24

So I'm trying to grab the current URL of the page using Java's request object. I've been using request.getRequestURI() to preform this, but I noticed that when a java class reroutes me to a different page off a servlet request getRequestURI gives that that address as opposed to the orginal URL that was typed in the browser and which still shows in the browser.

Ex: \AdvancedSearch:
getRequestURI() returns "\subdir\search\search.jsp"

I'm looking for a way to grab what the browser sees as the URL and not what that page knows is only a servlet wrapper.

1

7 Answers 7

43

If your current request is coming from an "inside the app-server" forward or include, the app-server is expected to preserve request information as request attributes. The specific attributes, and what they contain, depends on whether you're doing a forward or an include.

For <jsp:include>, the original parent URL will be returned by request.getRequestURL(), and information about the included page will be found in the following request attributes:

     javax.servlet.include.request_uri
     javax.servlet.include.context_path
     javax.servlet.include.servlet_path
     javax.servlet.include.path_info
     javax.servlet.include.query_string

For <jsp:forward>, the new URL will be returned by request.getRequestURL(), and the original request's information will be found in the following request attributes:

     javax.servlet.forward.request_uri
     javax.servlet.forward.context_path
     javax.servlet.forward.servlet_path
     javax.servlet.forward.path_info
     javax.servlet.forward.query_string

These are set out in section 8.3 and 8.4 of the Servlet 2.4 specification.

However, be aware that this information is only preserved for internally-dispatched requests. If you have a front-end web-server, or dispatch outside of the current container, these values will be null. In other words, you may have no way to find the original request URL.

3
  • I tried out.println(request.getAttribute("request_uri")); out.println(request.getAttribute("context_path")); out.println(request.getAttribute("servlet_path")); out.println(request.getAttribute("path_info")); out.println(request.getAttribute("query_string")); All returned null. Does this mean I'm screwed? Aug 10, 2009 at 19:12
  • 4
    The actual attribute name is "javax.servlet.include.request_uri", not "request_uri"
    – kdgregory
    Aug 10, 2009 at 19:16
  • Thanks that works. Need to add a little more logic in my navigation, but hey saves me a lot of trouble. Thanks. Aug 10, 2009 at 19:49
9

Just did a slight tidy of the solution by Ballsacian1

String currentURL = null;
if( request.getAttribute("javax.servlet.forward.request_uri") != null ){
    currentURL = (String)request.getAttribute("javax.servlet.forward.request_uri");
}
if( currentURL != null && request.getAttribute("javax.servlet.include.query_string") != null ){
    currentURL += "?" + request.getQueryString();
}

The null checks are going to run a lot more efficiently than String comparisons.

2
  • Thanks for this. While not currently of much use to me, This is one of those questions that I'm sure will come back to me in the future. Sep 5, 2012 at 2:18
  • @readikus - should that be javax.servlet.forward.query_string instead of javax.servlet.include.query_string? Jul 5, 2017 at 17:18
5
String activePage = "";
    // using getAttribute allows us to get the orginal url out of the page when a forward has taken place.
    String queryString = "?"+request.getAttribute("javax.servlet.forward.query_string");
    String requestURI = ""+request.getAttribute("javax.servlet.forward.request_uri");
    if(requestURI == "null") {
        // using getAttribute allows us to get the orginal url out of the page when a include has taken place.
        queryString = "?"+request.getAttribute("javax.servlet.include.query_string");
        requestURI = ""+request.getAttribute("javax.servlet.include.request_uri");
    }
    if(requestURI == "null") {
        queryString = "?"+request.getQueryString();
        requestURI = request.getRequestURI();
    }
    if(queryString.equals("?null")) queryString = "";
    activePage = requestURI+queryString;
0
4

${requestScope['javax.servlet.forward.query_string']} -- if you access it form jsp, using Expression Language

1

Can you try this

<%=request.getRequestURL().toString()%>
1

To get the HTTP requested path without know the state of the internal flow of the request, use this method:

public String getUri(HttpServletRequest request) {
    String r = (String) request.getAttribute("javax.servlet.forward.request_uri");
    return r == null ? request.getRequestURI() : r;
}
0

Same answer as @kdgregory, but you can rather use the Request Dispatcher constants.

javax.servlet.include.request_uri        RequestDispatcher.FORWARD_REQUEST_URI
javax.servlet.include.context_path       RequestDispatcher.FORWARD_CONTEXT_PATH
javax.servlet.include.servlet_path       RequestDispatcher.FORWARD_SERVLET_PATH
javax.servlet.include.path_info          RequestDispatcher.FORWARD_PATH_INFO
javax.servlet.include.query_string       RequestDispatcher.FORWARD_QUERY_STRING

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