Catch error when session timed out [duplicate] - session

I have written simple application with container-managed security. The problem is when I log in and open another page on which I logout, then I come back to first page and I click on any link etc or refresh page I get this exception. I guess it's normal (or maybe not:)) because I logged out and session is destroyed. What should I do to redirect user to for example index.xhtml or login.xhtml and save him from seeing that error page/message?
In other words how can I automatically redirect other pages to index/login page after I log out?
Here it is:
javax.faces.application.ViewExpiredException: viewId:/index.xhtml - View /index.xhtml could not be restored.
at com.sun.faces.lifecycle.RestoreViewPhase.execute(RestoreViewPhase.java:212)
at com.sun.faces.lifecycle.Phase.doPhase(Phase.java:101)
at com.sun.faces.lifecycle.RestoreViewPhase.doPhase(RestoreViewPhase.java:110)
at com.sun.faces.lifecycle.LifecycleImpl.execute(LifecycleImpl.java:118)
at javax.faces.webapp.FacesServlet.service(FacesServlet.java:312)
at org.apache.catalina.core.StandardWrapper.service(StandardWrapper.java:1523)
at org.apache.catalina.core.ApplicationFilterChain.internalDoFilter(ApplicationFilterChain.java:343)
at org.apache.catalina.core.ApplicationFilterChain.doFilter(ApplicationFilterChain.java:215)
at filter.HttpHttpsFilter.doFilter(HttpHttpsFilter.java:66)
at org.apache.catalina.core.ApplicationFilterChain.internalDoFilter(ApplicationFilterChain.java:256)
at org.apache.catalina.core.ApplicationFilterChain.doFilter(ApplicationFilterChain.java:215)
at org.apache.catalina.core.StandardWrapperValve.invoke(StandardWrapperValve.java:277)
at org.apache.catalina.core.StandardContextValve.invoke(StandardContextValve.java:188)
at org.apache.catalina.core.StandardPipeline.invoke(StandardPipeline.java:641)
at com.sun.enterprise.web.WebPipeline.invoke(WebPipeline.java:97)
at com.sun.enterprise.web.PESessionLockingStandardPipeline.invoke(PESessionLockingStandardPipeline.java:85)
at org.apache.catalina.core.StandardHostValve.invoke(StandardHostValve.java:185)
at org.apache.catalina.connector.CoyoteAdapter.doService(CoyoteAdapter.java:325)
at org.apache.catalina.connector.CoyoteAdapter.service(CoyoteAdapter.java:226)
at com.sun.enterprise.v3.services.impl.ContainerMapper.service(ContainerMapper.java:165)
at com.sun.grizzly.http.ProcessorTask.invokeAdapter(ProcessorTask.java:791)
at com.sun.grizzly.http.ProcessorTask.doProcess(ProcessorTask.java:693)
at com.sun.grizzly.http.ProcessorTask.process(ProcessorTask.java:954)
at com.sun.grizzly.http.DefaultProtocolFilter.execute(DefaultProtocolFilter.java:170)
at com.sun.grizzly.DefaultProtocolChain.executeProtocolFilter(DefaultProtocolChain.java:135)
at com.sun.grizzly.DefaultProtocolChain.execute(DefaultProtocolChain.java:102)
at com.sun.grizzly.DefaultProtocolChain.execute(DefaultProtocolChain.java:88)
at com.sun.grizzly.http.HttpProtocolChain.execute(HttpProtocolChain.java:76)
at com.sun.grizzly.ProtocolChainContextTask.doCall(ProtocolChainContextTask.java:53)
at com.sun.grizzly.SelectionKeyContextTask.call(SelectionKeyContextTask.java:57)
at com.sun.grizzly.ContextTask.run(ContextTask.java:69)
at com.sun.grizzly.util.AbstractThreadPool$Worker.doWork(AbstractThreadPool.java:330)
at com.sun.grizzly.util.AbstractThreadPool$Worker.run(AbstractThreadPool.java:309)
at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:619)

Introduction
The ViewExpiredException will be thrown whenever the javax.faces.STATE_SAVING_METHOD is set to server (default) and the enduser sends a HTTP POST request on a view via <h:form> with <h:commandLink>, <h:commandButton> or <f:ajax>, while the associated view state isn't available in the session anymore.
The view state is identified as value of a hidden input field javax.faces.ViewState of the <h:form>. With the state saving method set to server, this contains only the view state ID which references a serialized view state in the session. So, when the session is expired or absent for one of the following reasons ...
session object is timed out in server
session cookie is timed out in client
session cookie is deleted in client
HttpSession#invalidate() is called in server
SameSite=None is missing on session cookie (and thus e.g. Chrome won't send them along when a 3rd party site (e.g. payment) navigates back to your site via a callback URL)
... then the serialized view state is not available anymore in the session and the enduser will get this exception. To understand the working of the session, see also How do servlets work? Instantiation, sessions, shared variables and multithreading.
There is also a limit on the amount of views JSF will store in the session. When the limit is hit, then the least recently used view will be expired. See also com.sun.faces.numberOfViewsInSession vs com.sun.faces.numberOfLogicalViews.
With the state saving method set to client, the javax.faces.ViewState hidden input field contains instead the whole serialized view state, so the enduser won't get a ViewExpiredException when the session expires. It can however still happen on a cluster environment ("ERROR: MAC did not verify" is symptomatic) and/or when there's a implementation-specific timeout on the client side state configured and/or when server re-generates the AES key during restart, see also Getting ViewExpiredException in clustered environment while state saving method is set to client and user session is valid how to solve it.
Regardless of the solution, make sure you do not use enableRestoreView11Compatibility. it does not at all restore the original view state. It basically recreates the view and all associated view scoped beans from scratch and hereby thus losing all of original data (state). As the application will behave in a confusing way ("Hey, where are my input values..??"), this is very bad for user experience. Better use stateless views or <o:enableRestorableView> instead so you can manage it on a specific view only instead of on all views.
As to the why JSF needs to save view state, head to this answer: Why JSF saves the state of UI components on server?
Avoiding ViewExpiredException on page navigation
In order to avoid ViewExpiredException when e.g. navigating back after logout when the state saving is set to server, only redirecting the POST request after logout is not sufficient. You also need to instruct the browser to not cache the dynamic JSF pages, otherwise the browser may show them from the cache instead of requesting a fresh one from the server when you send a GET request on it (e.g. by back button).
The javax.faces.ViewState hidden field of the cached page may contain a view state ID value which is not valid anymore in the current session. If you're (ab)using POST (command links/buttons) instead of GET (regular links/buttons) for page-to-page navigation, and click such a command link/button on the cached page, then this will in turn fail with a ViewExpiredException.
To fire a redirect after logout in JSF 2.0, either add <redirect /> to the <navigation-case> in question (if any), or add ?faces-redirect=true to the outcome value.
<h:commandButton value="Logout" action="logout?faces-redirect=true" />
or
public String logout() {
// ...
return "index?faces-redirect=true";
}
To instruct the browser to not cache the dynamic JSF pages, create a Filter which is mapped on the servlet name of the FacesServlet and adds the needed response headers to disable the browser cache. E.g.
#WebFilter(servletNames={"Faces Servlet"}) // Must match <servlet-name> of your FacesServlet.
public class NoCacheFilter implements Filter {
#Override
public void doFilter(ServletRequest request, ServletResponse response, FilterChain chain) throws IOException, ServletException {
HttpServletRequest req = (HttpServletRequest) request;
HttpServletResponse res = (HttpServletResponse) response;
if (!req.getRequestURI().startsWith(req.getContextPath() + ResourceHandler.RESOURCE_IDENTIFIER)) { // Skip JSF resources (CSS/JS/Images/etc)
res.setHeader("Cache-Control", "no-cache, no-store, must-revalidate"); // HTTP 1.1.
res.setHeader("Pragma", "no-cache"); // HTTP 1.0.
res.setDateHeader("Expires", 0); // Proxies.
}
chain.doFilter(request, response);
}
// ...
}
Avoiding ViewExpiredException on page refresh
In order to avoid ViewExpiredException when refreshing the current page when the state saving is set to server, you not only need to make sure you are performing page-to-page navigation exclusively by GET (regular links/buttons), but you also need to make sure that you are exclusively using ajax to submit the forms. If you're submitting the form synchronously (non-ajax) anyway, then you'd best either make the view stateless (see later section), or to send a redirect after POST (see previous section).
Having a ViewExpiredException on page refresh is in default configuration a very rare case. It can only happen when the limit on the amount of views JSF will store in the session is hit. So, it will only happen when you've manually set that limit way too low, or that you're continuously creating new views in the "background" (e.g. by a badly implemented ajax poll in the same page or by a badly implemented 404 error page on broken images of the same page). See also com.sun.faces.numberOfViewsInSession vs com.sun.faces.numberOfLogicalViews for detail on that limit. Another cause is having duplicate JSF libraries in runtime classpath conflicting each other. The correct procedure to install JSF is outlined in our JSF wiki page.
Handling ViewExpiredException
When you want to handle an unavoidable ViewExpiredException after a POST action on an arbitrary page which was already opened in some browser tab/window while you're logged out in another tab/window, then you'd like to specify an error-page for that in web.xml which goes to a "Your session is timed out" page. E.g.
<error-page>
<exception-type>javax.faces.application.ViewExpiredException</exception-type>
<location>/WEB-INF/errorpages/expired.xhtml</location>
</error-page>
Use if necessary a meta refresh header in the error page in case you intend to actually redirect further to home or login page.
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<title>Session expired</title>
<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="0;url=#{request.contextPath}/login.xhtml" />
</head>
<body>
<h1>Session expired</h1>
<h3>You will be redirected to login page</h3>
<p>Click here if redirect didn't work or when you're impatient.</p>
</body>
</html>
(the 0 in content represents the amount of seconds before redirect, 0 thus means "redirect immediately", you can use e.g. 3 to let the browser wait 3 seconds with the redirect)
Note that handling exceptions during ajax requests requires a special ExceptionHandler. See also Session timeout and ViewExpiredException handling on JSF/PrimeFaces ajax request. You can find a live example at OmniFaces FullAjaxExceptionHandler showcase page (this also covers non-ajax requests).
Also note that your "general" error page should be mapped on <error-code> of 500 instead of an <exception-type> of e.g. java.lang.Exception or java.lang.Throwable, otherwise all exceptions wrapped in ServletException such as ViewExpiredException would still end up in the general error page. See also ViewExpiredException shown in java.lang.Throwable error-page in web.xml.
<error-page>
<error-code>500</error-code>
<location>/WEB-INF/errorpages/general.xhtml</location>
</error-page>
Stateless views
A completely different alternative is to run JSF views in stateless mode. This way nothing of JSF state will be saved and the views will never expire, but just be rebuilt from scratch on every request. You can turn on stateless views by setting the transient attribute of <f:view> to true:
<f:view transient="true">
</f:view>
This way the javax.faces.ViewState hidden field will get a fixed value of "stateless" in Mojarra (have not checked MyFaces at this point). Note that this feature was introduced in Mojarra 2.1.19 and 2.2.0 and is not available in older versions.
The consequence is that you cannot use view scoped beans anymore. They will now behave like request scoped beans. One of the disadvantages is that you have to track the state yourself by fiddling with hidden inputs and/or loose request parameters. Mainly those forms with input fields with rendered, readonly or disabled attributes which are controlled by ajax events will be affected.
Note that the <f:view> does not necessarily need to be unique throughout the view and/or reside in the master template only. It's also completely legit to redeclare and nest it in a template client. It basically "extends" the parent <f:view> then. E.g. in master template:
<f:view contentType="text/html">
<ui:insert name="content" />
</f:view>
and in template client:
<ui:define name="content">
<f:view transient="true">
<h:form>...</h:form>
</f:view>
</f:view>
You can even wrap the <f:view> in a <c:if> to make it conditional. Note that it would apply on the entire view, not only on the nested contents, such as the <h:form> in above example.
See also
ViewExpiredException shown in java.lang.Throwable error-page in web.xml
Check if session exists JSF
Session timeout and ViewExpiredException handling on JSF/PrimeFaces ajax request
Unrelated to the concrete problem, using HTTP POST for pure page-to-page navigation isn't very user/SEO friendly. In JSF 2.0 you should really prefer <h:link> or <h:button> over the <h:commandXxx> ones for plain vanilla page-to-page navigation.
So instead of e.g.
<h:form id="menu">
<h:commandLink value="Foo" action="foo?faces-redirect=true" />
<h:commandLink value="Bar" action="bar?faces-redirect=true" />
<h:commandLink value="Baz" action="baz?faces-redirect=true" />
</h:form>
better do
<h:link value="Foo" outcome="foo" />
<h:link value="Bar" outcome="bar" />
<h:link value="Baz" outcome="baz" />
See also
When should I use h:outputLink instead of h:commandLink?
Difference between h:button and h:commandButton
How to navigate in JSF? How to make URL reflect current page (and not previous one)

Have you tried adding lines below to your web.xml?
<context-param>
<param-name>com.sun.faces.enableRestoreView11Compatibility</param-name>
<param-value>true</param-value>
</context-param>
I found this to be very effective when I encountered this issue.

First what you have to do, before changing web.xml is to make sure your ManagedBean implements Serializable:
#ManagedBean
#ViewScoped
public class Login implements Serializable {
}
Especially if you use MyFaces

Avoid multipart forms in Richfaces:
<h:form enctype="multipart/form-data">
<a4j:poll id="poll" interval="10000"/>
</h:form>
If you are using Richfaces, i have found that ajax requests inside of multipart forms return a new View ID on each request.
How to debug:
On each ajax request a View ID is returned, that is fine as long as the View ID is always the same. If you get a new View ID on each request, then there is a problem and must be fixed.

I resolved this problem in JAVA EE 8 using AjaxExceptionHandler tag of Primefaces this is available from Primefaces 7 or higher (i am using and test in 11 version). Is so easy and you can combine this with a custom ExceptionHandlerWrapper as BalusC suggests. Use onShow event like this if you need that the page reload are auto.
<p:ajaxExceptionHandler type="javax.faces.application.ViewExpiredException"
update="viewExpiredDialog"
onexception="PF('viewExpiredDialog').show();" />
<p:dialog id="viewExpiredDialog" header="Session expired"
widgetVar="viewExpiredDialog" height="250px"
onShow="document.location.href = document.location.href;">
<h3>Reloading page</h3>
<p>Message...</p>
<!--Here, you decide that you need-->
<h:commandButton value="Reload" action="index?faces-redirect=true" />
Reload.
</p:dialog>
Add this configuration to faces-config.xml file. See ExceptionHandler and Error Handling
<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>
<faces-config version="2.3" xmlns="http://xmlns.jcp.org/xml/ns/javaee"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://xmlns.jcp.org/xml/ns/javaee
http://xmlns.jcp.org/xml/ns/javaee/web-facesconfig_2_3.xsd">
<application>
<el-resolver>
org.primefaces.application.exceptionhandler.PrimeExceptionHandlerELResolver
</el-resolver>
</application>
<factory>
<exception-handler-factory>
org.primefaces.application.exceptionhandler.PrimeExceptionHandlerFactory
</exception-handler-factory>
</factory>
</faces-config>
And Voilà this works like clockwork. Regards.

You coud use your own custom AjaxExceptionHandler or primefaces-extensions
Update your faces-config.xml
...
<factory>
<exception-handler-factory>org.primefaces.extensions.component.ajaxerrorhandler.AjaxExceptionHandlerFactory</exception-handler-factory>
</factory>
...
Add following code in your jsf page
...
<pe:ajaxErrorHandler />
...

I was getting this error : javax.faces.application.ViewExpiredException.When I using different requests, I found those having same JsessionId, even after restarting the server.
So this is due to the browser cache. Just close the browser and try, it will work.

When our page is idle for x amount of time the view will expire and throw javax.faces.application.ViewExpiredException to prevent this from happening
one solution is to create CustomViewHandler that extends ViewHandler
and override restoreView method all the other methods are being delegated to the Parent
import java.io.IOException;
import javax.faces.FacesException;
import javax.faces.application.ViewHandler;
import javax.faces.component.UIViewRoot;
import javax.faces.context.FacesContext;
import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest;
public class CustomViewHandler extends ViewHandler {
private ViewHandler parent;
public CustomViewHandler(ViewHandler parent) {
//System.out.println("CustomViewHandler.CustomViewHandler():Parent View Handler:"+parent.getClass());
this.parent = parent;
}
#Override
public UIViewRoot restoreView(FacesContext facesContext, String viewId) {
/**
* {#link javax.faces.application.ViewExpiredException}. This happens only when we try to logout from timed out pages.
*/
UIViewRoot root = null;
root = parent.restoreView(facesContext, viewId);
if(root == null) {
root = createView(facesContext, viewId);
}
return root;
}
#Override
public Locale calculateLocale(FacesContext facesContext) {
return parent.calculateLocale(facesContext);
}
#Override
public String calculateRenderKitId(FacesContext facesContext) {
String renderKitId = parent.calculateRenderKitId(facesContext);
//System.out.println("CustomViewHandler.calculateRenderKitId():RenderKitId: "+renderKitId);
return renderKitId;
}
#Override
public UIViewRoot createView(FacesContext facesContext, String viewId) {
return parent.createView(facesContext, viewId);
}
#Override
public String getActionURL(FacesContext facesContext, String actionId) {
return parent.getActionURL(facesContext, actionId);
}
#Override
public String getResourceURL(FacesContext facesContext, String resId) {
return parent.getResourceURL(facesContext, resId);
}
#Override
public void renderView(FacesContext facesContext, UIViewRoot viewId) throws IOException, FacesException {
parent.renderView(facesContext, viewId);
}
#Override
public void writeState(FacesContext facesContext) throws IOException {
parent.writeState(facesContext);
}
public ViewHandler getParent() {
return parent;
}
}
Then you need to add it to your faces-config.xml
<application>
<view-handler>com.demo.CustomViewHandler</view-handler>
</application>
Thanks for the original answer on the below link:
http://www.gregbugaj.com/?p=164

Please add this line in your web.xml
It works for me
<context-param>
<param-name>org.ajax4jsf.handleViewExpiredOnClient</param-name>
<param-value>true</param-value>
</context-param>

I ran into this problem myself and realized that it was because of a side-effect of a Filter that I created which was filtering all requests on the appliation. As soon as I modified the filter to pick only certain requests, this problem did not occur. It maybe good to check for such filters in your application and see how they behave.

I add the following configuration to web.xml and it got resolved.
<context-param>
<param-name>com.sun.faces.numberOfViewsInSession</param-name>
<param-value>500</param-value>
</context-param>
<context-param>
<param-name>com.sun.faces.numberOfLogicalViews</param-name>
<param-value>500</param-value>
</context-param>

Related

What might cause a session ID to sometimes change after redirect (Java/Kotlin Spring web app)?

I have a web application built with Kotlin+Spring which identifies users by session ID. On a static front page I have a form which, on submit, sends a POST request to "/start". This is handled by Spring by executing some code and redirecting user to another page "/page" – here's the minimal code:
#Controller
class SomeController() {
// No GetMapping("/"), because '/' is 100% static
#PostMapping("/start")
fun start(#ModelAttribute someModelAttr: SomeModelAttr, model: Model,
response: HttpServletResponse,
session: HttpSession) {
log.info { "POST /start visited by ${session.id}" }
val id = getSomeStuffSynchronously(someModelAttr, session.id);
response.sendRedirect("page/${id}")
}
#GetMapping("/page/{id}")
fun page(#PathVariable id: String,
model: Model,
session: HttpSession) {
log.info { "GET /page/${id} visited by ${session.id}" }
doOtherStuff(id, session.id);
return "page" // i.e. render a Thymeleaf template
}
The code above assumes that the session ID in start and page is the same. However, sometimes (but not always) this is false which breaks stuff for the users. In this situation, the log lines are basically:
POST /start visited by abcd
Log from getSomeStuffSynchronously(someModelAttr, "abcd")
GET /page/123 visited by vxyz
Unfortunately I could not capture headers sent and received by the browser when this happens, because when I tried, I could not reproduce this issue.
I've checked:
This issue might happen regardless of whether the user uses incognito mode in their browser, or not
I have not yet observed this happening on other requests than front-page->/start->/page/id
I do not have caching enabled neither at my hosting provider nor in Spring
I do not have a huge load on my website
I do not use spring-security
Sessions are Cookie sessions and are managed by spring-session-redis, with timeout in Redis set to 15 minutes. However I did not see any obvious correlation between the time between visits to the site and this issue happening.
My question is: what might cause the session ID to change during the redirect?
The reason for getting a different sessions, might be because the cookie/url param containing a reference to the session might not have been set/is used (so a new session is generated every time).
It might be an obvious question but are you sure the filter responsible for handling the session is registered? E.g. did you add the #EnableRedisHttpSession annotation to a configuration class (see redig http session docs)?
Relying on session.id is unreliable between redirects, but as a work-around one can use RedirectAttributes and store relevant data that will be needed in the second request handler as flash attributes – see e.g. How to pass the model as a redirect attribute in spring

sendRedirect in JSF 2.2

I am upgrading JSF from 1.2 to 2.2 version.
I have a simple response.sendRedirect() in my backing bean method. With JSF2.2, it started giving "java.lang.IllegalStateException: Cannot change buffer size after data has been written at org.apache.catalina.connecto" exception.
After adding "FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().responseComplete();", it worked!
Can anyone help me in understanding how the implementation is upgraded in JSF2.2 that redirect is not working without explicity saying response is completed?
Thanks!
You're supposed to use ExternalContext#redirect() for the job.
public void submit() throws IOException {
// ...
ExternalContext ec = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getExternalContext();
ec.redirect(ec.getRequestContextPath() + "/otherpage.jsf");
}
This has always been the case since the beginning, also in JSF 1.x. It will under the covers automatically call FacesContext#responseComplete() after performing the HttpServletResponse#sendRedirect(). The responseComplete() will basically instruct JSF that the response is already manually completed, and that JSF basically doesn't need to proceed to render response phase then (i.e. writing the navigation outcome into the response).
Moreover, any attempt to grab and downcast the raw javax.servlet.* API from under JSF's covers should be taken as a hint to think twice if there isn't already a JSF-ish way to achieve the same. In JSF 2.x there's an additional new way to perform a redirect: append faces-redirect=true query parameter to the (implicit) navigation outcome:
public String submit() {
// ...
return "otherpage?faces-redirect=true";
}
As to the illegal state exception you faced, JSF 2.2 just postpones setting the response headers to the point when it actually needs to render response. It will be too late if the response is already committed.
Java.lang.IllegalStateException: Cannot change buffer size after data has been written at org.apache.catalina.connecto" exception.
This may occur because of you had set response buffer size manually for reducing memory reallocation at rendering time but your page has more size than buffer size
For example
<context-param>
<param-name> javax.faces.FACELETS_BUFFER_SIZE </param-name>
<param-value> 55555 </param-value>
</context-param>

METADATA parameters disappear after AJAX action

in template i'm defining a parameter
<f:metadata >
<f:viewParam name="pageKey" value="#{parameterProvider.pageKey}" />
</f:metadata>
All works fine except AJAX requests with makes this param disappear?
example ajax button in xhtml page:
Message value from server= [#{lockerBean.msg}]<br/>
<h:form>
<h:commandButton value="Ajax Action" styleClass="systemButton" >
<f:ajax execute="#all" render="#all" listener="#{lockerBean.ajaxButton(event)}"/>
</h:commandButton><br/>
</h:form>
ajax action is simply
public void ajaxButton(ActionEvent event){
msg="Ajax reload";
}
After ajax request pageKey is gone. If i set required="true" i get valudation error
j_idt3: Validation Error: Value is required. with clearly indicates, that parameter has been deleted. how can i preserve it?
I know about includeViewParams, but i don't understand this mechanism very well and it is not easy to add to all kinds of buttons and links... can i somehow force it to be passed or can i inject them somewhere in context?
EDIT:
this log might help to understand what is happening:
ParameterProvider, is sessionscoped CGI that holds pageKey. I modified getter & setter, so they log info about being called. In whole aplication getters and setters to this value is used only when applying request value in jsf lifecycle (my own code uses different methods)
14:04:06,400 OFF [ParameterProvider] (default task-12) Getting pageKey[-1] into viewParams.
14:04:06,401 OFF [ParameterProvider] (default task-12) Setting pageKey[2] from viewParams.
14:04:06,401 OFF [MultiActionLockListener] (default task-12) AJAX ACTION
14:04:06,414 OFF [ParameterProvider] (default task-12) Getting pageKey[3] into viewParams.
as you can see, before anything we have calling getter and setter for key (2 has been send from client 3 suppose to be sent to client in response)
calling another action will cause to log:
14:08:54,281 OFF [MultiActionLockListener] (default task-14) AJAX ACTION
14:08:54,294 OFF [ParameterProvider] (default task-14) Getting pageKey[7] into viewParams.
as you see, there is no getter and setter, which means pageKey is gone?

Apache-Shiro: User authenticates within AJAX, how to restore GET-Variables after login?

in my JavaEE-Application, I am using Apache Shiro[1] for user-authentication.
My users are navigating via GET-URLs, as for example "/company/index.xhtml?companyId=327".
I have enabled programmatic login, following a guide[2] from BalusC:
SavedRequest savedRequest = WebUtils.getAndClearSavedRequest(Faces.getRequest());
My problem is, that savedRequest.getRequestUrl() does not contain the previous mentioned GET-parameteres, when my case is asynchronous POST with or without RememberMe; just "/company/index.xhtml" is returned, for example. It seems as if "FacesAjaxAwareUserFilter" (see [2]) is not GET-params aware. Everything works fine on synchronous GET-calls.
How do I get the GET-parameters after an shiro-redirect because of authentication-needed in case of using "FacesAjaxAwareUserFilter"?
[1] https://shiro.apache.org/
[2] Followed this great article about JavaEE and Shiro: http://balusc.blogspot.de/2013/01/apache-shiro-is-it-ready-for-java-ee-6.html
JSF ajax requests are sent to the URL as generated by <h:form>. This is however by default not exactly the current URL including the query string, it's by default the current URI without the query string.
There are several ways to fix this. The simplest but ugliest way is to use JS:
<h:form id="foo">
...
</h:form>
<script>document.getElementById("foo").action += "?" + location.search;</script>
The cleanest way would be to create a custom ViewHandler whose getActionURL() (as used by <h:form>) will return the desired URL with the query string.
JSF utility library OmniFaces has already such a component which does that based on view parameters: the <o:form> which basically extends the <h:form> with support for includeViewParams="true" (exactly the same way as <h:link> does).
<f:metadata>
<f:viewParam name="companyId" value="#{bean.company}" />
</f:metadata>
...
<o:form includeViewParams="true">
...
</o:form>

Passing request scoped beans from one page to another

If I have a request scope bean on a page in JSF2....how do I pass it to another page (I'm using JSF2 with Spring)?
I've tried the following but it doesnt work:
<h:commandButton action="complete.xhtml?faces-redirect=true" value="Confirm Booking">
<f:setPropertyActionListener target="#{quoteHolder.item}" value="#{quoteHolder.item}"/>
</h:commandButton>
action="complete.xhtml?faces-redirect=true"
You're sending a redirect. The <f:setPropertyActionListener> won't help much here as the request scoped bean will be garbaged after the invoke action phase anyway.
You have basically the following options:
Send all the data as request parameter(s) instead (conversion to/from String necessary!)
Don't send a redirect (the <f:setPropertyActionListener> becomes superfluous then)
Store it in a session scoped bean (not recommended! may be bad for user experience).

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