1
@ServerEndpoint("/websocket/blah")
public class LeadChangeWebsocketEndpoint {
    @Inject
    private SessionScopedBean bean;

    @OnOpen
    public void onOpen(Session session) {
        bean.takeWebsocketAndDoSomething(session);
    }
    //....
}

That code results in an exception. How does one associate a websocket with a user's session? I can't find any documentation explicitly stating what the CDI scope of a @ServerEndpoint bean is, even though it is capable of receiving CDI injections.

5
  • Before onOpen is called, the HTTP request is still alive with all it's cookies, tokens etc'. That's the time to authenticate the user or refuse the connection... especially as (on some servers) the onMessage callback might be called while onOpen is still processing... I'm not much into Java, so I'm not sure how you would apply this (I can show you in Ruby, but that won't help much).
    – Myst
    Jul 27, 2015 at 2:03
  • 1
    It looks like it is not so well supported. stackoverflow.com/questions/21049387/… Did you try to annotated your class with @Stateless. Maybe this one could work. Jul 27, 2015 at 7:55
  • Yikes... I'll see if I can get the Java EE expert group to take a look at that and clarify. I didn't try it as an EJB though, seems scary haha. I'll post the results for TomEE Jul 27, 2015 at 15:00
  • @exabrial you forgot the result
    – Ced
    May 8, 2016 at 1:51
  • You won't like it, it's not pretty... see here: stackoverflow.com/questions/21888425/… May 9, 2016 at 14:24

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