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I'm tryin' to develop a small gwt chat application Atmosphere's gwt extension. The server side part of application take care about incoming AtmosphereResource associating a Broadcaster and suspending it. Here is the code snippet about suspending a new incoming AtmosphereResource:

private void doGet(AtmosphereResource ar, String userId) {
    if(BroadcasterFactory.getDefault().lookup(userId) != null) {
    ar.setBroadcaster(BroadcasterFactory.getDefault().lookup(userId).addAtmosphereResource(ar));
    } else {
            ar.setBroadcaster(BroadcasterFactory.getDefault().get(userId).addAtmosphereResource(ar));
    }
    ar.suspend();
    ...
}

When I look for that AtmosphereResource, using it's previously stored uuid, I always found it null:

...
AtmosphereResource arTarget = AtmosphereResourceFactory.getDefault().find(uuid);            
if (arTarget != null)   {
    arTarget.getBroadcaster().broadcast(msg,arTarget);
} else {
    log.info("handleRawMessage:no broadcaster "+((RawMessage) msg).toString());
}
...

What's wrong? I also notice that AtmosphereResources got rapidly onResume, as they immediately time out, but timeout is set to -1. Did I miss something? This is a snippet of my pom to.

<dependency>
    <groupId>org.atmosphere.extensions</groupId>
    <artifactId>atmosphere-gwt20-client</artifactId>
    <version>2.1.1</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
    <groupId>org.atmosphere.extensions</groupId>
    <artifactId>atmosphere-gwt20-common</artifactId>
    <version>2.1.1</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
    <groupId>org.atmosphere.extensions</groupId>
    <artifactId>atmosphere-gwt20-server</artifactId>
    <version>2.1.1</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
    <groupId>org.atmosphere</groupId>
    <artifactId>atmosphere-runtime</artifactId>
    <version>2.1.1</version>
</dependency>

1 Answer 1

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In order to get a broadcaster you have to have a client connected to the server. Are you sure your client is connecting?

VERSION 2.0

In order to implement the server in 2.0 I have done: (The client id could be obtained from the request)

public class AtmosphereHandler extends AbstractReflectorAtmosphereHandler {

private static Logger logger = Logger.getLogger(AtmosphereHandler.class);;

@Override
public void onRequest(final AtmosphereResource ar) throws IOException {
    logger.info("Connecting to comet with: "
            + ar.getRequest().getRequestURI());
    Broadcaster broadcaster = BroadcasterFactory.getDefault().lookup(
            YOUR_CLIENT_ID, true);
    if (broadcaster.getAtmosphereResources().size() > 0) {
        logger.debug("Broadcaster recovered with name: "
                + broadcaster.getID());
    } else {
        logger.debug("Broadcaster created with name: "
                + broadcaster.getID());
    }
    ar.setBroadcaster(broadcaster);

    ar.setSerializer(new Serializer() {
        Charset charset = Charset.forName(ar.getResponse()
                .getCharacterEncoding());

        @Override
        public void write(OutputStream os, Object o) throws IOException {
            try {
                logger.info("Writing object to JSON outputstream with charset: "
                        + charset.displayName());
                String payload = serializer.serialize(o);
                os.write(payload.getBytes(charset));
                os.flush();
            } catch (SerializationException ex) {
                throw new IOException("Failed to serialize object to JSON",
                        ex);
            }
        }
    });

    ar.suspend();

}

private ServerSerializer serializer = new JacksonSerializerProvider()
        .getServerSerializer();

In the client part you should have something similar to that:

     AutoBeanClientSerializer json_serializer = new AutoBeanClientSerializer();
    json_serializer.registerBeanFactory(beanFactory, ActivityMessage.class);
    AtmosphereRequestConfig jsonRequestConfig = AtmosphereRequestConfig.create(json_serializer);
    jsonRequestConfig.setUrl(GWT.getHostPageBaseURL() + HANDLER_URL_PART);
    jsonRequestConfig.setContentType("application/json; charset=UTF-8");
    jsonRequestConfig.setTransport(AtmosphereRequestConfig.Transport.WEBSOCKET);
    jsonRequestConfig.setFallbackTransport(AtmosphereRequestConfig.Transport.STREAMING);
    jsonRequestConfig.setOpenHandler(new AtmosphereOpenHandler() {
        @Override
        public void onOpen(AtmosphereResponse response) {
            GWT.log("JSON Connection opened");
        }
    });
    jsonRequestConfig.setCloseHandler(new AtmosphereCloseHandler() {
        @Override
        public void onClose(AtmosphereResponse response) {
            GWT.log("JSON Connection closed");
        }
    });
    jsonRequestConfig.setMessageHandler(new AtmosphereMessageHandler() {
        @Override
        public void onMessage(AtmosphereResponse response) {

        }
    });


    Atmosphere atmosphere = Atmosphere.create();
    final AtmosphereRequest jsonRequest = atmosphere.subscribe(jsonRequestConfig);

VERSION 1.1.0RC4

I extend the AtmosphereGwtHandler for implementing the server like this:

private static Logger logger;
@Override
public void init(ServletConfig servletConfig) throws ServletException {
    super.init(servletConfig);
    logger = Logger.getLogger(AtmosphereHandler.class);
}

@Override
public int doComet(GwtAtmosphereResource resource) throws ServletException, IOException {
    logger.info("Connecting to comet with: " +resource.getRequest().getRequestURI());
    Broadcaster broadcaster = BroadcasterFactory.getDefault().lookup(YOUR_CONNECTION_ID, true);
    if(broadcaster.getAtmosphereResources().size()>0){
        logger.debug("Broadcaster recovered with name: " + broadcaster.getID());
    }
    else{
        logger.debug("Broadcaster created with name: " + broadcaster.getID());
    }
    resource.getAtmosphereResource().setBroadcaster(broadcaster);
    return NO_TIMEOUT;
}

@Override
public void cometTerminated(GwtAtmosphereResource cometResponse, boolean serverInitiated) {
    logger.info("Disconnecting from comet. Broadcaster : " + cometResponse.getBroadcaster().getID());
    super.cometTerminated(cometResponse, serverInitiated);
}

@Override
public void doPost(HttpServletRequest postRequest, HttpServletResponse postResponse,
        List<?> messages, GwtAtmosphereResource cometResource) {
    broadcast(messages, cometResource);
}

You have to initialize it with a atmosphere.xml file at META-INF folder in your target directory.

I hope that helps!

5
  • Hello! Thankyou for reply. Why did you implement an extension of AtmosphereGWTHandler for the server-side? I implement my server side using AbstractReflectorAtmosphereHandler. Did you point that extension into your atmosphere.xml as atmosphere-handler?
    – Francesco
    Jul 2, 2014 at 14:09
  • 1
    Yes I was using an old version, I realised after thats why I edited my answer to put the version of atmosphere i was using. Now I am trying with 2.0. I'll tell you now if it's also working ;)
    – Kasas
    Jul 2, 2014 at 14:41
  • I have tested with atmosphere 2.0 and I could find the broadcaster without problems. Are you sure you have a client connected? I'll post my code.
    – Kasas
    Jul 2, 2014 at 15:31
  • If the Serializer is not properly made you won't receive the onMessage call. Be careful with that because I became crazy finding why it wasn't receiving the message!
    – Kasas
    Jul 3, 2014 at 9:57
  • Problem was more trivial than it seems. Simply I forgot to suspend every incoming AtmosphereResource. You pointed me to the right way. Thankyou.
    – Francesco
    Jul 3, 2014 at 12:52

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