First, the flow definition:
<action-state id="saveProject">
<bean-action bean="projectManager" method="save">
<method-arguments>
<argument expression="flowScope.project" />
</method-arguments>
<method-result name="project" scope="request"/>
</bean-action>
<transition on="success" to="putInSession" />
</action-state>
<action-state id="putInSession">
<action bean="putInSessionAction">
<attribute name="sessionKey" value="project" />
</action>
<transition on="success" to="finish"/>
</action-state>
I call a bean-action "saveProject" and I put the result in request with key "project". Next, I execute the action "putInSession" and I set the attribute "sessionKey" with the value of the key "project", this mean thay the object to save in session is in the request with this key.
With this convention, here the Action implementation:
public class PutInSessionAction implements Action{
public Event execute(RequestContext context) throws Exception {
String key = (String) context.getAttributes().get("sessionKey");
Object value = context.getRequestScope().get(key);
context.getExternalContext().getSessionMap().put(key, value);
return new Event(this, "success");
}
}
This simple Action gets the object from the request and puts in session.
5 comments:
Cool tip. I'll post a link on the Ervacon SWF Portal.
Thanks :)
Thanks...!!!It is well described.
Thank it's helpful
in 2.0 it is more easier
See This
http://forum.springframework.org/showthread.php?p=206734
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