Default Application
WebSphere Application Server provides a default configuration that administrators can use to verify that the Application Server is running. When the product is installed, it includes an application server called server1 and an enterprise application called Default Application, which contains a web module called DefaultWebApplication and an enterprise bean JAR file called Increment.
Snoop servlet
Use the Snoop servlet to retrieve information about a servlet request. This servlet returns the following information:
- Servlet initialization parameters
- Servlet context initialization parameters
- URL invocation request parameters
- Preferred client locale
- Context path
- User principal
- Request headers and their values
- Request parameter names and their values
- HTTPS protocol information
- Servlet request attributes and their values
- HTTP session information
- Session attributes and their values
The Snoop servlet includes security configuration so that when WebSphere Security is enabled, clients must supply a user ID and password to initiate the servlet.
http://hostname:9080/snoop/.
HelloHTML servlet
Use the HelloHTML pervasive servlet to exercise the PageList support provided by the WebSphere web container. This servlet extends the PageListServlet, which provides APIs that allow servlets to call other web resources by name or, when using the Client Type detection support, by type. We can invoke the Hello servlet from an HTML browser, speech client, or most Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) enabled browsers using the URL:
http://localhost:9080/HelloHTML.jsp
For transitioning users: The PageList Servlet custom extension is deprecated in WAS v9.0. Re-architect your legacy applications to use javax.servlet.filter classes instead of com.ibm.servlet classes. Starting from the Servlet 2.3 specification, javax.servlet.filter classes we can intercept requests and examine responses. We can also use javax.servlet.filter classes to achieve chaining functionality, as well as embellishing or truncating responses.trns
HitCount application
Use the HitCount demonstration application to demonstrate how to increment a counter using a variety of methods, including:
- A servlet instance variable
- An HTTP session
- An enterprise bean
We can instruct the servlet to execute any of these methods within a transaction that we can commit or roll back. If the transaction is committed, the counter is incremented. If the transaction is rolled back, the counter is not incremented. The enterprise bean method uses a container-managed persistence enterprise bean that persists the counter value to an Apache Derby database. This enterprise bean is configured to use the DefaultApp Datasource, which is set to the DefaultDB database. When using the enterprise bean method, we can instruct the servlet to look up the enterprise bean, either in the WebSphere global namespace, or in the namespace local to the application. The URL for the HitCount application is:
http://localhost:9080/HitCount.jsp
Related:
Web applications Web modules Class loaders Accessing the samples Task overview: Develop and deploy web applications Web applications: Resources for learning Servlets