Action Configuration
- Action Mappings
- Action Names
- Action Methods
- Wildcard Method
- Dynamic Method Invocation
- ActionSupport Default
- Post-Back Default
- Action Default
The action mappings are the basic “unit-of-work” in the framework. Essentially, the action maps an identifier to a handler class. When a request matches the action’s name, the framework uses the mapping to determine how to process the request.
Action Mappings
The action mapping can specify a set of result types, a set of exception handlers, and an interceptor stack. Only the
name
attribute is required. The other attributes can also be provided at package scope.
A Logon Action
<action name="Logon" class="tutorial.Logon">
<result type="redirectAction">Menu</result>
<result name="input">/Logon.jsp</result>
</action>
When using Convention Plugin the action mapping can be configured with annotations:
A Logon Action with annotations
package tutorial
@Action("Logon") // actually that is not necessary as it is added by convention
@Results(
@Result(type="redirectAction", location="Menu"),
@Result(name="input", location="/Logon.jsp")
)
public class Logon {
Action Names
In a web application, the name
attribute is matched as part of the location requested by a browser (or other HTTP
client). The framework will drop the host and application name and the extension and match what’s in the middle:
the action name. So, a request for http://www.planetstruts.org/struts2-mailreader/Welcome.action
will map to the
Welcome
action.
Within an application a link to an action is usually generated by a Struts Tag. The tag can specify the action by name, and the framework will render the default extension and anything else that is needed. Forms may also submit directly to a Struts Action name (rather than a “raw” URI).
A Hello Form
<s:form action="Hello">
<s:textfield label="Please enter your name" name="name"/>
<s:submit/>
</s:form>
Action Names With Slashes
If your action names have slashes in them (for example, <action name="admin/home" class="tutorial.Admin"/>
) you need
to specifically allow slashes in your action names via a constant in the struts.xml
file by specifying
<constant name="struts.enable.SlashesInActionNames" value="true"/>
See JIRA Issue WW-1383 for discussion as there are side effects
to setting this property to true
.
Action Names with Dots and Dashes
Although action naming is pretty flexible, one should pay attention when using dots (eg. create.user) and/or dashes (eg. my-action). While the dot notation has no known side effects at this time, the dash notation will cause problems with the generated JavaScript for certain tags and themes. Use with caution, and always try to use camelcase action names (eg. createUser) or underscores (eg. my_action).
Allowed action names
DefaultActionMapper
is using pre-defined RegEx to check if action name matches allowed names. The default RegEx is
defined as follow: [a-zA-Z0-9._!/-]*
- if at some point this doesn’t match your action naming schema you can define
your own RegEx and override the default using constant named struts.allowed.action.names
, e.g.:
<struts>
<constant name="struts.allowed.action.names" value="[a-z{}]"*/>
...
</struts>
NOTE: Please be aware that action names not matching the RegEx will rise an exception.
Action Methods
The default entry method to the handler class is defined by the Action interface.
Action interface
public interface Action {
public String execute() throws Exception;
}
Implementing the Action interface is optional. If Action is not implemented, the framework will use reflection to look for an
execute
method.
Sometimes, developers like to create more than one entry point to an Action. For example, in the case of a data-access
Action, a developer might want separate entry-points for create
, retrieve
, update
, and delete
. A different
entry point can be specified by the method
attribute.
<action name="delete" class="example.CrudAction" method="delete">
...
If there is no
execute
method and no other method specified in the configuration the framework will throw an exception.
Convention Plugin allows that by annotating methods:
Annotated action method
@Action("crud")
public class CrudAction {
@Action("delete")
public String delete() {
...
Wildcard Method
Many times, a set of action mappings will share a common pattern. For example, all your edit
actions might start
with the word “edit”, and call the edit
method on the Action class. The delete
actions might use the same pattern,
but call the delete
method instead.
Rather than code a separate mapping for each action class that uses this pattern, you can write it once as a wildcard mapping.
<action name="*Crud" class="example.Crud" method="{1}">
...
Here, a reference to “editCrud” will call the edit
method on an instance of the Crud Action class. Likewise,
a reference to “deleteCrud” will call the delete
method instead.
Another common approach is to postfix the method name and set it off with an exclamation point (aka “bang”), underscore, or other special character.
- “action=Crud-input”
- “action=Crud-delete”
To use a postfix wildcard, just move the asterisk and add an underscore.
<action name="Crud_*" class="example.Crud" method="{1}">
From the framework’s perspective, a wildcard mapping creates a new “virtual” mapping with all the same attributes as a conventional, static mapping. As a result, you can use the expanded wildcard name as the name of validation, type conversion, and message resource files, just as if it were an Action name (which it is!).
Crud_input-validation.xml
Crud_delete-conversion.xml
If Wildcard Method mapping uses a “!” in the action name, the Wildcard Method will overlap with another flexible
approach to mapping, . To use action names that include the “!” character, set struts.enable.DynamicMethodInvocation
to false
in the application configuration.
Dynamic Method Invocation
There’s a feature embedded in Struts 2 that lets the “!” (bang) character invoke a method other than execute
. It is
called “Dynamic Method Invocation” aka DMI.
DMI will use the string following a “!” character in an action name as the name of a method to invoke (instead of
execute
). A reference to Category!create.action
, says to use the “Category” action mapping, but call the create
method instead.
Another way to use DMI is to provide HTTP parameters prefixed with method:
. For example in the URL it could be
Category.action?method:create=foo
, the parameter value is ignored. In POST-Requests that can be used e.g. with
a hidden parameter (<s:hidden name="method:create" value="foo" />
) or along with a button (<s:submit method="create" />
).
For Struts 2, we added a switch to disable DMI for two reasons. First, DMI can cause security issues if POJO actions are
used. Second, DMI overlaps with the Wildcard Method feature that we brought over from Struts 1 (and from Cocoon before
that). If you have security concerns, or would like to use the “!” character with Wildcard Method actions, then set
struts.enable.DynamicMethodInvocation
to false
in the application configuration.
The framework does support DMI, but there are problems with way DMI is implemented. Essentially, the code scans
the action name for a “!” character, and finding one, tricks the framework into invoking the other method instead of
execute
. The other method is invoked, but it uses the same configuration as the execute
method, including
validations. The framework “believes” it is invoking the Category
action with the execute
method.
The Wildcard Method feature is implemented differently. When a Wildcard Method action is invoked, the framework acts as
if the matching action had been hardcoded in the configuration. The framework “believes” it’s executing the action
Category!create
and “knows” it is executing the create
method of the corresponding Action class. Accordingly, we can
add for a Wildcard Method action mapping its own validations, message resources, and type converters, just like
a conventional action mapping. For this reason, the is preferred.
Strict DMI
In Struts 2.3, an option was added to restrict the methods that DMI can invoke. First, set the attribute
strict-method-invocation="true"
on your <package>
element. This tells Struts to reject any method that is not
explicitly allowed via either the method
attribute (including wildcards) or the <allowed-methods>
tag. Then specify
<allowed-methods>
as a comma-separated list of method names in your <action>
. (If you specify a method
attribute
for your action, you do not need to list it in <allowed-methods>
).
Note that you can specify <allowed-methods>
even without strict-method-invocation
. This restricts access only for
the specific actions that have <allowed-methods>
.
Example struts.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE struts PUBLIC
"-//Apache Software Foundation//DTD Struts Configuration 2.3//EN"
"http://struts.apache.org/dtds/struts-2.3.dtd">
<struts>
<constant name="struts.enable.DynamicMethodInvocation" value="true"/>
<package name="default" extends="struts-default" strict-method-invocation="true">
<action name="index" class="org.apache.struts2.examples.actions.Index">
<result name="success" type="redirectAction">hello</result>
</action>
<action name="hello" class="org.apache.struts2.examples.actions.HelloAction">
<result name="success">/WEB-INF/content/hello.jsp</result>
<result name="redisplay" type="redirectAction">hello</result>
<allowed-methods>add</allowed-methods>
</action>
</package>
</struts>
Strict Method Invocation
In Struts 2.5 the Strict DMI was extended and it’s called Strict Method Invocation aka SMI. You can imagine that
the DMI is a “border police”, where SMI is a “tax police” and keeps eye on internals. With this version, SMI is enabled
by default (strict-method-invocation
attribute is set to true
by default in struts-default
package), you have
option to disable it per package - there is no global switch to disable SMI for the whole application. To gain advantage
of the new configuration option please use the latest DTD definition:
Struts 2.5 DTD
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE struts PUBLIC
"-//Apache Software Foundation//DTD Struts Configuration 2.5//EN"
"http://struts.apache.org/dtds/struts-2.5.dtd">
<struts>
...
</struts>
SMI works in the following way:
<allowed-methods>
/@AllowedMethods
is defined per action - SMI works without switching it on but just for those actions (plus adding<global-allowed-methods/>
)- SMI is enabled but no
<allowed-methods>
/@AllowedMethods
are defined - SMI works but only with<global-allowed-methods/>
- SMI is disabled - call to any action method is allowed that matches the default RegEx -
([A-Za-z0-9_$]*)
You can redefine the default RegEx by using a constant as follow
<constant name="struts.strictMethodInvocation.methodRegex" value="([a-zA-Z]*)"/>
When using wildcard mapping in actions’ definitions SMI works in two ways:
- SMI is disabled - any wildcard will be substituted with the default RegEx, ie.:
<action name="Person\*" method="perform\*">
will be translated intoallowedMethod = "regex:perform(\[A-Za-z0-9-\$\]\*)"
. - SMI is enabled - no wildcard substitution will happen, you must strictly define which methods can be accessed
by annotations or
<allowed-method/>
tag.
You can configure SMI per <action/>
using <allowed-methods/>
tag or via @AllowedMethod
annotation plus using per
<package/>
<global-allowed-methods/>
, see the examples below:
SMI via struts.xml
<package ...>
...
<global-allowed-methods>execute,input,back,cancel,browse</global-allowed-methods>
...
<action name="Bar">
<allowed-methods>foo,bar</allowed-methods>
</action>
...
</package>
SMI via annotation on action class level
@AllowedMethods("end")
public class ClassLevelAllowedMethodsAction {
public String execute() {
return ...
}
}
SMI via annotation on package level (in package-info.java)
@org.apache.struts2.convention.annotation.AllowedMethods({"home", "start"})
package org.apache.struts2.convention.actions.allowedmethods;
Allowed methods can be defined as:
- literals ie. in xml:
execute,cancel
or in annotation:{"execute", "cancel"}
- patterns when using with wildcard mapping, i.e
<action ... method="do{2}"/>
- RegExs using
regex:
prefix, ie:<global-allowed-methods>execute,input,cancel,regex:user([A-Z]*)</global-allowed-methods>
Please be aware when using your own ConfigurationProvider
that the logic to set allowed methods is defined in built-in
providers - XmlConfigurationProvider
and PackageBasedActionConfigBuilder
- and you must replicate such logic in your
code as by default only execute method is allowed, even when SMI is disabled.
ActionSupport Default
If the class attribute in an action mapping is left blank, the com.opensymphony.xwork2.ActionSupport
class is used
as a default.
<action name="Hello">
// ...
</action>
The ActionSupport class has an
execute
method that returns “success” and aninput
method that returns “input”.
To specify a different class as the default Action class, set the default-class-ref
package attribute.
For more about using wildcards, see Wildcard Mappings.
Post-Back Default
A good practice is to link to actions rather than pages. Linking to actions encapsulates which server page renders, and ensures that an Action class can fire before a page renders.
Another common workflow stategy is to first render a page using an alternate method, like input
and then have it
submit back to the default execute
method.
Using these two strategies together creates an opportunity to use a “post-back” form that doesn’t specify an action. The form simply submits back to the action that created it.
Posting Back
<s:form>
<s:textfield label="Please enter your name" name="name"/>
<s:submit/>
</s:form>
Action Default
Usually, if an action is requested, and the framework can’t map the request to an action name, the result will be the usual “404 - Page not found” error. But, if you would prefer that an omnibus action handle any unmatched requests, you can specify a default action. If no other action matches, the default action is used instead.
<package name="Hello" extends="action-default">
<default-action-ref name="UnderConstruction"/>
<action name="UnderConstruction">
<result>/UnderConstruction.jsp</result>
</action>
...
There are no special requirements for the default action. Each package can have its own default action, but there should only be one default action per namespace.
(!) One to a Namespace
The default action features should be set up so that there is only one default action per namespace. If you have multiple packages declaring a default action with the same namespace, there is no guarantee which action will be the default.
Wildcard Default
Using wildcards is another approach to default actions. A wildcard action at the end of the configuration can be used to catch unmatched references.
<action name="*">
<result>/{1}.jsp</result>
</action>
When a new action is needed, just add a stub page.
It’s important to put a “catchall” wildcard mapping like this at the end of your configuration so it won’t attempt to map every request!