In servlets, getAttribute()
and setAttribute()
are only associated with HttpSession
, ServletRequest
and ServletContext
, i.e attributes are defined only for context, request and session scopes. Why not for, say, ServletResponse
or ServletConfig
?
3 Answers
Attributes always apply to some scope. For example, if you want them to apply to the current request only, then you bind them to the request object.
Similarly, if you want it to apply to the current session, then you bind them to the session object. Attributes relevant to the entire running application instance are set on the servlet context object.
The objects you proposed have the exact same scope, as those already provided: The response has the same scope (a.k.a lifetime) as the request. The servlet config has the exact same scope as the servlet context.
Therefore, adding getAttribute()
/setAttribute()
on those methods would only add to the confusion ("did I set the attribute on the request or on the response?") and not add any additional features.
- ServletConfig is for
init-params
defined in web.xml. - Setting attribute to
HttpServletResponse
will not avail anything, and neither it will make any sense, as response is for the client -- not from the client, i.e. browser, and that is not capable of understanding that, nonetheless. And you must understand that JSP and Servlet both run on server-side, whatsoever. Hence, settng attributes torequest
in servlet and getting those in JSP, doesn't involve the client at all.