Package org.springframework.web.servlet.mvc.multiaction

Package allowing MVC Controller implementations to handle requests at method rather than class level.

See
          Description

Class Diagram Summary
multiaction 
 

Interface Summary
MethodNameResolverInterface that parameterizes the MultiActionController class using the Strategy GoF Design pattern, allowing the mapping from incoming request to handler method name to be varied without affecting other application code.
 

Class Summary
AbstractUrlMethodNameResolverAbstract base class for URL-based MethodNameResolver implementations.
InternalPathMethodNameResolverSimple implementation of MethodNameResolver that maps URL to method name.
MultiActionControllerController implementation that allows multiple request types to be handled by the same class.
NoSuchRequestHandlingMethodExceptionException thrown when there's no request handling method for this request.
ParameterMethodNameResolverSimple implementation of MethodNameResolver that looks for a parameter value containing the name of the method to invoke.
PropertiesMethodNameResolverThe most sophisticated and useful framework implementation of the MethodNameResolver interface.
 

Package org.springframework.web.servlet.mvc.multiaction Description

Package allowing MVC Controller implementations to handle requests at method rather than class level. This is useful when we want to avoid having many trivial controller classes, as can easily happen when using an MVC framework.

Typically a controller that handles multiple request types will extend MultiActionController, and implement multiple request handling methods that will be invoked by reflection if they follow this class' naming convention. Classes are analyzed at startup and methods cached, so the performance overhead of reflection in this approach is negligible.

This approach is analogous to the Struts 1.1 DispatcherAction class, but more sophisticated, as it supports configurable mapping from requests to URLs and allows for delegation as well as subclassing.

This package is discussed in Chapter 12 of Expert One-On-One J2EE Design and Development by Rod Johnson, and used in the sample application.