Creating a servlet 3.0 application
Servlet 3.0 introduces a @WebServlet
annotation which can be used to
replace the traditional web.xml. The straightforward approach to create
a Vaadin application using servlet 3.0 annotations is to simply move
whatever is in web.xml to a custom servlet class (extends VaadinServlet
)
and annotate it using @WebServlet
and add @WebInitParams
as needed. You
will end up with something like
@WebServlet(value = "/*", asyncSupported = true, initParams = {
@WebInitParam(name = "ui", value = "com.example.MyUI"),
@WebInitParam(name = "productionMode", value = "false")
})
public class MyServlet extends VaadinServlet {
}
The problem you will face sooner or later with both this approach as well as using web.xml is that you will misspell some parameter name or class name. Maybe you change the UI class name and the init parameter is not automatically updated - and the head scratching and debugging starts.
Vaadin 7.1 introduces two features which makes this a lot easier,
@VaadinServletConfiguration
and automatic UI finding.
@VaadinServletConfiguration
is a type safe, Vaadin version of
@WebInitParam
which provides you with the option to select UI by
referring the UI class directly, toggle productionMode
using a boolean
and more. The above example rewritten using @VaadinServletConfiguration
looks like:
@WebServlet(value = "/*", asyncSupported = true)
@VaadinServletConfiguration(productionMode = false, ui = MYUI.class)
public class MyServlet extends VaadinServlet {
}
Automatic UI finding takes this even one step further and allows you to
leave out @VaadinServletConfiguration
completely if you define your
servlet class as a static inner class to your UI class. The above
example could therefore also be written as
public class MYUI extends UI {
@WebServlet(value = "/*", asyncSupported = true)
public static class Servlet extends VaadinServlet {
}
For clarity the variant with @VaadinServletConfiguration
is likely the
better option. Please do note that @VaadinServletConfiguration
comes
with defaults for some parameters, most importantly
legacyPropertyToStringMode
, which might be important if you are
migrating an older application.