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I have a webpage with a area where users can login. This area

www.host.com/mypage/myarea

should be under https.

The problem is that my https is running on a another host:

www.something-foo.host.com/mypage/myarea

. (loadbalancer stuff...??? I dont know why)

My try is to annotate the Pages with @RequireHttps, an than rewrite the urls of the Pages.

But how and where? Has someone please an example?

Thanks for your help.

1 Answer 1

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Well if you really want to this with Wicket your best option would be to write an implementation of IRequestMapperDelegate and set them during the onInit() process of your WicketApplication.

To give you an idea how to do this I've written an example of raping the HttpsMapper of Wicket:

    setRootRequestMapper(new HttpsMapper(getRootRequestMapper(), new HttpsConfig(8080, 8443)) {
        private final static String SUBDOMAIN = "www.something-foo.";

        @Override
        protected Scheme getSchemeOf(Request request) {
            HttpServletRequest req = (HttpServletRequest) ((WebRequest) request).getContainerRequest();
            // well that's basically cheating and not so nice... but we're not allowed to overwrite mapRequest()
            // but that means that every request that doesn't start with the subdomain will be treated as HTTP aka
            // insecure.
            if (req.getServerName().startsWith(SUBDOMAIN) == false) {
                return Scheme.HTTP;
            }

            return super.getSchemeOf(request);
        }

        @Override
        protected String createRedirectUrl(IRequestHandler handler, Request request, Scheme scheme) {
            // stolen from super implementation
            HttpServletRequest req = (HttpServletRequest) ((WebRequest) request).getContainerRequest();
            String url = scheme.urlName() + "://";
            // except the part where we insert the subdomain
            url += SUBDOMAIN;
            url += req.getServerName();
            if (!scheme.usesStandardPort(getConfig())) {
                url += ":" + scheme.getPort(getConfig());
            }
            url += req.getRequestURI();
            if (req.getQueryString() != null) {
                url += "?" + req.getQueryString();
            }
            return url;

        }
    });

Depending on your question I can't really determine if this is a good solution ... it really depends on how many frameworks are working on top of Wicket. Since you didn't mention anything else I'm assuming none.

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