org.springframework.webflow.execution.Action Maven / Gradle / Ivy
/*
* Copyright 2004-2012 the original author or authors.
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
* You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
package org.springframework.webflow.execution;
/**
* A command that executes a behavior and returns a logical execution result a calling flow execution can respond to.
*
* Actions typically delegate down to the application (or service) layer to perform business operations. They often
* retrieve data to support response rendering. They act as a bridge between a SWF web-tier and your middle-tier
* business logic layer.
*
* When an action completes execution it signals a result event describing the outcome of that execution (for example,
* "success", "error", "yes", "no", "tryAgain", etc). In addition to providing a logical outcome the flow can respond
* to, a result event may have payload associated with it, for example a "success" return value or an "error" error
* code. The result event is typically used as grounds for a state transition out of the current state of the calling
* Flow.
*
* Action implementations are often application-scoped singletons instantiated and managed by a web-tier Spring
* application context to take advantage of Spring's externalized configuration and dependency injection capabilities
* (which is a form of Inversion of Control [IoC]). Actions may also be stateful prototypes, storing conversational
* state as instance variables. Action instance definitions may also be locally scoped to a specific flow definition
* (see use of the "import" element of the root XML flow definition element.)
*
* Note: Actions are directly instantiatable for use in a standalone test environment and can be parameterized with
* mocks or stubs, as they are simple POJOs. Action proxies may also be generated at runtime for delegating to POJO
* business operations that have no dependency on the Spring Web Flow API.
*
* Note: if an Action is a singleton managed in application scope, take care not to store and/or modify caller-specific
* state in a unsafe manner. The Action {@link #execute(RequestContext)} method runs in an independently executing
* thread on each invocation so make sure you deal only with local data or internal, thread-safe services.
*
* Note: an Action is not a controller like a Spring MVC controller or a Struts action is a controller. Flow actions are
* commands. Such commands do not select views, they execute arbitrary behavioral logic and then return an
* logical execution result. The flow that invokes an Action is responsible for responding to the execution result to
* decide what to do next. In Spring Web Flow, the flow is the controller.
*
* @author Keith Donald
* @author Erwin Vervaet
*/
public interface Action {
/**
* Execute this action. Action execution will occur in the context of a request associated with an active flow
* execution.
*
* Action invocation is typically triggered in a production environment by a state within a flow carrying out the
* execution of a flow definition. The result of action execution, a logical outcome event, can be used as grounds
* for a transition out of the calling state.
*
* Note: The {@link RequestContext} argument to this method provides access to data about the active flow execution
* in the context of the currently executing thread. Among other things, this allows this action to access
* {@link RequestContext#getRequestScope() data} set by other actions, as well as set its own attributes it wishes
* to expose in a given scope.
*
* Some notes about actions and their usage of the attribute scope types:
*
* - Attributes set in {@link RequestContext#getRequestScope() request scope} exist for the life of the currently
* executing request only.
*
- Attributes set in {@link RequestContext#getFlashScope() flash scope} exist until after view rendering is
* completed. That time includes the current request plus any redirect required for the view render to complete.
*
- Attributes set in {@link RequestContext#getFlowScope() flow scope} exist for the life of the flow session and
* will be cleaned up automatically when the flow session ends.
*
- Attributes set in {@link RequestContext#getConversationScope() conversation scope} exist for the life of the
* entire flow execution representing a single logical "conversation" with a user.
*
*
* All attributes present in any scope are typically exposed in a model for access by a view when an "interactive"
* state type such as a view state is entered.
*
* Note: flow scope should generally not be used as a general purpose cache, but rather as a context for data needed
* locally by other states of the flow this action participates in. For example, it would be inappropriate to stuff
* large collections of objects (like those returned to support a search results view) into flow scope. Instead, put
* such result collections in request scope, and ensure you execute this action again each time you wish to view
* those results. 2nd level caches managed outside of SWF are more general cache solutions.
*
* Note: as flow scoped attributes are eligible for serialization they should be Serializable
.
*
* @param context the action execution context, for accessing and setting data in a {@link ScopeType scope type}, as
* well as obtaining other flow contextual information (e.g. request context attributes and flow execution context
* information)
* @return a logical result outcome, used as grounds for a transition in the calling flow (e.g. "success", "error",
* "yes", "no", * ...)
* @throws Exception a exception occurred during action execution, either checked or unchecked; note, any
* recoverable exceptions should be caught within this method and an appropriate result outcome returned
* or be handled by the current state of the calling flow execution.
*/
Event execute(RequestContext context) throws Exception;
}