files: /_resources.html, | |
| /templates-hidden/_resources.html, and /resources-hidden/_resources.html. | |
| Keep in mind that Lift will look for the _resources file using the suffixes based on the Locale. | |
| The resource file should be in the following format: | |
| 1 <resources> | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| <res name="welcome">Benvenuto</res> | |
| <res name="thank.you">Grazie</res> | |
| <res name="locale">Località</res> | |
| <res name="change">Cambia</res> | |
| 5 | |
| 6 </resources> | |
| In addition to global resource files, there are per-page resource files (based on the current | |
| Req.) | |
| If you are currently requesting page /foo/bar, the following resource files will also | |
| be consulted: /foo/_resources_bar.html, /templates-hidden/foo/_resources_- | |
| bar.html, and /foo/resources-hidden/_resources_bar.html (and all Locale-specific | |
| suffixes.) You can choose to create a separate resource file for each locale, or lump multiple locales | |
| into the _resources_bar.html file itself using the following format: | |
| 1 <resources> | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| <res name="hello" lang="en" default="true">Hello</res> | |
| <res name="hello" lang="en" country="US">Howdy, dude!</res> | |
| 8.1. LOCALIZATION | |
| 93 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| <res name="hello" lang="it">Benvenuto</res> | |
| <res name="thank.you" lang="en" default="true">Thank You</res> | |
| <res name="thank.you" lang="it">Grazie</res> | |
| <res name="locale" lang="en" default="true">Locale</res> | |
| <res name="locale" lang="it">Località</res> | |
| <res name="change" lang="en" default="true">Change</res> | |
| <res name="change" lang="it">Cambia</res> | |
| 10 | |
| 11 </resources> | |
| 8.1.3 Accessing Resources | |
| Lift makes it easy to access resources. | |
| From snippets: <span class="lift:Loc.hello">This Hello will be replaced if | |
| possible</span> Note that the value after the . in the snippet invocation is used to look up the | |
| resource name. | |
| From code: | |
| • S.loc("hello") - return a Box[NodeSeq] containing the localized value for the resource | |
| named “hello”. | |
| • S.??("Hello World") - look for a resource named “Hello World” and return the String | |
| value for that resource. If the resource is not found, return “Hello World”. | |
| 8.1.4 Conclusion | |
| Lift offers a broad range of mechanisms for localizing your application on a page-by-page and | |
| resource-by-resource by-resource basis. | |
| 94 | |
| CHAPTER 8. COMMON PATTERNS | |
| 8.2 Dependency Injection | |
| Dependency injection is an important topic in the Java world. It’s important because Java lacks | |
| certain basic features (e.g., functions) that tend to bind abstract interfaces to concrete implementa- | |
| tions. Basically, it’s so much easier to do MyInterface thing = new MyInterfaceImpl(), | |
| so most developers do just that. | |
| Scala’s cake pattern goes a long way to help developers compose complex behaviors by combining | |
| Scala traits. Jonas Bonér wrote an excellent piece on Dependency Injection. | |
| The cake pattern only goes half way to giving a Java developer complete dependency injection | |
| functionality. The cake pattern allows you to compose the complex classes out of Scala traits, but | |
| the cake pattern is less helpful in terms of allowing you to make dynamic choices about which | |
| combination of cake to vend in a given situation. Lift provides extra features that complete the | |
| dependency injection puzzle. | |
| 8.2.1 Lift Libraries and Injector | |
| Lift is both a web framework and a set of Scala libraries. Lift’s common, actor, json, and util | |
| packages provide common libraries for Scala developers to build their application. Lift’s libraries | |
| are well tested, widely used, well supported, and released on a well defined schedule (montly | |
| milestones, quarterly releases). | |
| Lift’s Injector trait forms the basis of dependency injection: | |
| 1 /** | |
| 2 | |
| * A trait that does basic dependency injection. | |
| */ | |
| 3 | |
| 4 trait Injector { | |
| implicit def inject[T](implicit man: Manifest[T]): Box[T] | |
| 5 | |
| 6 } | |
| You can use this trait as follows: | |
| 1 object MyInjector extends Injector {...} | |
| 2 | |
| 3 val myThing: Box[Thing] = MyInjector.inject | |
| The reason that the instance of MyThing is in a Box is because we’re not guaranteed that MyIn- | |
| jector knows how to create an instance of Thing. Lift provides an implementation of Injector | |
| called SimpleInjector that allows you to register (and re-register) functions for injection: | |
| 1 object MyInjector extends SimpleInjector | |
| 2 | |
| 3 def buildOne(): Thing = if (testMode) new Thing with TestThingy {} else new Thing with RuntimeThingy {} | |
| 4 | |
| 5 MyInjector.registerInjection(buildOne _) // register the function that builds Thing | |
| 6 | |
| 7 val myThing: Box[Thing] = MyInjector.inject | |
| 8.2. DEPENDENCY INJECTION | |
| 95 | |
| This isn’t bad... it allows us to define a function that makes the injection-time decision, and we can | |
| change the function out during runtime (or test-time.) However, there are two problems: getting | |
| Boxes for each injection is less than optimal. Further, globally scoped functions mean you have to | |
| put a whole bunch of logic (test vs. production vs. xxx) into the function. SimpleInjector has | |
| lots of ways to help out. | |
| 1 object MyInjector extends SimpleInjector { | |
| val thing = new Inject(buildOne _) {} // define a thing, has to be a val so it's eagerly evaluated and registered | |
| 2 | |
| 3 } | |
| 4 | |
| 5 def buildOne(): Thing = if (testMode) new Thing with TestThingy {} else new Thing with RuntimeThingy {} | |
| 6 | |
| 7 val myThingBox: Box[Thing] = MyInjector.injectval | |
| 8 | |
| 9 myThing = MyInjector.thing.vend // vend an instance of Thing | |
| Inject has a futher trick up its sleave... with Inject, you can scope the function... this is helpful | |
| for testing and if you need to change behavior for a particular call scope: | |
| 1 MyInjector.thing.doWith(new Thing with SpecialThing {}) { | |
| val t = MyInjector.thing.vend // an instance of SpecialThing | |
| val bt: Box[Thing] = MyInjector.inject // Full(SpecialThing) | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 } | |
| 5 | |
| 6 MyInjector.thing.default.set(() => new Thing with YetAnotherThing {}) // set the global scope | |
| Within the scope of the doWith call, MyInjector.thing will vend instances of SpecialThing. | |
| This is useful for testing as well as changing behavior within the scope of the call or globally. This | |
| gives us much of the functionality we get with dependency injection packages for Java. But within | |
| Lift WebKit, it gets better. | |
| 8.2.2 Lift WebKit and enhanced injection scoping | |
| Lift’s WebKit offers broad ranging tools for handling HTTP requests as well as HTML manipula- | |
| tion. | |
| Lift WebKit’s Factory extends SimpleInjector, but adds the ability to scope the function | |
| based on current HTTP request or the current container session: | |
| 1 object MyInjector extends Factory { | |
| val thing = new FactoryMaker(buildOne _) {} // define a thing, has to be a val so it's eagerly | |
| // evaluated and registered | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 } | |
| 5 | |
| 6 MyInjector.thing.session.set(new Thing with ThingForSession {}) // set the instance that will be vended | |
| 7 | |
| // for the duration of the session | |
| 8 | |
| 9 MyInjector.thing.request.set(new Thing with ThingForRequest {}) // set the instance that will be vended | |
| 10 | |
| // for the duration of the request | |
| 96 | |
| CHAPTER 8. COMMON PATTERNS | |
| WebKit’s LiftRules is a Factory and many of the properties that LiftRules contains are | |
| FactoryMakers. This means that you can change behavior during call scope (useful for testing): | |
| 1 LiftRules.convertToEntity.doWith(true) { ... test that we convert certain characters to entities} | |
| Or based on the current request (for example you can change the rules for calculating the docType | |
| during the current request): | |
| 1 if (isMobileReqest) LiftRules.docType.request.set((r: Req) => Full(DocType.xhtmlMobile)) | |
| Or based on the current session (for example, changing maxConcurrentRequests based on some | |
| rules when a session is created): | |
| 1 if (browserIsSomethingElse) LiftRules.maxConcurrentRequests.session.set((r: Req) => 32) | |
| 2 | |
| // for this session, we allow 32 concurrent requests | |
| 8.2.3 Conclusion | |
| Lift’s SimpleInjector/Factory facilities provide a powerful and flexible mechanism for | |
| vending instances based on a global function, call stack scoping, request and session scoping and | |
| provides more flexible features than most Java-based dependency injection frameworks without | |
| resorting to XML for configuration or byte-code rewriting magic. | |
| 8.3 Modules | |
| Lift has supported modules from the first version of the project in 2007. Lift’s entire handling of | |
| the HTTP request/response cycle is open to hooks. Further, Lift’s templating mechanism where | |
| resulting HTML pages are composed by transforming page content via snippets (See Section 7.1) | |
| which are simply functions that take HTML and return HTML: NodeSeq => NodeSeq. Be- | |
| cause Lift’s snippet resolution mechanism is open and any code referenced in Boot (See Section | |
| 7.4), any code can be a Lift “module” by virtue of registering its snippets and other resources in | |
| LiftRules. Many Lift modules already exist including PayPal, OAuth, OpenID, LDAP, and even | |
| a module containing many jQuery widgets. | |
| The most difficult issue relating to integration of external modules into Lift is how to properly | |
| insert the module’s menu items into a SiteMap (See Section 3.2) menu hierarchy. Lift 2.2 introduces | |
| a more flexible mechanism for mutating the SiteMap: SiteMap mutators. SiteMap mutators | |
| are functions that rewrite the SiteMap based on rules for where to insert the module’s menus in | |
| the menu hierarchy. Each module may publish markers. For example, here are the markers for | |
| ProtoUser: | |
| 1 /** | |
| 2 * Insert this LocParam into your menu if you want the | |
| 3 * User's menu items to be inserted at the same level | |
| 4 * and after the item | |
| 5 */ | |
| 6 final case object AddUserMenusAfter extends Loc.LocParam[Any] | |
| 8.3. MODULES | |
| 97 | |
| 7 /** | |
| 8 * replace the menu that has this LocParam with the User's menu | |
| 9 * items | |
| 10 */ | |
| 11 final case object AddUserMenusHere extends Loc.LocParam[Any] | |
| 12 /** | |
| 13 * Insert this LocParam into your menu if you want the | |
| 14 * User's menu items to be children of that menu | |
| 15 */ | |
| 16 final case object AddUserMenusUnder extends Loc.LocParam[Any] | |
| The module also makes a SiteMap mutator available, this can either be returned from the mod- | |
| ule’s init method or via some other method on the module. ProtoUser makes the sitemapMu- | |
| tator method available which returns a SiteMap => SiteMap. | |
| The application can add the marker to the appropriate menu item: | |
| 1 Menu("Home") / "index" >> User.AddUserMenusAfter | |
| And when the application registers the SiteMap with LiftRules, it applies the mutator: | |
| 1 LiftRules.setSiteMapFunc(() => User.sitemapMutator(sitemap())) | |
| Because the mutators are composable: | |
| 1 val allMutators = User.sitemapMutator andThen FruitBat.sitemapMutator | |
| 2 LiftRules.setSiteMapFunc(() => allMutators(sitemap())) | |
| For each module, the implementation of the mutators is pretty simple: | |
| private lazy val AfterUnapply = SiteMap.buildMenuMatcher(_ == AddUserMenusAfter) | |
| private lazy val HereUnapply = SiteMap.buildMenuMatcher(_ == AddUserMenusHere) | |
| private lazy val UnderUnapply = SiteMap.buildMenuMatcher(_ == AddUserMenusUnder) | |
| /** | |
| * The SiteMap mutator function | |
| */ | |
| def sitemapMutator: SiteMap => SiteMap = SiteMap.sitemapMutator { | |
| case AfterUnapply(menu) => menu :: sitemap | |
| case HereUnapply(_) => sitemap | |
| case UnderUnapply(menu) => List(menu.rebuild(_ ::: sitemap)) | |
| }(SiteMap.addMenusAtEndMutator(sitemap)) | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| We’ve defined some extractors that help with pattern matching. SiteMap.buildMenuMatcher | |
| is a helper method to make building the extractors super-simple. Then we supply a Partial- | |
| Function[Menu, List[Menu]] which looks for the marker LocParam and re-writes the menu | |
| based on the marker. If there are no matches, the additional rule is fired, in this case, we append | |
| the menus at the end of the SiteMap. | |
| 98 | |
| CHAPTER 8. COMMON PATTERNS | |
| 8.4 HtmlProperties, XHTML and HTML5 | |
| Lift unifies many aspects of parsing and displaying the HTML page in a single trait, HtmlProp- | |
| erties. | |
| HtmlProperties defines, on a session-by-session (and even a request-by-request) basis, the way | |
| that templates are parsed and the way that Scala’s NodeSeq is converted into valid HTML output. | |
| The properties on HtmlProperties are: | |
| • docType | |
| - | |
| the | |
| DocType | |
| for | |
| the HTML | |
| page, | |
| e.g., | |
| <!DOCTYPE | |
| html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" | |
| "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> or <!DOC- | |
| TYPE html> | |
| • encoding - the page’s encoding, e.g., <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> | |
| • contentType - the setting of the Content-Type response header, e.g., application/x- | |
| html+xml; charset=utf-8 or text/html; charset=utf-8 | |
| • htmlOutputHeader - calculates the way to combine the docType and encoding (this is | |
| important for IE6 support where encoding goes after docType). | |
| • htmlParser - a function that converts an InputStream to a Box[NodeSeq]. This is used | |
| by Lift to parse templates. | |
| • htmlWriter - a function that writes a NodeSeq to a Writer. This is used by Lift to convert | |
| the internal XML representation of a page to a stream of bytes representing an HTML page. | |
| • html5FormsSupport - a flag indicating whether the current browser supports HTML5 | |
| forms. | |
| • maxOpenRequests - the maximum number of concurrent HTTP requests the browser sup- | |
| ports to a named host. | |
| • userAgent - the User-Agent string sent from the browser. | |
| 8.4.1 XHTML via OldHtmlProperties | |
| The default properties that keep compability with the disparate LiftRules used to calculate Doc- | |
| Type and Encoding. Uses the PCDataXmlParser parser which requires well-formed XML files. | |
| Output is generally XHTML via AltXML.toXML, but cerain tags (e.g., <br>) are written in | |
| IE6/IE7 friendly ways. | |
| 8.4.2 HTML5 via Html5Properties | |
| Prior to Lift 2.2, Lift always emitted XHTML and by default set the Content-Type header to ap- | |
| plication/xhtml+xml; charset=utf-8. This continues to be Lift’s default behavior. | |
| It | |
| turns out that most browsers, even modern ones (Firefox, Chrome and Safari) had issues with | |
| XHTML. Further, XHTML limited the behavior of certain JavaScript libraries. | |
| 8.4. HTMLPROPERTIES, XHTML AND HTML5 | |
| 99 | |
| invoking | |
| LiftRules.htmlProperties.default.set((r: | |
| Req) => new | |
| By | |
| Html5Properties(r.userAgent)) in Boot.scala, you can set Lift to full HTML5 sup- | |
| port. Lift uses the nu.validator HTML parser and emits the correct DocType and response | |
| headers such that all tested browsers (IE6+, Firefox 2+, Safari 2+, Chrome 1+) render pages | |
| correctly. | |
| Because the HTML5 parser is different from the standard XML parser, you will need to adjust | |
| your existing templates in the following ways: | |
| • All tags are converted to lower case. This means the <lift:FooBar/> gets converted | |
| to <lift:foobar/> I advise converting to designer friendly where possible (e.g., <div | |
| class="lift:FooBar"></div>). | |
| • Tags of the format <div/> and <my_thing:bind/> are not legal. They must be converted | |
| to <div></div> and <my_thing:bind></my_thing:bind>. Unfortunately, the parser | |
| is very forgiving so rather than barking about the lack of closing tag, the parser will nest | |
| things in unexpected ways. | |
| • There are some tags that the parser "ensures". For example a <tr>, <thead>, or <tbody> | |
| tag must be the first tag inside <table>. This breaks the | |
| <table><mysnippet:line> | |
| <tr><td><mysnippet:bind_here></mysnippet:bind_here></td></tr> | |
| </mysnippet:line><table> | |
| paradigm. You can get the desired behavior with | |
| <table><tr lift:bind="mysnippet:line"><td><mysnippet:bind_- | |
| here></mysnippet:bind_here></td></tr><table>. | |
| 8.4.3 Changing behavior mid-session or mid-request | |
| LiftSes- | |
| You can change the behavior of HtmlProperties mid-session or mid-request. | |
| sion.sessionHtmlProperties is a SessionVar that contains the HtmlProperties for the | |
| session. LiftSession.requestHtmlProperties is a TranientRequestVar containing the | |
| HtmlProperties for the request. At the begining of the request, requestHtmlProperties is | |
| set to the value of sessionHtmlProperties. You can alter a property for the duration of the | |
| request using: | |
| 1 for { | |
| session <- S.session | |
| 2 | |
| 3 } session.requestHtmlProperties.set(session. | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| requestHtmlProperties.is.setDocType(() => | |
| Full("<!DOCTYPE moose>"))) | |
| 100 | |
| CHAPTER 8. COMMON PATTERNS | |
| 101 | |
| 102 | |
| CHAPTER 9. BUILT-IN SNIPPETS | |
| Chapter 9 | |
| Built-in Snippets | |
| 9.1 CSS | |
| 9.2 Msgs | |
| 9.3 Msg | |
| 9.4 Menu | |
| 9.5 A | |
| 9.6 Children | |
| 9.7 Comet | |
| 9.8 Form | |
| 9.9 Ignore | |
| 9.10 Loc | |
| 9.11 Surround | |
| 9.12 TestCond | |
| 9.13 Embed | |
| 9.14 Tail | |
| 9.15 WithParam | |
| 9.16 VersionInfo | |
| 9.17 SkipDocType | |
| 9.18 XmlGroup | |
| 9.19 LazyLoad | |
| 9.20 WithResourceId | |
| Chapter 10 | |
| SiteMap | |
| 103 | |
| 104 | |
| CHAPTER 10. SITEMAP | |
| Chapter 11 | |
| REST | |
| Lift makes providing REST-style web services very simple. | |
| First, create an object that extends RestHelper: | |
| 1 import net.liftweb.http._ | |
| 2 import net.liftweb.http.rest._ | |
| 3 | |
| 4 object MyRest extends RestHelper { | |
| 5 | |
| 6 } | |
| And hook your changes up to Lift in Boot.scala: | |
| 1 LiftRules.dispatch.append(MyRest) // stateful -- associated with a servlet container session | |
| 2 LiftRules.statelessDispatchTable.append(MyRest) // stateless -- no session created | |
| Within your MyRest object, you can define which URLs to serve: | |
| 1 serve { | |
| case Req("api" :: "static" :: _, "xml", GetRequest) => <b>Static</b> | |
| case Req("api" :: "static" :: _, "json", GetRequest) => JString("Static") | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 } | |
| The above code uses the suffix of the request to determine the response type. Lift supports testing | |
| the Accept header for a response type: | |
| 1 serve { | |
| case XmlGet("api" :: "static" :: _, _) => <b>Static</b> | |
| case JsonGet("api" :: "static" :: _, _) => JString("Static") | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 } | |
| The above can also be written: | |
| 1 serve { | |
| case "api" :: "static" :: _ XmlGet _=> <b>Static</b> | |
| case "api" :: "static" :: _ JsonGet _ => JString("Static") | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 } | |
| 105 | |
| 106 | |
| CHAPTER 11. REST | |
| If you want | |
| Note: | |
| add a *.xml or *.json (depending in what you have | |
| end | |
| http://localhost:8080/XXX/api/static/call.xml | |
| to | |
| the | |
| http://localhost:8080/XXX/api/static/call.json | |
| to navigate your Web Service, | |
| remember | |
| at | |
| implemented) | |
| you must | |
| URL: | |
| the | |
| of | |
| Because the REST dispatch code is based on Scala’s pattern matching, we can extract elements | |
| from the request (in this case the third element will be extracted into the id variable which is a | |
| String: | |
| 1 serve { | |
| case "api" :: "user" :: id :: _ XmlGet _ => <b>ID: {id}</b> | |
| case "api" :: "user" :: id :: _ JsonGet _ => JString(id) | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 } | |
| And with extractors, we convert an element to a particular type and only succeed with the pattern | |
| match (and the dispatch) if the parameter can be converted. For example: | |
| 1 serve { | |
| case "api" :: "user" :: AsLong(id) :: _ XmlGet _ => <b>ID: {id}</b> | |
| case "api" :: "user" :: AsLong(id) :: _ JsonGet _ => JInt(id) | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 } | |
| In the above example, id is extracted if it can be converted to a Long. | |
| Lift’s REST helper can also extract XML or JSON from a POST or PUT request and only dispatch the | |
| request if the XML or JSON is valid: | |
| 1 serve { | |
| case "api" :: "user" :: _ XmlPut xml -> _ => // xml is a scala.xml.Node | |
| User.createFromXml(xml).map { u => u.save; u.toXml} | |
| case "api" :: "user" :: _ JsonPut json -> _ => // json is a net.liftweb.json.JsonAST.JValue | |
| User.createFromJson(json).map { u => u.save; u.toJson} | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 } | |
| There may be cases when you want to have a single piece of business logic to calculate a value, | |
| but then convert the value to a result based on the request type. That’s where serveJx comes in | |
| . . . it’ll serve a response for JSON and XML requests. If you define a trait called Convertable: | |
| 1 trait Convertable { | |
| def toXml: Elem | |
| def toJson: JValue | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 } | |
| Then define a pattern that will convert from a Convertable to a JSON or XML: | |
| implicit def cvt: JxCvtPF[Convertable] = { case (JsonSelect, c, _) => c.toJson case (XmlSelect, c, _) | |
| => c.toXml } | |
| And anywhere you use serveJx and your pattern results in a Box[Convertable], the cvt | |
| pattern is used to generate the appropriate response: | |
| 1 serveJx { | |
| 107 | |
| case Get("api" :: "info" :: Info(info) :: _, _) => Full(info) | |
| 2 | |
| 3 } | |
| Or: | |
| 1 // extract the parameters, create a user | |
| 2 // return the appropriate response | |
| 3 | |
| 4 def addUser(): Box[UserInfo] = | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| 13 | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| for { | |
| firstname <- S.param("firstname") ?~ "firstname parameter missing" ~> 400 | |
| lastname <- S.param("lastname") ?~ "lastname parameter missing" | |
| email <- S.param("email") ?~ "email parameter missing" | |
| } yield { | |
| val u = User.create.firstName(firstname). | |
| lastName(lastname).email(email) | |
| S.param("password") foreach u.password.set | |
| u.saveMe | |
| } | |
| 16 | |
| 17 serveJx { | |
| case Post("api" :: "add_user" :: _, _) => addUser() | |
| 18 | |
| 19 } | |
| In the above example, if the firstname parameter is missing, the response will be a 400 with | |
| the response body “firstname parameter missing”. If the lastname parameter is missing, the | |
| response will be a 404 with the response body “lastname parameter missing”. | |
| 108 | |
| CHAPTER 11. REST | |
| Chapter 12 | |
| MVC (If you really want it) | |
| 109 | |
| 110 | |
| CHAPTER 12. MVC (IF YOU REALLY WANT IT) | |
| Chapter 13 | |
| From MVC | |
| Okay, so you’re coming from MVC-land and you’re used to defining routes, defining controlers | |
| and defining views. | |
| Lift is different. For HTML requests, Lift loads the view first and builds your page from the view. | |
| Lift also supports REST style requests for non-HTML data. (See 11 on page 105) | |
| “Why?” Because complex HTML pages rarely contain a dominant piece of logic... a single con- | |
| troller... but contain many different components. Some of those components interact and some do | |
| not. In Lift, you define the collection of components to be rendered in the resulting HTML page | |
| in the view. | |
| So, to create a page that has dynamic content, we need to do three things: | |
| • Make a SiteMap entry for the page | |
| • Create the view (the HTML) | |
| • Create the behavior (the Snippet that transforms the incoming HTML to the dynamically | |
| generated HTML) | |
| You can find the source for this project at https://github.com/dpp/simply_lift/tree/mas- | |
| ter/samples/from_mvc. | |
| 13.1 First things first | |
| The first step to using Lift is to make sure you’ve got Java 1.6 or better installed on your machine... | |
| you’ll need tar or zip as well. | |
| Download the TAR or Zip version of the Lift templates and extract the files. | |
| Copy the lift_basic project into another directory called first_lift. | |
| cd into first_lift and type sbt. It will take a few minutes for sbt, the Simple Build Tool, to | |
| download all the depedencies. At the > prompt type update which will download Lift and every- | |
| thing else you need to get started. Once all that stuff is downloaded, type jetty-run and point | |
| your browser to http://localhost:8080 and you’ll see a live application. To continuously | |
| update your running application as you to code, enter ~prepare-webapp at the sbt prompt. | |
| 111 | |
| 112 | |
| CHAPTER 13. FROM MVC | |
| 13.2 Making a SiteMap entry | |
| Every page on the site needs a SiteMap entry. For more on SiteMap, see 3.2 on page 15 and 7.5 | |
| on page 84. | |
| Open the Boot.scala file (src/main/scala/bootstrap/liftweb/Boot.scala) and up- | |
| date the SiteMap definition: | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| // Build SiteMap | |
| def sitemap(): SiteMap = SiteMap( | |
| Menu("Home") / "index", | |
| Menu("Second Page") / "second" | |
| ) | |
| 13.3 Creating the view | |
| Next you have to create a file that corresponds to the path defined in the SiteMap. So, let’s look | |
| at the src/main/webapp/index.html file: | |
| 1 <!DOCTYPE html> | |
| 2 <html> | |
| Listing 13.1: index.html | |
| <head> | |
| <meta content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" http-equiv="content-type" /> | |
| <title>Home</title> | |
| </head> | |
| <body class="lift:content_id=main"> | |
| <div id="main" class="lift:surround?with=default&at=content"> | |
| <div> | |
| Hi, I'm a page that contains the time: | |
| <span class="lift:TimeNow">??? some time</span>. | |
| </div> | |
| <div> | |
| And a button: <button class="lift:ClickMe">Click Me</button>. | |
| </div> | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| 13 | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| </div> | |
| </body> | |
| 18 | |
| 19 </html> | |
| The page is valid HTML5. <body class="lift:content_id=main"> says “ignore every- | |
| thing on this page except the Element with id ’main’.” | |
| <div id="main" class="lift:surround?with=default&at=content"> says “Wrap | |
| the default page chrome around this Element.” | |
| <span class="lift:TimeNow">??? | |
| some time</span> says “Find the TimeNow snip- | |
| pet and transform this Element with the rules contained in that snippet.” See 7.1 on page 78. The | |
| result will be <span>Fri Jan 21 11:30:34 PST 2011</span> | |
| 13.4. CREATING THE SNIPPET | |
| 113 | |
| So, that’s simple. You tell Lift what Snippet to use to transform your static content into dynamic | |
| content. | |
| 13.4 Creating the Snippet | |
| Next you have to tell Lift what the rules are for transforming the section of your template based on | |
| dynamic rules. This is a Snippet... it’s a function that transforms NodeSeq => NodeSeq. Let’s | |
| look at the TimeNow snippet: | |
| Listing 13.2: TimeNow.scala | |
| 1 // make sure this is the snippet package so Lift | |
| 2 // can find the snippet | |
| 3 package code | |
| 4 package snippet | |
| 5 | |
| 6 // some inputs | |
| 7 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 8 import util._ | |
| 9 import Helpers._ | |
| 10 | |
| 11 // our snippet | |
| 12 object TimeNow { | |
| // create a function (NodeSeq => NodeSeq) | |
| // that puts the current time into the | |
| // body of the incoming Elem | |
| def render = "* *" #> now.toString | |
| 13 | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 } | |
| This snippet must be in the snippet package so Lift knows how to find it by convention. | |
| It is an object which is a singleton because the snippet has no state. | |
| Lift calls the render method on a snippet unless you specify another method when you invoke | |
| your snippet. | |
| The snippet generates a function, NodeSeq => NodeSeq, that uses Lift’s CSS Selector Trans- | |
| forms (See 7.10 on page 85) to insert the current time into the body of all HTML Elements: def | |
| render = "* *" #> now.toString | |
| 13.5 Getting Ajaxy | |
| The ClickMe snippet is a little more complex, but it demonstrates, especially on the “Second | |
| Page” the power of Lift’s View First in which no particular component on the page is the dominant | |
| component. Here’s the ClickMe code: | |
| 1 // make sure this is the snippet package so Lift | |
| 2 // can find the snippet | |
| 3 package code | |
| Listing 13.3: ClickMe.scala | |
| 114 | |
| CHAPTER 13. FROM MVC | |
| 4 package snippet | |
| 5 | |
| 6 // some inputs | |
| 7 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 8 import util._ | |
| 9 import Helpers._ | |
| 10 import http._ | |
| 11 import js.JsCmds._ | |
| 12 | |
| 13 // our snippet | |
| 14 object ClickMe { | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| // variables associated with the request | |
| private object pos extends RequestVar(0) | |
| private object cnt extends RequestVar(0) | |
| // create a function (NodeSeq => NodeSeq) | |
| // set the onClick method of the button | |
| def render = { | |
| // capture our position on the page | |
| val posOnPage = pos.set(pos.is + 1) | |
| "button [onclick]" #> | |
| SHtml.ajaxInvoke(() => { | |
| cnt.set(cnt.is + 1) // increment the click count | |
| Alert("Thanks pos: "+posOnPage+ | |
| " click count "+cnt) | |
| }) | |
| } | |
| 31 | |
| 32 } | |
| We define two RequestVars that hold request-scoped values. For Lift, the scope of a request is | |
| the initial full HTML page load plus any Ajax requests associated with that page. | |
| When the snippet’s render method is called, we capture the current value for the pos Request- | |
| Var. | |
| The snippet associates the invocation of an Ajax call with the button’s onclick method. When | |
| the button is clicked, the function is invoked. | |
| The function closed over the scope of the position of the button on the page. The buttons all share | |
| the cnt RequestVar and thus for a single page load, the number of button-presses are counted. | |
| If you have 5 different browser tabs open to the same page, each tab will have a unique page | |
| count. | |
| This demonstrates the component nature of Lift and why having complex items on a page means | |
| not having a front-controller, but having lots of behaviors associated with lots of HTML elements. | |
| 13.6 Next Steps | |
| If you want to see more of Lift’s snazzy Ajax and Comet, check out 2 on page 5. If you want to see | |
| more of the basics of SiteMap and snippets, check out 3 on page 11. If you want to see how Lift | |
| does forms, check out 4 on page 27. | |
| Part II | |
| Recipes | |
| 115 | |
| Chapter 14 | |
| Dynamic html tables created from | |
| DB.runQuery() | |
| 14.1 Problem | |
| What I’m trying is: | |
| 1. query the SQL server via DB.runQuery() | |
| 2. put the result (multiple, rows and columns) into a Table structure like this: | |
| 1 <table> | |
| <thead> | |
| <tr><th></th></tr> | |
| </thead> | |
| <tbody> | |
| <tr><td></td></tr> | |
| </tbody> | |
| 7 | |
| 8 </table> | |
| 14.2 Solution | |
| The DB.runQuery(sql_query_string) method returns (List[String], List[List[String]]), to put that in | |
| a table, your view looks like: | |
| 1 <table class="lift:MySnippet"> | |
| <thead> | |
| <tr><th id="my_th">Field Name</th></tr> | |
| </thead> | |
| <tbody> | |
| <tr id="my_tr"><td>An item</td></tr> | |
| </tbody> | |
| 7 | |
| 8 </table> | |
| And your snippet uses CSS Selector Transforms (See Section 7.10) and looks like: | |
| 117 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 118 | |
| CHAPTER 14. DYNAMIC HTML TABLES CREATED FROM DB.RUNQUERY() | |
| 1 object MySnippet { | |
| def render = { | |
| 2 | |
| val (fieldNames: List[String], fieldValues: List[List[String]]) = DB.runQuery(...) | |
| "#my_th *" #> fieldNames & | |
| "#my_tr *" #> fieldValues.map(values => "td *" #> values) | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| } | |
| 7 | |
| 8 } | |
| Chapter 15 | |
| Dynamically choosing content | |
| 15.1 Problem | |
| I want to to keep design completely separated from logic and I am bit stuck. I have a page that | |
| loads different pieces of html depending on some variables and it also has some ajax code so it may | |
| load new pieces of html. So far, that page uses only one snippet that has the logic to decide what | |
| html should be loaded. So here is the question, how should the snippet get an only-with-design | |
| piece of html to bind data to it. | |
| 15.2 Solution | |
| Snippets are evaluated recursively... this means that you can return markup from a snippet that | |
| contains other snippets. | |
| The other thing to pay attention to is the <lift:embed> snippet (See Section 9.13). | |
| Combining the two: | |
| Main page: | |
| 1 <html><body> Stuff here | |
| 2 <div class="lift:ChooseBehavior">Different behavior will go here</div> | |
| 3 </body></html> | |
| The snippet: | |
| 1 object ChooseBehavior { | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| def render = someState match { | |
| case ShowData => <lift:embed what="_showData" /> | |
| case EditData => <lift:embed what="_editData" /> | |
| case AjaxThing => <lift:embed what="_ajaxThing" /> | |
| } | |
| 6 | |
| 7 } | |
| Then your designer need only edit the main page and each of the templates, and then you wire | |
| them together. | |
| 119 | |
| 120 | |
| CHAPTER 15. DYNAMICALLY CHOOSING CONTENT | |
| Chapter 16 | |
| Ajax Forms | |
| 121 | |
| 122 | |
| CHAPTER 16. AJAX FORMS | |
| Chapter 17 | |
| Protecting REST APIs | |
| 17.1 Problem | |
| I want to expose part of my site as authenticated REST, but with custom authentication (not the | |
| HTTP based authentication). | |
| Right now, I’m thinking of using a custom dispatch, but that means I’ll have to check every request | |
| in the request handler itself to see if it is authenticated, right? | |
| Authentication is just a SessionVar on the server, so it also implies I need a way to pass the session | |
| identifier back and forth between the REST client and the service. If it were a cookie I think it | |
| would be transparent, but I think Lift adds te session ids to the URLs (at least that’s what I see in | |
| my address bar). | |
| So, assuming I have a public "login" REST call that sets a SessionVar, how do I pass this transar- | |
| ently to the REST client? I have thought about a token system as well, but that seems like copying | |
| the session system. | |
| Any suggestions? | |
| 17.2 Solution | |
| If you’ve got a: | |
| 1 object MyService extends RestHelper { | |
| 2 .... | |
| 3 } | |
| And: | |
| 1 val ensureSession: PartialFunction[Req, Unit] = { | |
| case _ if isLoggedIn => | |
| 2 | |
| 3 } | |
| then in Boot: | |
| 123 | |
| 124 | |
| CHAPTER 17. PROTECTING REST APIS | |
| 1 import net.liftweb.util.Helpers._ | |
| 2 | |
| 3 LiftRules.dispatch.append(ensureSession guard MyService) | |
| This is a simple way to compose PartialFunctions and put a guard around all the elements | |
| of a PartialFunction. | |
| Chapter 18 | |
| URI-based locale selection | |
| 18.1 Problem | |
| I’m evaluating Lift and one thing I miss, or cannot see how toimplement, is the ability to have the | |
| locale determined from an URI-pattern. In Struts2 I have: | |
| 1 namespace="/{request_locale}" | |
| So I can have an action (restful) invoked on an URI=/no/companies/company/1 and it will call | |
| my CompanyAction with id=1 and the locale | |
| set to no If called from URI=/en/companies/company/1 it will callthe same CompanyAction | |
| but the locale will be set to "en". | |
| So my question is: Is it possible to teach Lift to retrieve the locale based on some uri-pattern, so | |
| that it will try to resolve my *.xhtml after the /{request_locale} part? | |
| /no/index.xhtml | |
| /en/index.xhtml | |
| Should then map to the same templates but with different locale. | |
| 18.2 Solution | |
| This is an ideal use of URL rewriting. | |
| You have to hook up the module in Boot.scala with: UrlLocalizer.init(). | |
| You can see a complete runnable example at DPP’s GitHub Starting Point. | |
| Here’s the code: | |
| 125 | |
| 126 | |
| CHAPTER 18. URI-BASED LOCALE SELECTION | |
| 1 package code | |
| 2 package lib | |
| 3 | |
| 4 import net.liftweb._ | |
| 5 import http._ | |
| 6 import provider._ | |
| 7 import common._ | |
| 8 | |
| 9 import java.util.Locale | |
| 10 | |
| 11 object UrlLocalizer { | |
| 12 | |
| 13 | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 | |
| 24 | |
| 25 | |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | |
| 30 | |
| 31 | |
| 32 | |
| 33 | |
| 34 | |
| 35 | |
| 36 | |
| 37 | |
| 38 | |
| 39 | |
| 40 | |
| 41 | |
| 42 | |
| 43 | |
| 44 | |
| 45 | |
| 46 | |
| 47 | |
| 48 | |
| 49 | |
| 50 | |
| 51 | |
| 52 | |
| // capture the old localization function | |
| val oldLocalizeFunc = LiftRules.localeCalculator | |
| /** | |
| * What are the available locales? | |
| */ | |
| val locales: Map[String, Locale] = | |
| Map(Locale.getAvailableLocales.map(l => l.toString -> l) :_*) | |
| object currentLocale extends RequestVar(Locale.getDefault) | |
| /** | |
| * Extract the locale | |
| */ | |
| def unapply(in: String): Option[Locale] = | |
| if (currentLocale.set_?) None // don't duplicate | |
| else locales.get(in) // if it's a valid locale, it matches | |
| /** | |
| * Calculate the Locale | |
| */ | |
| def calcLocale(in: Box[HTTPRequest]): Locale = | |
| if (currentLocale.set_?) currentLocale.get | |
| else oldLocalizeFunc(in) | |
| /** | |
| * Initialize the locale | |
| */ | |
| def init() { | |
| // hook into Lift | |
| LiftRules.localeCalculator = calcLocale | |
| // rewrite requests with a locale at the head | |
| // of the path | |
| LiftRules.statelessRewrite.append { | |
| case RewriteRequest(ParsePath(UrlLocalizer(locale) :: rest, | |
| _, _, _), _, _) => { | |
| currentLocale.set(locale) | |
| RewriteResponse(rest) | |
| } | |
| } | |
| } | |
| 53 | |
| 54 } | |
| Chapter 19 | |
| Embedding JavaScript in an HTML page | |
| 19.1 Problem | |
| What am I doing wrong? I’m trying to output a javascript object into the page (so my front end | |
| guy can do some stuff with the data without parsing it out of elements by id) but it’s replacing all | |
| the double quotes with " (only in view source - if I inspect it then firebug converts them to | |
| double quotes again) | |
| I’ve copied the example from EXPLORING LIFT, but it still does the same: | |
| 1 & ".data_as_object *" #> { | |
| 2 | |
| JsCrVar("myObject", JsObj(("persons", JsArray( | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| JsObj(("name", "Thor"), ("race", "Asgard")), | |
| JsObj(("name", "Todd"), ("race", "Wraith")), | |
| JsObj(("name", "Rodney"), ("race", "Human")) | |
| )))) | |
| Becomes: | |
| 1 <div class="data_as_object" style="display: none;">var myObject = | |
| 2 {"persons": [{"name": "Thor", | |
| 3 "race": "Asgard"}, {"name": | |
| 4 "Todd", "race": "Wraith"}, | |
| 5 {"name": "Rodney", "race": | |
| 6 "Human"}] | |
| 7 };</div> | |
| I’ve noticed that if what I’m outputting is a number rather than a string then it’s fine. | |
| 19.2 Solution | |
| Try: | |
| 1 & ".data_as_object *" #> { | |
| 2 | |
| Script(JsCrVar("myObject", JsObj(("persons", JsArray( | |
| 127 | |
| 128 | |
| CHAPTER 19. EMBEDDING JAVASCRIPT IN AN HTML PAGE | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| JsObj(("name", "Thor"), ("race", "Asgard")), | |
| JsObj(("name", "Todd"), ("race", "Wraith")), | |
| JsObj(("name", "Rodney"), ("race", "Human")) | |
| ))))) | |
| JsExp are also Nodes, so they render out, but they render out escaped. Putting Script() around | |
| them turns them into: | |
| 1 <script> | |
| 2 // <![CDATA[ | |
| 3 .... | |
| 4 ]]> | |
| 5 </script> | |
| Part III | |
| Questions and Answers | |
| 129 | |
| Chapter 20 | |
| Scaling | |
| Lift is a web framework built on the Scala programming language. Lift takes advantage of many | |
| of Scala’s features that allow developers to very concisely code secure, scalable, highly interactive | |
| web applications. Lift provides a full set of layered abstractions on top of HTTP and HTML from | |
| "close to the metal" REST abstractions up to transportation agnostic server push (Comet) support. | |
| Scala compiles to JVM byte-code and is compatible with Java libraries and the Java object model. | |
| Lift applications are typically deployed as WAR files in J/EE web containers... Lift apps run in | |
| Tomcat, Jetty, Glassfish, etc. | |
| just like any other J/EE web application. Lift apps can generally | |
| be monitored and managed just like any Java web app. Web Applications, Sessions, and State. | |
| All web applications are stateful in one way or another. Even a "static" web site is made up of | |
| the files that are served... the application’s state is defined in those files. The site content may | |
| be served out of a database, but the content served does not depend on identity of the user or | |
| anything about the HTTP request except the contents of the HTTP request. These contents can | |
| include the URI, parameters, and headers. The complete value of the response can be calculated | |
| from the request without referencing any resources except the content resources. For the purpose | |
| of this discussion, I will refer to these as session-less requests. News sites like the UK Guardian, | |
| MSNBC, and others are prototypical examples of this kind of site. Sessions. Some applications | |
| are customized on a user-by-user basis. These applications include the likes of Foursquare and | |
| others where many HTTP requests make up a "session" in which the results of previous HTTP | |
| requests change the behavior of future HTTP requests. Put in concrete terms, a user can log into | |
| a site and for some duration, the responses are specific to that user. There are many mechanisms | |
| for managing sessions, but the most common and secure method is creating a cryptographically | |
| unique token (a session id), and putting that token in the Set-Cookie response header such that | |
| the browser will present that Cookie in subsequent HTTP requests for a certain period of time. | |
| The server-side state is referenced by the Cookie and the state is made available to the web appli- | |
| cation during the scope of servicing the request and any mutations the web app makes to session | |
| state during the request are kept on the server and are available to the application in subsequent | |
| requests. Another available technique for managing state is to serialize application state in the | |
| Cookie and deliver it to the browser such that the server is not responsible for managing state | |
| across requests. As we’ve recently discovered, this is a tremendously insecure way to manage | |
| application state. Further, for any moderately complex application, the amount of data the needs | |
| to be transferred as part of each request and response is huge. Migratory Sessions. Many web | |
| application managers allow for server-managed sessions to migrate across a cluster of web appli- | |
| cation servers. In some environments such as Ruby on Rails, this is a hard requirement because | |
| 131 | |
| 132 | |
| CHAPTER 20. SCALING | |
| only one request at a time can be served per process, thus for any moderate traffic site, there | |
| must be multiple processes serving pages. There are many strategies for migrating state across | |
| processes: storing state on disk, in memcached, in a database (relational or NoSQL), or having | |
| some proprietary cluster communications protocol. In any of these scenarios sessions can migrate | |
| across the grid of processes serving requests for a given web application. Web applications that | |
| support migratory state are often referred to as "stateless" because the session state does not re- | |
| side in the same process as the web application. Session Affinity. Some applications require that | |
| all requests related to a particular session are routed to the same process and that process keeps | |
| session-related content in local memory. In a cluster, there are multiple mechanisms for achiev- | |
| ing session affinity... the two most popular being HAProxy and Nginx. Availability, Scalability, | |
| Security, Performance, and User Experience. There are many vectors on which to measure the | |
| overall-quality of a web application. Let’s take a quick peek at each one. Availability. Avail- | |
| ability of an application is the amount of time it gives a meaningful response to a request. Highly | |
| available applications generally span multiple pieces of hardware and often multiple data centers. | |
| Highly available applications are also typically available during upgrades of part of the system | |
| that makes up the application. Highly available applications have very few single points of failure | |
| and those single points of failure are usually deployed on very reliable hardware. Scalability. A | |
| scalable application can, within certain bounds, respond with similar performance to increased | |
| load by adding hardware to process more load. No system is infinitely or linearly scalable. How- | |
| ever, many systems have grossly disproportionate load demands such that, for example, you can | |
| add a lot of web application front-ends to a Rails application before there’s enough load on the | |
| back-end RDBMS such that scaling is impaired. | |
| Security. The Internet is a dangerous place and no request that is received from the Internet can | |
| be trusted. Applications, frameworks, systems and everything else must be designed to be se- | |
| cure and resist attacks. The most common attacks on web application are listed in the OWASP | |
| Top Ten. Performance. Web application performance can be measured on two vectors: response | |
| time to a request and system resources required to service the request. These two vectors are | |
| inter-dependent. User Experience. The user experience of a web app is an important measure of | |
| its quality. User experience can be measured on many different vectors including perceived re- | |
| sponsiveness, visual design, interactivity, lack of "hicups", etc. Ultimately, because we’re building | |
| applications for users, the user experience is very important. Lift’s trade-offs. Given the number | |
| and complexity related to the quality of a web application, there are a lot of trade-offs, implicit | |
| and explicit, to building a framework that allows developers and business people to deliver a | |
| great user experience. Let’s talk for a minute about what Lift is and what it isn’t. Lift is a web | |
| framework. It provides a set of abstractions over HTTP and HTML such that developers can write | |
| excellent web applications. Lift is persistence agnostic. You can use Lift with relational databases, | |
| file systems, NoSQL data stores, mule carts, etc. As long as you can materialize an object into | |
| the JVM where Lift is running, Lift can make use of that object. Lift sits on top of the JVM. Lift | |
| applications execute in the Java Virtual Machine. The JVM is a very high performance computing | |
| system. There are raging debates as to the relative performance of JVM code and native machine | |
| code. No matter which benchmarks you look at, the JVM is a very fast performer. Lift apps take | |
| advantage of the JVM’s performance characteristics. Moderately complex Lift apps that access the | |
| database can serve 1,000+ requests per second on quad-core Intel hardware. Even very complex | |
| Lift apps that make many back-end calls per request can serve hundreds of requests per second on | |
| EC2 large instances. Lift as proxy. Many web applications, typically REST applications, provide | |
| a very thin layer on top of a backing data store. The web application serves a few basic functions | |
| to broker between the HTTP request and the backing store. These functions include: request and | |
| 133 | |
| parameter validation, authentication, parameter unpacking, back-end service request, and trans- | |
| lation of response data to wire format (typically XML or JSON). Lift can service these kinds of | |
| requests within the scope of a session or without any session at all, depending on application | |
| design. For more information on Lift’s REST features, see Lift RestHelper. When running these | |
| kinds of services, Lift apps can be treated without regard for session affinity. Lift as HTML gen- | |
| erator. Lift has a powerful and secure templating mechanism. All Lift templates are expressed | |
| as valid XML and during the rendering process, Lift keeps the page in XML format. Pages ren- | |
| dered via Lift’s templating mechanism are generally resistant to cross site scripting attacks and | |
| other attacks that insert malicious content in rendered pages. Lift’s templating mechanism is de- | |
| signer friendly yet supports complex and powerful substitution rules. Further, the rendered page | |
| can be evaluated and transformed during the final rendering phase to ensure that all script tags | |
| are at the bottom of the page, all CSS tags are at the top, etc. Lift’s templating mechanism can | |
| be used to serve sessionless requests or serve requests within the context of a session. Further, | |
| pages can be marked as not requiring a session, yet will make session state available if the re- | |
| quest was made in the context of a container session. Lift page rendering can even be done in | |
| parallel such that if there are long off-process components on the page (e.g., advertising servers), | |
| those components can be Sessionless Lift, forms and Ajax Lift applications can process HTML | |
| forms and process Ajax requests even if there’s no session associated with the request. Such forms | |
| and Ajax requests have to have stable field names and stable URLs, but this is the same require- | |
| ment as most web frameworks including Struts, Rails, and Django impose on their applications. | |
| In such a mode, Lift apps have the similar characteristics to web apps written on tops of Struts, | |
| Play, JSF and other popular Java web frameworks. Lift as Secure, Interactive App Platform Lift | |
| features require session affinity: GUID to function mapping, type-safe SessionVars and Comet. | |
| Applications that take advantage of these features need to have requests associated with the JVM | |
| that stores the session. I’ll discuss the reason for this limitation, the down-side to the limitation, | |
| the downside to migratory session, and the benefits of these features. Application servers that | |
| support migratory sessions (sessions that are available to application servers running in multiple | |
| address spaces/processes) require a mechanism for transferring the state information between | |
| processes. This is typically (with the exception of Terracotta) done by serializing the stored data. | |
| Serialization is the process of converting rich data structures into a stream of bytes. Some of | |
| Scala’s constructs are hard or impossible to serialize. For example, local variables that are mu- | |
| tated within a closure are promoted from stack variables to heap variables. When those variables | |
| are serialized at different times, the application winds up with two references even though the | |
| references are logically the same. Lift makes use of many of these constructs (I’ll explain why | |
| next) and Lift’s use of these constructs makes session serialization and migration impossible. It | |
| also means that Lift’s type-safe SessionVars are not guaranteed to be serialized. One of the key | |
| Lift constructs is to map a cryptographically unique identifier in the browser to a function on the | |
| server. Lift uses Scala functions which close over scope, including all of the variables referenced | |
| by the function. This means that it’s not necessary to expose primary keys to the client when edit- | |
| ing a record in the database because the primary key of the record or the record itself is known | |
| to the function on the server. This guards against OWASP Vulnerability A4, Insecure Object Ref- | |
| erences as well as Replay Attacks. From the developer’s standpoint, writing Lift applications is | |
| like writing a VisualBasic application... the developer associates the user action with a function. | |
| Lift supplies the plumbing to bridge between the two. Lift’s GUID to function mapping extends | |
| to Lift’s Ajax support. Associating a button, checkbox, or other HTML element with an Ajax call | |
| is literally a single line: SHtml.ajaxButton(<b>PressMe</b>, () => Alert("You pressed a button at | |
| "+Helpers.currentTimeFormatted) Lift’s Ajax support is simple, maintainable, and secure. There’s | |
| no need to build and maintain routing. Lift has the most advanced server-push/Comet support | |
| 134 | |
| CHAPTER 20. SCALING | |
| of any web framework or any other system currently available. Lift’s comet support relies on | |
| session affinity. Lift’s comet support associates an Actor with a section of screen real estate. A | |
| single browser window may have many pieces of screen real estate associated with many of Lift’s | |
| CometActors. When state changes in the Actor, the state change is pushed to the browser. Lift | |
| takes care of multiplexing a single HTTP connection to handle all the comet items on a given | |
| page, the versioning of the change deltas (if the HTTP connection is dropped while 3 changes | |
| become available, all 3 of those changes are pushed when the next HTTP request is made.) Fur- | |
| ther, Lift’s comet support will work the same way once web sockets are available to the client and | |
| server... there will be no application code changes necessary for web sockets support. Lift’s comet | |
| support requires that the connect is made from the browser back to the same JVM in which the | |
| CometActors are resident... the same JVM where the session is located. | |
| The downside to Lift’s session affinity requirement mainly falls on the operations team. They | |
| must use a session aware load balancer or other mechanism to route incoming requests to the | |
| server that the session is associated with. This is easily accomplished with HAProxy and Nginx. | |
| Further, if the server running a given session goes down, the information associated with that | |
| session is lost (note that any information distributed off-session [into a database, into a cluster of | |
| Akka actors, etc.] is preserved.) But, Lift has extended session facilities that support re-creation | |
| of session information in the event of session lost. Lift also has heart-beat functionality so that | |
| sessions are kept alive as long as a browser page is open to the application, so user inactivity will | |
| not result in session timeouts. | |
| Compared to the operational cost of a session aware load balancer, there are many costs associated | |
| with migratory sessions. First, there must be a persistence mechanism for those sessions. Mem- | |
| cached is an unreliable mechanism as memcached instances have no more stability than the JVM | |
| which hosts the application and being a cache, some sessions may get expired. Putting session | |
| data in backing store such as MySQL or Cassandra increases the latency of requests. Further, the | |
| costs of serializing state, transmitting the state across the network, storing it, retrieving it, trans- | |
| mitting it across the network, and deserializing it all costs a lot of cycles and bandwidth. When | |
| your Lift application scales beyond a single server, beyond 100 requests per second, the costs of | |
| migrating state on every request becomes a significant operational issue. | |
| Session serialization can cause session information loss in the case of multiple requests being ex- | |
| ecuted in multiple processes. It’s common to have multiple tabs/windows open to the same ap- | |
| plication. If session data is serialized as a blob and two different requests from the same server | |
| are being executed at the same time, the last request to write session data into the store will over- | |
| write the prior session data. This is a concurrency problem and can lead to hard to debug issues | |
| in production because reproducing this kind of problem is non-trivial and this kind of problem is | |
| not expected by developers. | |
| The third issue with migratory sessions and session serialization is that the inability to store com- | |
| plex information in the session (e.g., a function that closes over scope) means that the developer | |
| has to write imperative code to serialize session state to implement complex user interactions like | |
| multi-screen wizards (which is a 400 line implementation in Lift). These complex, hand written | |
| serializations are error prone, can introduce security problems and are non-trivial to maintain. | |
| The operational costs of supporting session affinity are not materially different from the opera- | |
| tional costs of providing backing store for migratory sessions. On the other hand, there are many | |
| significant downsides to migratory sessions. Let’s explore the advantages of Lift’s design. | |
| Lift’s use of GUIDs associated with functions on the server: Increase the security of the applica- | |
| tion by guarding against cross site request forgeries, replay attacks, and insecure object references | |
| 135 | |
| Decrease application development and maintenance time and costs Increase application inter- | |
| activity, thus a much better user experience Increase in application richness because of simpler | |
| Ajax, multi-page Wizards, and Comet Improved application performance because fewer cycles | |
| are spent serializing and transmitting session information No difference in scalability... just add | |
| more servers to the front end to scale the front end of your application The positive attributes of | |
| Lift’s design decisions are evident at Foursquare which handles thousands of requests per second | |
| all served by Lift. There are very few sites that have more traffic than Foursquare. They have | |
| scaled their web front end successfully and securely with Lift. Other high volume sites including | |
| Novell are successfully scaling with Lift. If you are scaling your site, there are also commercial Lift | |
| Cloud manager tools that can help manage clusters of Lift’s session requirements. Conclusion Lift | |
| provides a lot of choices for developing and deploying complex web applications. Lift can operate | |
| in a web container like any other Java web framework. If you choose to use certain Lift features | |
| and you are deploying across multiple servers, you need to have a session aware load balancer. | |
| Even when using Lift’s session-affinity dependent features, Lift applications have higher perfor- | |
| mance, identical availability, identical scalability, better security, and better user experience than | |
| applications written with web frameworks such as Ruby on Rails, Struts, and GWT. | |
| 136 | |
| CHAPTER 20. SCALING | |
| Chapter 21 | |
| How Lift does function/GUID mapping | |
| 137 | |
| 138 | |
| CHAPTER 21. HOW LIFT DOES FUNCTION/GUID MAPPING | |
| Chapter 22 | |
| How Lift does Comet | |
| I can speak to Lift’s Comet Architecture which was selected by Novell to power their Pulse product | |
| after they evaluated a number of different technologies. | |
| Lift’s Comet implementation uses a single HTTP connection to poll for changes to an arbitrary | |
| number of components on the page. Each component has a version number. The long poll in- | |
| cludes the version number and the component GUID. On the server side, a listener is attached to | |
| all of the GUIDs listed in the long poll requests. If any of the components has a higher version | |
| number (or the version number increases during the period of the long poll), the deltas (a set of | |
| JavaScript describing the change from each version) is sent to the client. The deltas are applied | |
| and the version number on the client is set to the highest version number for the change set. | |
| Lift integrates long polling with session management so that if a second request comes into the | |
| same URL during a long poll, the long poll is terminated to avoid connection starvation (most | |
| browsers have a maximum of 2 HTTP connections per named server). Lift also supports DNS | |
| wild-carded servers for long poll requests such that each tab in the browser can do long polling | |
| against a different DNS wildcarded server. This avoids the connection starvation issues. | |
| Lift dynamically detects the container the Servlet is running in and on Jetty 6 & 7 and (soon) | |
| Glassfish, Lift will use the platform’s "continuations" implementation to avoid using a thread | |
| during the long poll. | |
| Lift’s JavaScript can sit on top of jQuery and YUI (and could sit on top of Prototype/Scriptaculous | |
| as well.) The actual polling code includes back-off on connection failures and other "graceful" | |
| ways of dealing with transient connection failures. | |
| I’ve looked at Atmosphere and CometD (both JVM-oriented Comet technologies). Neither had | |
| (at the time I evaluated them) support for multiple components per page or connection starvation | |
| avoidance. | |
| 139 | |
| 140 | |
| CHAPTER 22. HOW LIFT DOES COMET | |
| Chapter 23 | |
| Advanced Concepts | |
| 23.1 Snippet Resolution | |
| Lift snippets transform markup to dynamic content. The are functions that transform NodeSeq | |
| => NodeSeq. | |
| Snippets can be invoked from templates via tags: | |
| 1 <lift:surround with="default" at="content"> | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| <p> | |
| You have reached this page, but you can only get here if you've logged in | |
| first. | |
| </p> | |
| 5 | |
| 6 </lift:surround> | |
| or via class attributes. | |
| 1 <p class="lift:surround?with=default;at=content"> | |
| You have reached this page, but you can only get here if you've logged in | |
| first. | |
| In both cases, the surround (See Section 9.11) snippet will be invoked with attribute with set to | |
| default and at set to content. The parameter passed to the surround NodeSeq => NodeSeq | |
| function is: | |
| 1 <p> | |
| You have reached this page, but you can only get here if you've logged in | |
| first. | |
| 3 | |
| 4 </p> | |
| 2 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 </p> | |
| Lift will resolve from the snippet name to a function in the following steps. | |
| 141 | |
| 142 | |
| CHAPTER 23. ADVANCED CONCEPTS | |
| 23.1.1 LiftSession.liftTagProcessing | |
| a | |
| consults | |
| List[PartialFunction[(String, Elem, MetaData, NodeSeq, | |
| Lift | |
| String), NodeSeq]] located in LiftSession.liftTagProcessing for | |
| the rules to use to | |
| LiftSes- | |
| evaluate the snippet name, attributes, etc. | |
| sion.liftTagProcessing is the result of LiftRules.liftTagProcessing or else | |
| the default Lift tag processor. | |
| If you need special snippet resolution mechanisms, you can | |
| place them in LiftRules.liftTagProcessing. By default, the snippets get processed by | |
| LiftSession.processSnippet. | |
| into the resulting NodeSeq. | |
| 23.1.2 LiftRules.liftTagProcessing | |
| LiftRules.liftTagProcessing looks for the form attribute and sets the isForm variable. | |
| Next, Lift determines if the contents of the snippet should be evaluated eagerly by looking for one | |
| of eager_eval, l:eager_eval, or lift:eager_eval attributes. | |
| If the snippet is an eager evaluation, the child tags will be evaluated for any snippets. | |
| Either the originally passed children or the eagerly evaluated children will be referred to as chil- | |
| dren in the next section. | |
| 23.1.3 Snippet name resolution | |
| Lift looks for the named snippet in the following locations in order: | |
| • S.locateMappedSnippet - the complete snippet name without any camel or snake ap- | |
| plication is used to look up a NodeSeq => NodeSeq in within the scope of the current | |
| extended request1. Snippets may be registered using S.mapSnippet. | |
| • SiteMap Loc snippet | |
| the current SiteMap Loc (S.location) will be queried | |
| it has a NodeSeq => NodeSeq that matches the current snippet name | |
| - | |
| to see if | |
| (loc.snippet(snippetName)). | |
| • LiftRules.snippets - next, the snippet name is split at the ’.’ character to determine the | |
| snippet name and snippet method name. The snippets RulesSeq is tested for a match | |
| between the List[String] that results from splitting the name at the period and NodeSeq | |
| => NodeSeq. | |
| • If the above mechanisms do not result in a NodeSeq => NodeSeq, Lift looks for a Class that | |
| matches the name. | |
| – S.snippetForClass - is checked to see if a Class has been associated with the snip- | |
| pet name. If none is found... | |
| 1For the purposes of this discussion, the extended request is the scope of a RequestVar. This is the scope of a | |
| full page render plus any subsequent Ajax operations that originate from that page. This means that a snippet may be | |
| registered using S.mapSnippet during page rendering and the same snippet function with the same scope binding | |
| will be used by any Ajax commands. | |
| 23.1. SNIPPET RESOLUTION | |
| 143 | |
| – LiftRules.snippetDispatch is checked to see if theres an instance of Dispatch- | |
| Snippet that matches to snippet name. Lift’s built-in snippets are registered with | |
| LiftRules.snippetDispatch. If there’s no match... | |
| – Lift tries reflection to find a matching class name (note that Lift will try camel | |
| case and snake case for class names, so the foo_bar snippet will match the class | |
| Lift looks for classes in the snippet subpack- | |
| foo_bar as well as FooBar). | |
| age of all the packages added via LiftRules.addToPackages. | |
| So if you call | |
| LiftRules.addToPackages("foo.bar") in Boot.scala, then Lift will search for | |
| the classes foo.bar.snippet.foo_bar and foo.bar.snippet.FooBar. | |
| – Once the class is found, Lift will try to instantiate the class the following ways: | |
| * Lift will look at the current location (S.location) and if the parameter type of | |
| the Loc is not Unit, Lift get the current parameter and look for a constructor that | |
| matches the current parameter type or Box of current parameter type (and super- | |
| classes of both). If there’s a match the constructor will be called with the param- | |
| eters. For example, if the current page is a Loc[Dog] and Dog is a subclass of | |
| Animal, the following constructors will match: | |
| Dog) | |
| Animal) | |
| Box[Dog]) | |
| Box[Animal]) | |
| · class MySnippet(dog: | |
| · class MySnippet(animal: | |
| · class MySnippet(dog: | |
| · class MySnippet(animal: | |
| · class MySnippet(dog: | |
| · class MySnippet(animal: | |
| · class MySnippet(dog: | |
| · class MySnippet(animal: | |
| Dog, session: | |
| LiftSession) | |
| Animal, session: | |
| LiftSession) | |
| Box[Dog], session: | |
| LiftSession) | |
| Box[Animal], session: | |
| LiftSes- | |
| sion) | |
| * If a typed constructor cannot be found, try the zero argument constructor; | |
| * If the zero argument constructor cannot be found, try to treat the Class as a Scala | |
| object singleton and get the instance that the singleton refers to. | |
| – Once we’ve got an instance of the potential snippet handling class: | |
| * If it’s a StatefulSnippet, register with S.overrideSnippetForClass; | |
| * Update the LiftSession snippetMap RequestVar so subsequent references to | |
| the snippet during the same extended request uses same instance (that way if any | |
| instance variables are set on the class instance, they are picked up by subsequent | |
| accesses to the same snippet); | |
| * Next, Lift attempts to invoke the snippet method. If no explicit method is given, | |
| the render method is used. | |
| · Stateful and Dispatch use dispatch method to find the NodeSeq => Node- | |
| Seq | |
| · Non-dispatch, do the following method lookup: | |
| · method that takes no parameters and returns CssBindFunc, NodeSeq => | |
| NodeSeq, invoke the method and apply the function to the children; or | |
| · try to invoke the named method with Group(children) (NodeSeq signa- | |
| ture) or invoke it with no parameters. If the return value is NodeSeq, Node, or | |
| Seq[Node], then it was successful. | |
| 144 | |
| CHAPTER 23. ADVANCED CONCEPTS | |
| 23.1.4 Post-processing of results | |
| • LiftRules.snippetDispatch (built in snippets registered here) | |
| parallel snippets | |
| 23.2 The Merging Phase | |
| Part IV | |
| Misc | |
| 145 | |
| Chapter 24 | |
| Releases | |
| 147 | |
| 148 | |
| 24.1 Lift 2.2-RC1 | |
| December 8, 2010 | |
| CHAPTER 24. RELEASES | |
| The Lift team is pleased to announce Lift 2.2-RC1. In the month since the 2.2-M1 release, the team | |
| has closed 53 tickets and made significant improvements to Lift based on community feedback. | |
| Lift is an elegant, expressive framework that allows any size team build and maintain secure, | |
| highly interactive, scalable web applications quickly and efficiently. Lift is built on Scala and | |
| compiles to JVM byte-code. Lift applications deploy as WAR files on popular application servers | |
| and web containers including Jetty, Glassfish and Tomcat. Lift applications can be monitored | |
| and managed with the same proven infrastructure used to manage and monitor any Java web | |
| application. Lift is open source licensed under an Apache 2.0 license. | |
| Lift features include: | |
| • Community... the Lift community is 2,400 members strong, super-active and always there to | |
| help with questions | |
| • Best Comet (server-push) support that allows the creation of dynamic application such as | |
| Novell Vibe | |
| • Super simple Ajax for creating highly interactive web applications without worrying about | |
| HTTP plumbing | |
| • Secure by default... Lift apps are resistant to the OWASP top 10 vulnerabilities including | |
| XSS, XSRF, and parameter tampering | |
| • Concise and Maintainable... Lift apps typically contain fewer lines of code than correspond- | |
| ing Rails apps, yet are type safe so that many errors are flagged by the compiler | |
| • Scalable... Lift apps scale to millions of users across many servers, yet are highly efficient for | |
| single-box implementations | |
| • Compatible... Lift apps can take advantage of any Java library as well as the growing collec- | |
| tion of Scala libraries | |
| Lift 2.2-RC1 improvements include: | |
| • HTML5 Support: Lift supports parsing HTML5 input files and rendering HTML5 to the | |
| browser in addition to Lift’s XHTML support | |
| • Wiring: Spreadsheets meet web application yielding an automatic mechanism for updating | |
| dependent elements on a page, making it even easier to build dynamic apps with Lift | |
| • Wizard and Screen Improvements: Build complex screens more easily with new helper | |
| methods for creating form elements and improved life-cycle callbacks | |
| • CSS Selector Transforms Improvements: including appending attributes, multiple selectors | |
| applying to a single element, and element lifting | |
| 24.1. LIFT 2.2-RC1 | |
| 149 | |
| • Support for migratory sessions: ContainerVars provide type-safe, guaranteed serializable | |
| session variables that can migrate across application servers in a cluster | |
| • Improved i18n: including per-page localization strings and localization strings and HTML | |
| stored in templates rather than Java resource files which makes editing much easier | |
| • Security Improvements: including creation of new sessions on login | |
| • MongoDB Improvements: performance improvements as well as new features | |
| • Support for Scala 2.8.1 as well as 2.8.0 and 2.7.7 | |
| • ProtoUser support for Record: Lift’s ProtoUser and CRUDify can be used on Record-based | |
| persistence classes as well as Mapper-based persistence classes | |
| • Squeryl integration improvements: Lift is updated to use the latest version of Squeryl | |
| Lift-powered sites include: | |
| • Foursquare: the multi-million user location based service that services millions of check-ins | |
| a day on their Lift-powered system | |
| • Novell Vibe: enterprise collaboration software platform based on Google Wave | |
| • Innovation Games: The fun way to do serious business – seriously | |
| • Xerox/XMPie: the leading provider of software for cross-media, variable data one-to-one | |
| marketing | |
| • Exchango: The easy and convenient way to give and get free stuff. | |
| • Snapsort: Compare and decide on cameras | |
| • No Fouls: Find pickup basketball games | |
| Please join the Lift community and help use grow Lift. And a super-big thanks to the 30+ Lift | |
| committers who have grown the Lift community and code-base to what it is today... and what it | |
| will be in the future! | |
| 150 | |
| 24.2 Lift 2.2 | |
| January 5, 2011 | |
| CHAPTER 24. RELEASES | |
| The Lift team is pleased to announce Lift 2.2. In the three months since the 2.1 release, the team has | |
| closed over 100 tickets and made significant improvements to Lift based on community feedback. | |
| Lift is an elegant, expressive framework that allows any size team build and maintain secure, | |
| highly interactive, scalable web applications quickly and efficiently. Lift is built on Scala and | |
| compiles to JVM byte-code. Lift applications deploy as WAR files on popular application servers | |
| and web containers including Jetty, Glassfish and Tomcat. Lift applications can be monitored | |
| and managed with the same proven infrastructure used to manage and monitor any Java web | |
| application. Lift is open source licensed under an Apache 2.0 license. | |
| Lift features include: | |
| • Community... the Lift community is 2,400 members strong, super-active and always there to | |
| help with questions | |
| • Best Comet (server-push) support that allows the creation of dynamic application such as | |
| Novell Vibe | |
| • Super simple Ajax for creating highly interactive web applications without worrying about | |
| HTTP plumbing | |
| • Secure by default... Lift apps are resistant to the OWASP top 10 vulnerabilities including | |
| XSS, XSRF, and parameter tampering | |
| • Concise and Maintainable... Lift apps typically contain fewer lines of code than correspond- | |
| ing Rails apps, yet are type safe so that many errors are flagged by the compiler | |
| • Scalable... Lift apps scale to millions of users across many servers, yet are highly efficient for | |
| single-box implementations | |
| • Compatible... Lift apps can take advantage of any Java library as well as the growing collec- | |
| tion of Scala libraries | |
| Lift 2.2 improvements include: | |
| • HTML5 Support: Lift supports parsing HTML5 input files and rendering HTML5 to the | |
| browser in addition to Lift’s XHTML support | |
| • Wiring: Spreadsheets meet web application yielding an automatic mechanism for updating | |
| dependent elements on a page, making it even easier to build dynamic apps with Lift | |
| • Wizard and Screen Improvements: Build complex screens more easily with new helper | |
| methods for creating form elements and improved life-cycle callbacks | |
| • CSS Selector Transforms Improvements: including appending attributes, multiple selectors | |
| applying to a single element, and element lifting | |
| 24.2. LIFT 2.2 | |
| 151 | |
| • Support for migratory sessions: ContainerVars provide type-safe, guaranteed serializable | |
| session variables that can migrate across application servers in a cluster | |
| • Improved i18n: including per-page localization strings and localization strings and HTML | |
| stored in templates rather than Java resource files which makes editing much easier | |
| • Security Improvements: including creation of new sessions on login | |
| • MongoDB Improvements: performance improvements as well as new features | |
| • Support for Scala 2.8.1 as well as 2.8.0 and 2.7.7 | |
| • ProtoUser support for Record: Lift’s ProtoUser and CRUDify can be used on Record-based | |
| persistence classes as well as Mapper-based persistence classes | |
| • Squeryl integration improvements: Lift is updated to use the latest version of Squeryl | |
| • Designer-friendly templates | |
| • Stateless renderingincluding the HTML pipeline | |
| • Support for MVC-style development | |
| Lift-powered sites include: | |
| • Foursquare: the multi-million user location based service that services millions of check-ins | |
| a day on their Lift-powered system | |
| • Novell Vibe: enterprise collaboration software platform based on Google Wave | |
| • Innovation Games: The fun way to do serious business – seriously | |
| • Xerox/XMPie: the leading provider of software for cross-media, variable data one-to-one | |
| marketing | |
| • Exchango: The easy and convenient way to give and get free stuff. | |
| • Snapsort: Compare and decide on cameras | |
| • No Fouls: Find pickup basketball games | |
| Please join the Lift community and help use grow Lift. And a super-big thanks to the 30+ Lift | |
| committers who have grown the Lift community and code-base to what it is today... and what it | |
| will be in the future! | |
| Index | |
| MVC, 3 | |
| 152 | |