Annotation Type ViewScoped
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@Inherited @Documented @NormalScope(passivating=true) @Retention(RUNTIME) @Target({TYPE,METHOD,FIELD}) public @interface ViewScoped
The CDI view scope annotation, with more optimal handling of bean destroy as compared to standard Faces one.
In standard Faces, the
@
PreDestroy
annotated method on a view scoped bean is only invoked when the session expires. However, there may be cases when it's desirable to immediately destroy a view scoped bean as well when the browserunload
event is invoked. I.e. when the user navigates away by GET, or closes the browser tab/window. The standard Faces view scope does not support this. Since OmniFaces 2.2, this CDI view scope annotation will guarantee that the@PreDestroy
annotated method is also invoked on browser unload. This trick is done bynavigator.sendBeacon
. For browsers not supportingnavigator.sendBeacon
, it will fallback to a synchronous XHR request.Since OmniFaces 2.3, the unload has been further improved to also physically remove the associated Faces view state from Faces implementation's internal LRU map in case of server side state saving, hereby further decreasing the risk at
ViewExpiredException
on the other views which were created/opened earlier. As side effect of this change, the@PreDestroy
annotated method of any standard Faces view scoped beans referenced in the same view as the OmniFaces CDI view scoped bean will also guaranteed be invoked on browser unload.Since OmniFaces 2.6, this annotation got a new attribute:
saveInViewState
. When using client side state saving, this attribute can be set totrue
in order to force Faces to store whole view scoped bean instances annotated with this annotation in the Faces view state instead of in the HTTP session. For more detail, see thesaveInViewState()
.In a nutshell: if you want the
@PreDestroy
to be invoked on browser unload too, then use OmniFaces 2.2+ with this view scope annotation. Or, if you want to store whole view scoped beans in the Faces view state when using client side state saving, then use OmniFaces 2.6+ with this view scope annotation and thesaveInViewState
attribute set totrue
.Related Faces issues:
Usage
Just use it the usual way as all other CDI scopes. Watch out with IDE autocomplete on import that you don't accidentally import standard Faces own one.
import jakarta.inject.Named; import org.omnifaces.cdi.ViewScoped; @Named @ViewScoped public class OmniCDIViewScopedBean implements Serializable {}
Please note that the bean must implement
Serializable
, otherwise the CDI implementation will throw an exception about the bean not being passivation capable.Under the covers, CDI managed beans with this scope are via
ViewScopeManager
by default stored in the session scope by anUUID
based key which is referenced in Faces own view map as available byUIViewRoot.getViewMap()
. They are not stored in the Faces view state itself as that would be rather expensive in case of client side state saving.In case you are using client side state saving by having the
jakarta.faces.STATE_SAVING_METHOD
context parameter set totrue
along with a validjsf/ClientSideSecretKey
inweb.xml
as below,<context-param> <param-name>jakarta.faces.STATE_SAVING_METHOD</param-name> <param-value>client</param-value> </context-param> <env-entry> <env-entry-name>jsf/ClientSideSecretKey</env-entry-name> <env-entry-type>java.lang.String</env-entry-type> <env-entry-value><!-- See https://stackoverflow.com/q/35102645/157882 --></env-entry-value> </env-entry>
And you explicitly want to store the whole view scoped bean instance in the Faces view state, then set the annotation's
saveInViewState
attribute totrue
.import jakarta.inject.Named; import org.omnifaces.cdi.ViewScoped; @Named @ViewScoped(saveInViewState=true) public class OmniCDIViewScopedBean implements Serializable {}
It's very important that you understand that this setting has potentially a major impact in the size of the Faces view state, certainly when the view scoped bean instance holds "too much" data, such as a collection of entities for a data table, and that such beans will in fact never expire as they are stored entirely in the
jakarta.faces.ViewState
hidden input field in the HTML page. Moreover, the@
PreDestroy
annotated method on such bean will explicitly never be invoked, even not on an unload as it's quite possible to save or cache the page source and re-execute it at a (much) later moment.It's therefore strongly recommended to use this setting only on a view scoped bean instance which is exclusively used to keep track of the dynamically controlled form state, such as
disabled
,readonly
andrendered
attributes which are controlled by ajax events.This setting is NOT recommended when using server side state saving. It has basically no effect and it only adds unnecessary serialization overhead. The system will therefore throw an
IllegalStateException
on such condition.Configuration
By default, the maximum number of active view scopes is hold in a LRU map in HTTP session with a default size equal to the first non-null value of the following context parameters:
- "org.omnifaces.VIEW_SCOPE_MANAGER_MAX_ACTIVE_VIEW_SCOPES" (OmniFaces)
- "com.sun.faces.numberOfLogicalViews" (Mojarra-specific)
- "org.apache.myfaces.NUMBER_OF_VIEWS_IN_SESSION" (MyFaces-specific)
If none of those context parameters are present, then a default size of 20 will be used. When a view scoped bean is evicted from the LRU map, then its
@PreDestroy
will also guaranteed to be invoked.This setting has no effect when
saveInViewState
attribute is set totrue
.Using window.onbeforeunload
If you have a custom
onbeforeunload
handler, then it's strongly recommended to use plain vanilla JSwindow.onbeforeunload = function
instead of e.g. jQuery$(window).on("beforeunload", function)
or DOMwindow.addEventListener("beforeunload", function)
for this. This way the@ViewScoped
unload can detect it and take it into account and continue to work properly. Otherwise the view scoped bean will still be destroyed in background even when the user cancels and decides to stay in the same page.Below is a kickoff example how to properly register it, assuming jQuery is available, and that "stateless" forms and inputs (for which you don't want to trigger the unsaved data warning) have the class
stateless
set:$(document).on("change", "form:not(.stateless) :input:not(.stateless)", function() { $("body").data("unsavedchanges", true); }); OmniFaces.Util.addSubmitListener(function() { // This hooks on Mojarra/MyFaces/PrimeFaces ajax submit events too. $("body").data("unsavedchanges", false); }); window.onbeforeunload = function() { return $("body").data("unsavedchanges") ? "You have unsaved data. Are you sure you wish to leave this page?" : null; };
Using download links
If you have a synchronous download link as in
<a href="/path/to/file.ext">
, then the unload will also be triggered. For HTML5-capable browsers it's sufficient to add thedownload
attribute representing the file name you'd like to use in the client specific "Save As" dialogue.<a href="/path/to/file.ext" download="file.ext">download</a>
When this attribute is present, then the browser won't anymore trigger the unload event. In case your target browser does not support it, then you'd need to explicitly disable the OmniFaces unload event as follows:
<a href="/path/to/file.ext" onclick="OmniFaces.Unload.disable();">download</a>
An alternative is to explicitly open the download in a new tab/window. Decent browsers, even these not supporting the
download
attribute, will usually automatically close the newly opened tab/window when a response withContent-Disposition: attachment
is received.<a href="/path/to/file.ext" target="_blank">download</a>
Detecting unload requests
When the unload request has hit your servlet filter or authentication mechanism or whatever global listener/observer, and you would like to be able to detect them, so that you can exclude them from the logic, then you can use
ViewScopeManager.isUnloadRequest(jakarta.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest)
orViewScopeManager.isUnloadRequest(FacesContext)
, depending on whether theFacesContext
is available in the current context. You should always ensure that the flow just continues for them, else the unload requests won't be able to do their work of explicitly destroying the bean and state.Here is an example assuming that you're in a servlet filter:
if (!ViewScopeManager.isUnloadRequest(request)) { // Do actual job here. } chain.doFilter(request, response); // Ensure that this just continues!
- Since:
- 1.6
- Author:
- Radu Creanga <rdcrng@gmail.com>, Bauke Scholtz
- See Also:
ViewScopeExtension
,ViewScopeContext
,ViewScopeManager
,ViewScopeStorage
,ViewScopeStorageInSession
,ViewScopeStorageInViewState
,ViewScopeEventListener
,BeanStorage
,OmniViewHandler
,OmniExternalContext
,OmniExternalContextFactory
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Optional Element Summary
Optional Elements Modifier and Type Optional Element Description boolean
saveInViewState
Sets whether to save the view scoped bean instance in Faces view state instead of in HTTP session.
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Element Detail
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saveInViewState
boolean saveInViewState
Sets whether to save the view scoped bean instance in Faces view state instead of in HTTP session. By default, concrete view scoped bean instances are saved in HTTP session, also when client side state saving is enabled. This means, when the HTTP session expires, then the view scoped bean instances will also implicitly expire and be newly recreated upon a request in a new session. This may be undesirable when using client side state saving as it's intuitively expected that concrete view scoped beans are also saved in Faces view state.
- Returns:
- Whether to save the view scoped bean instance in Faces view state instead of in HTTP session.
- Throws:
IllegalStateException
- When enabled while not using client side state saving.- Since:
- 2.6
- Default:
- false
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