public class IDPLoginServlet extends HttpServlet
| Constructor and Description |
|---|
IDPLoginServlet() |
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
protected void |
doPost(HttpServletRequest request,
HttpServletResponse response)
Called by the server (via the
service method) to allow a servlet to handle a POST request. |
void |
init(ServletConfig config)
Called by the servlet container to indicate to a servlet that the servlet is being placed into service.
|
void |
testPost(HttpServletRequest request,
HttpServletResponse response) |
doDelete, doGet, doHead, doOptions, doPut, doTrace, getLastModified, service, servicedestroy, getInitParameter, getInitParameterNames, getServletConfig, getServletContext, getServletInfo, getServletName, init, log, logprotected void doPost(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOException
HttpServletservice method) to allow a servlet to handle a POST request.
The HTTP POST method allows the client to send data of unlimited length to the Web server a single time and is
useful when posting information such as credit card numbers.
When overriding this method, read the request data, write the response headers, get the response's writer or
output stream object, and finally, write the response data. It's best to include content type and encoding. When
using a PrintWriter object to return the response, set the content type before accessing the
PrintWriter object.
The servlet container must write the headers before committing the response, because in HTTP the headers must be sent before the response body.
Where possible, set the Content-Length header (with the ServletResponse.setContentLength(int)
method), to allow the servlet container to use a persistent connection to return its response to the client,
improving performance. The content length is automatically set if the entire response fits inside the response
buffer.
When using HTTP 1.1 chunked encoding (which means that the response has a Transfer-Encoding header), do not set the Content-Length header.
This method does not need to be either safe or idempotent. Operations requested through POST can have side effects for which the user can be held accountable, for example, updating stored data or buying items online.
If the HTTP POST request is incorrectly formatted, doPost returns an HTTP "Bad Request" message.
doPost in class HttpServletrequest - an HttpServletRequest object that contains the request the client has made of the servletresponse - an HttpServletResponse object that contains the response the servlet sends to the clientServletException - if the request for the POST could not be handledIOException - if an input or output error is detected when the servlet handles the requestServletOutputStream,
ServletResponse.setContentType(java.lang.String)public void init(ServletConfig config) throws ServletException
GenericServletServlet.init(javax.servlet.ServletConfig).
This implementation stores the ServletConfig object it receives from the servlet container for later use.
When overriding this form of the method, call super.init(config).
init in interface Servletinit in class GenericServletconfig - the ServletConfig object that contains configuration information for this servletServletException - if an exception occurs that interrupts the servlet's normal operationUnavailableExceptionpublic void testPost(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOException
ServletExceptionIOExceptionCopyright © 2019 JBoss by Red Hat. All rights reserved.