I'm catching the following exception in a very simple jsf2 page:

java.lang.IllegalStateException: Cannot create a session after the response has been committed
    at org.apache.catalina.connector.Request.doGetSession(Request.java:2758)
    at org.apache.catalina.connector.Request.getSession(Request.java:2268)

I'm using Mojarra 2.1.3 and PrimeFaces3.0M4, on Tomcat 7.0.22 and jdk 7. The page is a very basic data table:

<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"
    xmlns:h="http://java.sun.com/jsf/html"
    xmlns:f="http://java.sun.com/jsf/core"
    xmlns:p="http://primefaces.org/ui">
<h:head>

</h:head>
<h:body>
    <h:form>        
        <p:dataTable var="car" value="#{tableBean.cars}">

                 ......
        </p:dataTable>
    </h:form>
</h:body>
</html>

and the page shows correctly on the browser but on the console I see the exception. Why the Exception disappear if I remove the (unnecessary) h:form element?

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up vote 16 down vote accepted

This is a known problem and has been reported by yours truly as JSF issue 2215. This will occur when the response buffer has overflowed (due to large content) and the response is been committed before the session is been created. This is result of bit overzealous attempts of Mojarra to postpone "unnecessary" session creation as much as possible (which is at its own a Good Thing though).

Until they get it fixed, there are several workarounds:

  1. Create a Filter which does HttpServletRequest#getSession() before FilterChain#doFilter(). Advantage: no need to change JSF configuration/code. Disadvantage: when you want to avoid unnecessary session creation yourself as well.

  2. Call ExternalContext#getSession() with true in bean's (post)constructor or preRenderView listener. Advantage: actually, nothing. Disadvantage: too hacky.

  3. Add a context parameter with name of com.sun.faces.writeStateAtFormEnd and value of false to web.xml. Advantage: unnecessary session creation will be really avoided as opposed to #1 and #2. Disadvantage: response will now be fully buffered in memory until </h:form> is reached. If your forms are not extremely large, the impact should however be minimal.

  4. Add a context parameter with name of javax.faces.STATE_SAVING_METHOD and value of client to web.xml. Advantage: session will not be created at all unless you have session scoped beans. It also immediately solves potential ViewExpiredException cases. Disadvantage: increased network bandwidth usage. If you're using partial state saving, then the impact should however be minimal.

As to why the problem disappears when you remove <h:form>, this is because no session needs to be created in order to store the view state.

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wow thats nice :) – mprabhat Dec 8 '11 at 12:16
thanks! it seems this issue will be solved with Mojarra 2.1.8 (java.net/jira/browse/JAVASERVERFACES-2277) which should be released soon – wemu Mar 20 at 8:56
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