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I have a Http Upload Servlet (http-post) and a user can upload an XML file along with some form fields. I have put on some validation checks to see if there was a bad request (eg. null value). So I used the following code chunk to perform that.

String myID = request.getParameter("ID");
if (myID .equalsIgnoreCase("")|| myID ==null)
response.setStatus(HttpServletResponse.SC_BAD_REQUEST);
else
myBean.setMyId(myID );

Now that I set the response.setStatus, I wanted to see what response.getStatus would look like, but I did not find any method in the HttpServletResponse class (my response is HttpServletResponse) that could show me the status. I needed to output the status as a field called Server Response as a response to the upload. Please help me with suggestions.

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  • If you can upgrade to a Servlet 3.0 compatible container, then you can use the getStatus() method.
    – BalusC
    Sep 13, 2011 at 2:49
  • Thanks BalusC, I didn't find the existed question in stackoverflow, so had to post this question. Also I am using EasyEclipse for this project, and easyeclipse doesnot seems to support tomcat7..corrrect me if I am wrong! Do you know any other way to get the status easily instead of writintg a wrapper? thanks much
    – mona
    Sep 13, 2011 at 20:51
  • I recommend "Eclipse for Java EE". It bundles all Java EE development tools such as WTP (JSP/Servlet/JSF editor and so on) and several server plugins. You can find Tomcat integration steps in this less-or-more related question stackoverflow.com/questions/4076601/…
    – BalusC
    Sep 13, 2011 at 20:58

2 Answers 2

0

The servlet APIs don't provide a way to do this directly, but there are ways you could do this.

  • The clean way would be to create a Filter to wrap the real HttpServletResponse object with a wrapper class that allows you to get the status.

  • The hacky / non-portable way would be to look at the actual implementation class for the HttpServletResponse and see if there is an additional public method. (Or even a non-public method or field that you could access reflectively ... though that would be a really bad idea, IMO)

0

If by "output the status as a field", you mean show the status code in HTML, a typical way to do this in a webapp is for your request handling logic (controller) to store the status code somewhere (model) so that it can be retrieved and shown in whatever mechanism creates the HTML (view), hence the MVC pattern. Don't consider the HttpServletResponse as a place to store the data you need to render a view. It's nothing but your conduit back to the user. Data needed for view rendering should go somewhere else, like in a request attribute, maybe.

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