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How to use JSF versioning for resources in jar

PF 3.5.10, Mojarra 2.1.21, omnifaces 1.5

I have a JSF library (with css files only). This library is in a .jar file. The css will be included in xhtml with <h:outputStylesheet library="mylib" name="css/mycss.css">.

In html it is rendered to the following: localhost:8080/cms/javax.faces.resource/css/mycss.css.jsf?ln=mylib

CSS file of primefaces is rendered to: localhost:8080/cms/javax.faces.resource/primefaces.js.jsf?ln=primefaces&v=3.5.10

Notice the library version (&3.5.10) at the end. How can I do the same thing ? Should I write version in Manifest.mf. Or how can I use jsf-versioning in jar file?

like image 288
Tony Avatar asked Aug 09 '13 09:08

Tony


2 Answers

That's unfortunately not possible. Library versioning is not supported for resources in JAR.

You've basically 2 options:

  1. Do it the easy and ugly way, include server's startup time as query string. Given that you're using OmniFaces, you could use its builtin #{startup} managed bean referring a java.util.Date instance in application scope:

    <h:outputStylesheet ... name="some.css?#{startup.time}" />
    <h:outputScript ... name="some.js?#{startup.time}" />
    

    Or perhaps you've the version already as some application variable.

    <h:outputStylesheet ... name="some.css?v=#{app.version}" />
    <h:outputScript ... name="some.js?v=#{app.version}" />
    

    Update: Notwithstanding, this doesn't work for <h:outputStylesheet>. See also: https://github.com/javaserverfaces/mojarra/issues/3945 or https://github.com/javaee/javaserverfaces-spec/issues/1395

    It works for <h:outputScript> though, which had a very simliar bug report which was implemented pretty soon https://github.com/javaserverfaces/mojarra/issues/1216

  2. Do the same as PrimeFaces, create a custom ResourceHandler.

    public class MyVersionResourceHandler extends ResourceHandlerWrapper {
    
        private ResourceHandler wrapped;
    
        public MyVersionResourceHandler(ResourceHandler wrapped) {
            this.wrapped = wrapped;
        }
    
        @Override
        public Resource createResource(String resourceName) {
            return createResource(resourceName, null, null);
        }
    
        @Override
        public Resource createResource(String resourceName, String libraryName) {
            return createResource(resourceName, libraryName, null);
        }
    
        @Override
        public Resource createResource(String resourceName, String libraryName, String contentType) {
            final Resource resource = super.createResource(resourceName, libraryName, contentType);
    
            if (resource == null) {
                return null;
            }
    
            return new ResourceWrapper() {
    
                @Override
                public String getRequestPath() {
                    return super.getRequestPath() + "&v=1.0";
                }
    
                @Override // Necessary because this is missing in ResourceWrapper (will be fixed in JSF 2.2).
                public String getResourceName() {
                    return resource.getResourceName();
                }
    
                @Override // Necessary because this is missing in ResourceWrapper (will be fixed in JSF 2.2).
                public String getLibraryName() {
                    return resource.getLibraryName();
                }
    
                @Override // Necessary because this is missing in ResourceWrapper (will be fixed in JSF 2.2).
                public String getContentType() {
                    return resource.getContentType();
                }
    
                @Override
                public Resource getWrapped() {
                    return resource;
                }
            };
        }
    
        @Override
        public ResourceHandler getWrapped() {
            return wrapped;
        }
    
    }
    

    Or if you happen to already use OmniFaces, it could be done simpler:

    public class YourVersionResourceHandler extends DefaultResourceHandler {
    
        public YourVersionResourceHandler(ResourceHandler wrapped) {
            super(wrapped);
        }
    
        @Override
        public Resource decorateResource(Resource resource) {
            if (resource == null || !"mylib".equals(resource.getLibraryName())) {
                return resource;
            }
    
            return new RemappedResource(resource, resource.getRequestPath() + "&v=1.0");
        }
    
    }
    

    Either way, to get it to run, register it as <resource-handler> in /META-INF/faces-config.xml of the JAR.

    <application>
        <resource-handler>com.example.MyVersionResourceHandler</resource-handler>
    </application>
    
like image 133
BalusC Avatar answered Sep 22 '22 07:09

BalusC


You can also use your project version and append it as a version number for your resource files. This can be done using the maven-war-plugin. The maven-war-plugin will look at your pages during the build time and replace the defined properties.

The following example shows you how to configure the maven-war-plugin to filter your webapp resources in order to inject the custom property asset.version:

pom.xml

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<project xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0" ...>
  ...

  <properties>
    <asset.version>${project.version}</asset.version>    
  </properties>

  ...

  <build>
    <plugins>
      ...

      <plugin>
        <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
        <artifactId>maven-war-plugin</artifactId>
        <version>2.3</version>
        <configuration>

          <nonFilteredFileExtensions>
            <nonFilteredFileExtension>gif</nonFilteredFileExtension>
            <nonFilteredFileExtension>ico</nonFilteredFileExtension>
            <nonFilteredFileExtension>jpg</nonFilteredFileExtension>
            <nonFilteredFileExtension>png</nonFilteredFileExtension>
            <nonFilteredFileExtension>pdf</nonFilteredFileExtension>
          </nonFilteredFileExtensions>

          <failOnMissingWebXml>false</failOnMissingWebXml>

          <webResources> 
            <webResource>
              <directory>${basedir}/src/main/webapp</directory> 
              <filtering>true</filtering> 
            </webResource>
          </webResources> 

        </configuration>
      </plugin>

      ...
    </plugins>
  </build>

</project>

The asset.version property can then be used in your JSF file.

Here is an example tested with JSF 2.2:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html ...
      xmlns:jsf="http://xmlns.jcp.org/jsf">

...
<script jsf:name="js/libs/pure/pure-min.css?v=${project.version}" />

The result (in my case) will be the following:

<script type="text/javascript" src="/context-path/javax.faces.resource/js/libs/pure/pure-min.css.xhtml?v=1.0.15-SNAPSHOT"></script>
like image 27
Benny Neugebauer Avatar answered Sep 19 '22 07:09

Benny Neugebauer