I have created a custom Converter in JSF 1.2 to convert Date objects. The dates have a very particular format. I have implemented my converter using the core Java SimpleDateFormat class to do the conversion, using the formatter string shown in my code comments below. This all works fine.
My question is about thread safety. The SimpleDateFormat API docs state that it is not thread safe. For that reason I have created a separate instance of the date format object for each instance of my converter object. However, I'm not sure if this is enough. My DateFormat object is stored as a member of the DTGDateConverter.
QUESTION: Will two threads every simultaneously access the same instance of a Converter object in JSF?
If the answer is yes, then my Converter is probably at risk.
/**
* <p>JSF Converter used to convert from java.util.Date to a string.
* The SimpleDateFormat format used is: ddHHmm'Z'MMMyy.</p>
*
* <p>Example: October 31st 2010 at 23:59 formats to 312359ZOCT10</p>
*
* @author JTOUGH
*/
public class DTGDateConverter implements Converter {
private static final Logger logger =
LoggerFactory.getLogger(DTGDateConverter.class);
private static final String EMPTY_STRING = "";
private static final DateFormat DTG_DATE_FORMAT =
MyFormatterUtilities.createDTGInstance();
// The 'format' family of core Java classes are NOT thread-safe.
// Each instance of this class needs its own DateFormat object or
// runs the risk of two request threads accessing it at the same time.
private final DateFormat df = (DateFormat)DTG_DATE_FORMAT.clone();
@Override
public Object getAsObject(
FacesContext context,
UIComponent component,
String stringValue)
throws ConverterException {
Date date = null;
// Prevent ParseException when an empty form field is submitted
// for conversion
if (stringValue == null || stringValue.equals(EMPTY_STRING)) {
date = null;
} else {
try {
date = df.parse(stringValue);
} catch (ParseException e) {
if (logger.isDebugEnabled()) {
logger.debug("Unable to convert string to Date object", e);
}
date = null;
}
}
return date;
}
@Override
public String getAsString(
FacesContext context,
UIComponent component,
Object objectValue)
throws ConverterException {
if (objectValue == null) {
return null;
} else if (!(objectValue instanceof Date)) {
throw new IllegalArgumentException(
"objectValue is not a Date object");
} else {
// Use 'toUpperCase()' to fix mixed case string returned
// from 'MMM' portion of date format
return df.format(objectValue).toUpperCase();
}
}
}