For example, I have class Article with methods getTitle () and getContent ().
I also have ArticlesService with method getAllArticles (). How to create a list of links with meaningful names (formed with #{article.title})? Like:
http://mysiteaddress.com/article/first-article-title
http://mysiteaddress.com/article/how-to-make-links-in-jsf
..or something similar.
I can create links with all necessary functionality with <h:commandLink>, but I don't know how to make nice 'href' for it: it always has href '#'.
I can create nice links with <h:outputLink> but I don't know how to add necessary functionality to it.
In jsp I created my own front-controller, which parsed urls from requests and then performed redirection to correspondent jsp-page.
How to achieve the same functionality in JSF?
If this is intended as an improvement of an existing application, then you basically need a
Filterwhich detects "dirty" and "friendly" URLs. When it detects a "dirty" URL, then it should redirect the request to a "friendly" URL byHttpServletResponse#sendRedirect(). When it detects a "friendly" URL, then it should forward the request to the "dirty" URL byRequestDispatcher#forward(). An example can be found in this related question: How to use a servlet filter in Java to change an incoming servlet request url?Further, you also need a custom
ViewHandlerto produce the desired "friendly" URL for JSF<h:form>,<h:link>, etc. An example can be found here: Dynamic Directory in Java EE Web Application.If this is a new application or an application which is open to changes, you could consider any of the existing pretty URL libraries instead of reinventing the wheel:
pretty-config.xml. This library is useful if you want to completely change URLs and/or want to configure redirects from old to new URLs.web.xmlcontext param. It also supports "MultiViews" whereby path parameters can declaratively be injected in managed beans. E.g./foo/bar/bazcan point to/foo.xhtmland the valuesbarandbazcan be injected by@Param(pathIndex).There's also the experimental PrettyUrlPhaseListener of Mojarra Scales library, but it's an old library and PrettyFaces is largely based on it, so it's not worth the effort.