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So I try to access an attribute of my HttpSession on my @PreDestroy method on a @SessionScoped JSF managed bean using

session.getAttribute("myAttribute"); 

But I get a

java.lang.IllegalStateException: getAttribute: Session has already been invalidated

Why?

I need to access the list of connections to external services opened by that session before one of my session beans is destroyed, and they are of course stored on a session attribute object.

How can I do that?

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    Accessing session attributes in a session scoped JSF managed bean? Why not store them into a true session scoped managed bean instead?
    – Tiny
    Feb 18, 2016 at 18:01
  • what do you mean by "true"?
    – NotGaeL
    Feb 18, 2016 at 18:03
  • "true" means "true". A managed bean designated with a true @SessionScoped annotation.
    – Tiny
    Feb 18, 2016 at 18:05
  • Well it is a managed bean designated with a @SessionScoped annotation. What am I missing here? What do you mean by "true" @SessionScoped annotation? CDI? EJB? They are all part of the standard Java EE API.
    – NotGaeL
    Feb 18, 2016 at 18:22
  • I think @Tiny means that you should have the one with the lists injected instead of manually loading it from the session. For that it needs to be a ManagedBean (JSF, CDI, whatever) too. I hope the PreDestroy is called then in the order of 'Depending' and then Dependent so you can access it
    – Kukeltje
    Feb 18, 2016 at 18:50

1 Answer 1

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Explicitly accessing a session attribute in a session scoped managed bean doesn't make sense. Just make that attribute a property of the session scoped managed bean itself.

@SessionScoped
public class YourSessionScopedBean implements Serializable {

    private Object yourAttribute; // It becomes a session attribute already.

    @PreDestroy
    public void destroy() {
        // Just access yourAttribute directly, no need to do it the hard way.
    }

}

The exception you faced occurred because the session was explicitly invalidated via a HttpSession#invalidate() call instead of "just" expired.

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  • That's what I did in the end, but that explicit call invalidating the session is weird. Does JSF do that? Because I am certain I am not doing it. I just let the session expire.
    – NotGaeL
    Feb 19, 2016 at 9:08

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