JSF Controller, Service and DAO

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情书的邮戳
情书的邮戳 2020-11-21 07:16

I\'m trying to get used to how JSF works with regards to accessing data (coming from a spring background)

I\'m creating a simple example that maintains a list of use

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  •  别那么骄傲
    2020-11-21 07:59

    Is this the correct way of doing things?

    Apart from performing business logic the inefficient way in a managed bean getter method, and using a too broad managed bean scope, it looks okay. If you move the service call from the getter method to a @PostConstruct method and use either @RequestScoped or @ViewScoped instead of @SessionScoped, it will look better.

    See also:

    • Why JSF calls getters multiple times
    • How to choose the right bean scope?

    Is my terminology right?

    It's okay. As long as you're consistent with it and the code is readable in a sensible way. Only your way of naming classes and variables is somewhat awkward (illogical and/or duplication). For instance, I personally would use users instead of userList, and use var="user" instead of var="u", and use id and name instead of userId and userName. Also, a "UserListService" sounds like it can only deal with lists of users instead of users in general. I'd rather use "UserService" so you can also use it for creating, updating and deleting users.

    See also:

    • JSF managed bean naming conventions

    The "service" feels more like a DAO?

    It isn't exactly a DAO. Basically, JPA is the real DAO here. Previously, when JPA didn't exist, everyone homegrew DAO interfaces so that the service methods can keep using them even when the underlying implementation ("plain old" JDBC, or "good old" Hibernate, etc) changes. The real task of a service method is transparently managing transactions. This isn't the responsibility of the DAO.

    See also:

    • I found JPA, or alike, don't encourage DAO pattern
    • DAO and JDBC relation?
    • When is it necessary or convenient to use Spring or EJB3 or all of them together?

    And the controller feels like it's doing some of the job of the service.

    I can imagine that it does that in this relatively simple setup. However, the controller is in fact part of the frontend not the backend. The service is part of the backend which should be designed in such way that it's reusable across all different frontends, such as JSF, JAX-RS, "plain" JSP+Servlet, even Swing, etc. Moreover, the frontend-specific controller (also called "backing bean" or "presenter") allows you to deal in a frontend-specific way with success and/or exceptional outcomes, such as in JSF's case displaying a faces message in case of an exception thrown from a service.

    See also:

    • JSF Service Layer
    • What components are MVC in JSF MVC framework?

    All in all, the correct approach would be like below:

    
        #{user.id}
        #{user.name}
    
    
    @Named
    @RequestScoped // Use @ViewScoped once you bring in ajax (e.g. CRUD)
    public class UserBacking {
    
        private List users;
    
        @EJB
        private UserService userService;
    
        @PostConstruct
        public void init() {
            users = userService.listAll();
        }
    
        public List getUsers() {
            return users;
        }
    
    }
    
    @Stateless
    public class UserService {
    
        @PersistenceContext
        private EntityManager em;
    
        public List listAll() {
            return em.createQuery("SELECT u FROM User u", User.class).getResultList();
        }
    
    }
    

    You can find here a real world kickoff project here utilizing the canonical Java EE / JSF / CDI / EJB / JPA practices: Java EE kickoff app.

    See also:

    • Creating master-detail pages for entities, how to link them and which bean scope to choose
    • Passing a JSF2 managed pojo bean into EJB or putting what is required into a transfer object
    • Filter do not initialize EntityManager
    • javax.persistence.TransactionRequiredException in small facelet application

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