Difference between revisions of "Developing Portlets with GWT"

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How to write a portlet with the aim of GWT.
 
How to write a portlet with the aim of GWT.
  

Latest revision as of 19:04, 6 July 2016


How to write a portlet with the aim of GWT.

Pre-development Actions

Modifying Gridpshere Home

If you want you can also apply the respective changes to gridsphere's home directory. This can be useful if, for some reason, you want to redeploy gridsphere.

Installing GWT

  1. Download the latest version of GWT from here.
  2. Uzip the file.
  3. Set environmntal variable: GWT_HOME=<the name of the folder where you unpacked gwt files>

Creating a gwt-portlet

Creating a gwt project

In order to create a gwt project, you must execute:

cd $GRIDPSHERE_HOME/projects
mkdir <module_dir_name>
cd <module_dir_name>
$GWT_HOME/projectCreator -eclipse MyProject
$GWT_HOME/applicationCreator -eclipse MyProject org.gcube.<whatever>.client.<ModuleName>

Now you can develop your gwt project as you wish by using eclipse!

Writing a gwt application

You can find useful information about how to write a gwt application on the Google Web Toolkit's official site: http://code.google.com/webtoolkit/.

! IMPORTANT INFO

In the entrypoint-class, in the onModuleLoad() method: When you are about to add your widget in the main page,
instead of writing:

RootPanel.get().add(<your widget>);

you must write:

RootPanel.get(<a unique id for the DIV>).add(<your widget>);

So, the generated html will be placed in the predefined div instead of being placed in an unspecified location.

Creating a jsr 168 portlet

In oder to create an empty portlet project, you must execute:

>cd $GRIDPSHERE_HOME/
>ant new-project

  • insert: <Portlet's Title>
  • insert: <module_dir_name> -- This must be the same as in gwt project
  • insert: jsr

Now, if you refresh the eclipse project, you can see that the "portlet-files" are generated.

Creating the portlet class

  • Create a class named: org.gcube.<whatever>.portlets.<portletClassName>.
  • Add the following content to the class:
    // 	JSP folder name
    public static final String JSP_FOLDER = "/jsp";
    //	 JSP file name to be rendered on the view mode
    public static final String VIEW_JSP = JSP_FOLDER + "/<a_name_for_the_jsp_page>.jsp";
 
 
    public void doView(RenderRequest request, RenderResponse response) throws PortletException, IOException{
		// ------------------------------------------------------------
		// Note: The portlet is just diplaying a JSP for the AJAX Lab.
		// It does absolutely nothing else.
		// ------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
 
    	        request.getPortletSession().setAttribute("username", request.getRemoteUser(), PortletSession.APPLICATION_SCOPE);
 
		// Invoke the JSP to render:
       		PortletRequestDispatcher rd = getPortletContext().getRequestDispatcher(VIEW_JSP);
		rd.include(request,response);            
    }

Creating the jsp page

  • Create a file in the webapp/jsp directory named: <a_name_for_the_jsp_page>.jsp.
  • In this file you place the following content:
<%@ page contentType="text/html" %>
<%@taglib uri="http://java.sun.com/portlet" prefix="portlet" %>
 
<!--                                           -->
<!-- The module reference below is the link    -->
<!-- between html and your Web Toolkit module  -->		
<!--                                           -->
<script src='<%=request.getContextPath()%>/html/org.gcube.<whatever>.<ModuleName>.nocache.js'></script>
 
 
<div id="<a unique id for the DIV>">
</div>

I should mention here that the org.gcube.<whatever>.<ModuleName> is the one you defined when you created the gwt application.
Additionally, the id for the div is the one you used in the RootPanel.get() method.

Configuring the portlet

  • Modify the webapp/WEB-INF/portlet.xml file as following:

Instead of:

        <!-- place portlet description here -->
        <description xml:lang="en">This Portlet is a sample</description>
        <description xml:lang="de">Diese Portlet ist ein sample</description>
        <!-- place unique portlet name here -->
        <portlet-name>SamplePortlet</portlet-name>
        <display-name xml:lang="en">A sample Portlet</display-name>
        <display-name xml:lang="de">Ein sample Portlet</display-name>
        <!-- place your portlet class name here -->
        <portlet-class>org.gridlab.gridsphere.portlets.SamplePortlet</portlet-class>

Write:

        <!-- place portlet description here -->
        <description xml:lang="en">Your Portlet description</description>
        <!-- place unique portlet name here -->
        <portlet-name>UniquePorltetName</portlet-name>
        <display-name xml:lang="en">Portlet's Title</display-name>
        <!-- place your portlet class name here -->
        <portlet-class>>org.diligentproject.<whatever>.portlets.<portletClassName></portlet-class>

Deploying the gwt-portlet

In order to deploy the gwt-portlet you need to create a file in the main directory of your eclipse project which will contain the following:

#!/bin/bash
#This bash script compiles and deploys the gwt-portlet.
 
# Delete files from previous compilation / deployment:
rm -rf webapp/html
rm -rf webapp/WEB-INF/classes/org
rm -rf .gwt-cache/
rm -rf ./www/org.gcube*
ant clean
 
#Stop Tomcat:
$CATALINA_HOME/bin/shutdown.sh
 
#Compile the gwt project:
./<ModuleName>-compile -out www/  ##### Replace the <ModuleName> with the actual one.
 
# Copy files from gwt project to portlet public place:
mkdir webapp/html/
cp -r ./www/org.gcube*/* webapp/html/
 
 
ant compile
cp -r ./build/classes/org/ webapp/WEB-INF/classes/
 
# Install the porltet on Tomcat:
ant install
 
#Start Tomcat:
$CATALINA_HOME/bin/startup.sh

Finally, just execute this script, and the portlet will be deployed!!!

Authors

Valia Tsagkalidou

Luca Frosini


--Valia 17:32, 1 March 2007 (EET)